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V1 Anthology
 
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V1 Anthology [Best of]

Duane Allman Audio CD
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
Price: CDN$ 26.18 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Customers buy this album with V2 Anthology CDN$ 30.83

V1 Anthology + V2 Anthology
Price For Both: CDN$ 57.01

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Product Details


Disc: 1
1. B. B. King Medley: Sweet Little Angel/It's My Own Fault/How Blue Can You Get? - The Hourglass
2. Hey Jude - Wilson Pickett
3. The Road Of Love - Clarence Carter
4. Goin' Down Slow - Duane Allman
5. The Weight - Aretha Franklin
6. Games People Play - King Curtis
7. Shake For Me - John Hammond
8. Loan Me A Dime - Boz Scaggs
9. Rollin' Stone - Johnny Jenkins
Disc: 2
1. Livin' On The Open Road - Delaney & Bonnie
2. Down Along The Cove - Johnny Jenkins
3. Please Be With Me - Cowboy
4. Mean Old World - Eric Clapton And Duane Allman
5. Layla - Derek & The Dominos
6. Statesboro Blues - The Allman Brothers Band
7. Don't Keep Me Wondering - The Allman Brothers Band
8. Standback - The Allman Brothers Band
9. Dreams - The Allman Brothers Band
10. Little Martha - The Allman Brothers Band

Product Description

From Amazon.com

While his recording career only lasted a little more than six years ('66-'71), Duane Allman's playing was heard not only with the Allman Brothers Band, but on a variety of important records by other artists as well. Hence this posthumous 1972 double-album collection, which--besides five Allman Brothers tracks--includes many memorable solos by the distinctive slide guitarist from sessions at the fabled Fame and Muscle Shoals studios. Highlights include soul versions of "Hey Jude" (Wilson Pickett), "The Weight" (Aretha Franklin), and "Games People Play" (King Curtis), as well as the time-stopping "Somebody Loan Me a Dime" (Boz Scaggs) and Derek and the Dominoes' classic, "Layla." --Billy Altman

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Customer Reviews

17 Reviews
5 star:
 (15)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (17 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Fire from his fingers, Nov 6 2003
By 
Mitchell Lopate (Adak, Alaska) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: V1 Anthology (Audio CD)
The Hourglass were a blues crew waiting for distribution: a young band work up B.B. King, John Lee Hooker, and Mel London with such passion. That grieving, woeful organ player is Paul Hornsby; Gregg melts the microphone with anguished howls and heart-wrenching pleas. B.B. taught Duane how fingertips cut diamonds. Note the Albert King-like influence (on "Loan Me a Dime") formation of his style, including the repetitive phrases that follow one-two in milli-second quickness, lay down a note, ring it again in a bell-like manner, or pull it off on the second try.

Wilson Pickett's scalding cover of "Hey Jude" would praise the Beatles, the Muscle Shoals players, or Pickett himself, but Duane's great white shark bite solo made the hair stand up on the back of your neck. On "The Road of Love," Clarence Carter proudly said, "I like what I'm listening to!" as he admired the fuzzy distortions of Allman's slide. Contemplate, however, when Duane reunited with Hourglass friends Hornsby and Sandlin, and added newcomer Berry Oakley for a string-bending prophetic eulogy on Champion Jack Dupree's "Goin' Down Slow." Duane's vocals could handle slow crooning without being annoying, and his guitar wept where his voice wouldn't go. Other good people lent Duane their voice or let him be their spokesman: just imagine him nodding his head in agreement, his slide dancing to Aretha's statements when she belted out "The Weight," or the slinky, sinewy electric sitar that pulsated alongside buddy King Curtis, a man with talent to blow--a Meerschaum pipe if possible?--and make notes this beautiful on "Games People Play." A ventriloquist throwing his voice, Duane added a 'talking slide' dimension to his bottleneck on John Hammond's version of Willie Dixon's "Shake for Me," mimicking human frustrations and gestures that hoot and wag wildly beside the unbridled, frenzied vocals.

Perhaps "Loan Me a Dime" is the tune that describes Duane's closeness in letting his instrument speak the words that the soul cannot say. Boz Scaggs carries the heavy hurtin' blues, but Duane's introductory solo also cried to the heavens like his heart had been pulled from his living, beating chest. Boz faces his last day on Earth with no love or hope, and Duane plays as though he's losing his, too. The follow-up solo, criticized for engineering coordination (Duane's mix get buried midway), is apparent that he did not stop playing this tune--ever. The recording session ended, the sun went down, the band went home, but Duane played this way every time: nothing came between him and the feelings he needed to release. Sensitive regional touches and dobro/slide playing find themselves nestled in the comfort of the Delta's warmth as he, Johnny Jenkins, and Berry settle back at the old farmhouse, finding shelter from that summer heat in Muddy Waters's "Rollin' Stone." Visualize baking-hot red earth beneath your bare feet back as the three men pick and pluck those strings.

Delaney & Bonnie & Friends were Duane's second family unit; his slide has the wildest time with pals "Out on the Open Road," continuing when Johnny Jenkins comes back again in "Down Along The Cove." Gentle times return when Scott Boyer and Cowboy hitch their wagon and give the reins a tug in "Please Be With Me," and Duane shimmers on dobro. Eric Clapton gives/gets a lesson in acoustic slide with Duane on Layla's "Mean Old World." The final songs embrace the group scene, and his five-alarm siren call at the opening of "Layla" make it the epic monolith of unreturned love affairs. Happily, the other five cuts are as fundamental as the laws of gravity: "Statesboro Blues"; "Don't Keep Me Wondering" (the studio version); "Stand Back," and "Dreams": the very best that modern recording could portray in bottleneck phrasing, tone, composition, and originality. By the divine right of kings, Duane had sole ownership of the inner secrets of electric slide. "Little Martha" wraps up (but not the Dreams box set with Berry's bass foundation).

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Mortal perfection, Jan 16 2003
By 
This review is from: V1 Anthology (Audio CD)
Duane Allman's mastery of the guitar is beyond mortal. This album is an enjoyable listen only because of the beautiful guitarmanship peppered throughout each studio session. The most impressive of all of these is from Wisconsin alumni Boz Skaggs, and his song "Somebody loan me a dime." Allman's outro solo is akin to the sound of God. An album like this dissuades guitar players (I know), because it is so impressive, and makes one feel that they'll never reach that level of wide open virtuosity.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Duane, we hardly knew ye..., Mar 5 2002
By 
This review is from: V1 Anthology (Audio CD)
Although in the public eye the talents of Duane Allman were somewhat obscured by the huge shadows cast by contemporaries such as Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, and Jimmy Page (although he was certainly NOT obscured to them), this anthology, along with Volume II, convincingly demonstrates that he belongs right up in the pantheon with them.

Old fashioned rock & roll, soul, country, gut-wrenching blues and everything in between; this guy could do it all. There are stellar examples of many genres including songs from Aretha Franklin, Boz Scaggs and Delaney & Bonnie; not to mention the Allman Brothers and Derek & the Dominoes.

As another reviewer correctly stated, if this CD only had Boz Scaggs' "Loan Me A Dime" on it, it would still be worth buying. Allman's playing is AWESOME. My only complaint is that whoever mastered the original recording should have 1) Turned up Allman's guitar in the mix and 2) Not faded out the end of the song. He was just getting warmed up! What were they thinking?!?!?

This is a fine overview of a supremely talented musician.

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