The Press

Guitarist was hit-crafting mainstay of Allman Brothers Band

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b December 12, 1943 d April 18, 2024

Dickey Betts, the singer-guitarist who co-founded the genredefin­ing Southern rock group the Allman Brothers Band and wrote several of the group’s most enduring compositio­ns, including Ramblin’ Man, died on April 18 at his home in Osprey, Florida. He was 80.

His manager, David Spero, said Betts had cancer and chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease. He had been treated in 2018 for a brain injury following a fall in his backyard and cancelled a tour following a stroke.

Ramblin’ Man (1973), which some bandmates initially deemed too country for their repertoire, became the group’s only top 10 hit on the Billboard Hot 100. The lyrics, set against a bouncy, upbeat melody, expressed the resigned and unrepentan­t wanderlust of a man “born in the back seat of a Greyhound bus rollin’ down Highway 41”.

“When it comes to leaving,” the song went, “I hope you understand that I was born a ramblin’ man.”

Betts wrote several of the group’s most enduring compositio­ns, such as the jazz-inflected instrument­al In Memory of Elizabeth Reed and the pastoral love song Blue Sky.

The Allman Brothers Band built its style on guitar interplay between leader Duane Allman and the highly melodic fretwork of Betts, whose influences included gypsy jazz musician Django Reinhardt and bluesman BB King.

Allman and Betts would play a theme in harmony before cutting loose with their own solos or answering each other’s licks in a call-and-response style. By the mid-1970s, a wave of Southern Rock acts including Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Marshall Tucker Band, the Charlie Daniels Band and the Outlaws borrowed heavily from their twin-guitar format.

At their popular peak in the 1970s, the Allman Brothers Band played nearly 300 concerts a year, grossed between $50,000 and $100,000 a show and criss-crossed the US on a private Boeing 720. When not touring, they shared quarters in a Tudorstyle mansion in Macon, Georgia.

The band survived the 1971 death of Duane Allman following a motorcycle accident, then broke up twice – largely because of increasing acrimony between singer and organist Gregg Allman (Duane’s brother) and Betts. Both men struggled with substance abuse.

Betts blossomed as a singer and songwriter on the Allman Brothers’ 1973 release Brothers and Sisters. During the recording sessions, founding bassist Berry Oakley died after a motorcycle crash. Pianist Chuck Leavell and a new bassist, Lamar Williams, joined the lineup to finish the recording.

In a retrospect­ive review, Rolling Stone magazine praised Betts for “increasing the country light and buoyancy in the Allmans’ electric-blues stampede” with his songs such as Ramblin’ Man, Pony Boy and Jessica. Pony Boy, an acoustic showcase for Betts’ slide guitar, recounted family lore about a hard-drinking uncle who rode a horse home from a tavern to avoid a DUI.

Fatherhood inspired Jessica, an instrument­al showcase for his nimble fretwork.

“With Jessica, I knew what I wanted to do, but I couldn’t quite find it,” Betts told Guitar World magazine. “Then my little daughter, Jessica, crawled into the room, and I just started playing to her, trying to capture the feeling of her crawling and smiling. That’s why I named it after her.”

The next year, he recorded an acclaimed solo album, Highway Call, credited to Richard Betts, with guest appearance­s by fiddler Vassar Clements and steel guitarist John Hughey. Several songs acknowledg­ed a yearning for a simpler rural life that perhaps was a reflection of the strain of relentless touring.

Critics dismissed the band’s next album, Win, Lose or Draw (1975), on which many of its members recorded their parts separately, as below the band’s standards. That same year, Gregg Allman married pop singer Cher and moved to Beverly Hills. Then, in 1976, Allman, caught up in a federal drug case against a supplier, testified against the band’s roadie in a plea bargain for immunity. The band broke up.

Betts stayed busy, doing recording sessions for outlaw country performers Hank Williams Jr, Billy Joe Shaver and Gary Stewart, collaborat­ing on songs with future Miami Vice TV star Don Johnson and touring with his own band, Great Southern.

“There is no way we can work with Gregg again. Ever,” Betts told Rolling Stone.

But he did, first reforming the band with Allman in 1978. In later decades, he performed in the Allman Brothers Band alongside younger guitarists Warren

Haynes (the two had worked together previously in Great Southern) and Derek Trucks, the nephew of drummer Butch Trucks – though he was often in and out of the band.

Forrest Richard Betts was born in West Palm Beach, Florida, on December 12, 1943, and raised in Bradenton, Florida. At 5, he played ukulele in his father’s bluegrass group. He later switched to mandolin then banjo and finally – as he was trying to impress girls – an electric guitar.

At 16, he left home to join a teen band that worked with a travelling circus.

“Our band would do like splits and we had basketball knee pads and we’d go sliding on our knees playing and then I’d pick the other guitar player up on my shoulders,” Betts told the Sarosota HeraldTrib­une. “So we did like 10, 12 shows a day. It was like vaudeville or something except it was rock-and-roll. That was my first road trip.”

As his musical reputation increased, so did his wild streak. The young guitarist sped around town on motorcycle­s wearing a jacket embroidere­d with an explicit phrase. When an Ohio-based band, the Jokers, came through town to hire him, Betts needed permission from a judge to leave the state. He had been placed on probation after he climbed a neighbour’s fence and shot a cow.

With bassist Oakley and keyboardis­t Reese Wynans, he joined a Jacksonvil­le, Florida, band, the Second Coming. In 1969, Duane Allman, then a studio session musician for Muscle Shoals Sound Studio in Alabama, approached Oakley and Betts about starting a group with Gregg Allman. The Allman Brothers Band emerged from their jam sessions.

When the band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995, Gregg

Allman was too inebriated to make the acceptance speech. The event proved to be a catalyst for Allman’s sobriety – but not for Betts.

The following year, there were rumours of a final band break after Betts allegedly put a gun to his wife’s head during an argument about his drug abuse. A stint in rehab followed.

In 2000, founding band members Allman, Butch Trucks and Jai Johanny “Jaimoe” Johanson fired Betts with a faxed letter that alluded to a decline in his playing.

Betts, who threatened a lawsuit and then settled out of court, maintained that the firing occurred after he asked for an accounting of band finances. Betts returned to leading his own band, often with his guitarist son Duane, who was named after Allman. Gregg Allman and Butch Trucks died in 2017.

Betts was married five times and had several children. A complete list of survivors was not immediatel­y available.

In later years, Betts resided on the water in Osprey, Florida. He and his wife, the former Donna Stearns, frequently butted heads with their neighbours, the Bay Preserve, a non-profit centre that hosted weddings and sporting events on the water.

When a local rowing team would practice, Betts would fire up his power boat to send waves in their direction. At one point, Donna Betts was arrested for pointing a rifle at a crew team as it paddled by their house.

“They have 300 teenage kids come over there and they’re arrogant as hell,” Betts told Rolling Stone in 2017.

“They’re driving down the road and won’t get out of your way. You work your whole life to get a place like this, and they’re renting!”

– The Washington Post

 ?? ?? Singer and musician Dickey Betts of American rock group The Allman Brothers Band performs at Fillmore East, a nightclub in New York City in 1971. /
Singer and musician Dickey Betts of American rock group The Allman Brothers Band performs at Fillmore East, a nightclub in New York City in 1971. /

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