Duane Allman(1946-1971)
- Soundtrack
Duane Allman was born in Nashville, Tennessee in November 1946. On
Christmas Day in 1960, Duane was given a motorcycle as a gift while his
younger brother, Gregg Allman, got a
guitar. A few months later, Duane wrecked his motorcycle in an
accident, but traded in the spare parts for a guitar of his own. Within
a year, the duo played at sock hops in Daytona Beach, Florida, calling
themselves "The Kings". In 1965, Duane and Gregg formed their band,
"The Allman Joys", and toured the south, but they failed to make an
impression in the music business. Duane, Gregg and a few friends
drifted to Los Angeles where they formed a new band called "Hourglass".
After recording two albums for Liberty Records, the Allmans returned to
Florida where they played with the bands "Second Coming" and "The 31th
of February". Duane frequently traveled to Muscle Shoals, Alabama and
played backup guitar with such great singers as
Aretha Franklin,
King Curtis and
Percy Sledge. In 1969, Duane got his first
big break when Jerry Wexler, the vice-president of Atlantic Records,
offered him a solo contract. Duane formed a new band which made up of
drummers Jai Johanny Johanson and
Butch Trucks, guitarist
Dickey Betts, bassist Berry Oakley, and
brother Gregg Allman on the keyboard. Once
assembled,
The Allman Brothers Band
settled in Macon, Georgia where they joined Phil Walden's Capricorn
Records for a recording contract. The band's first album combined
strains of blues, soul, rock and country music into the electrifying
sound that launched Southern rock music. Their second album, "Idlewild
South", climbed to the top of the charts where they performed at New
York's Filimore East in March 1971. The band recorded a double album
released in July of that year and reached the top ten, but Duane did
not live to see his band's true success. On October 29, 1971, Duane
Allman was riding his motorcycle down Macon's main street when a truck
pulled out from another street in front of him. He lost control of his
bike trying to avoid a collision and crashed head-on into the rig,
killing him almost immediately. He was 24 years old. The band played at
his funeral. Only a year later, they gathered somberly, again, to bury
Berry Oakley, who was killed in a motorcycle crash, just three blocks
away from Duane's fatal accident.