Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Southern rocker, Allman Brothers co-founder Gregg Allman dies at 69

Liver cancer claims Allman Brothers co-founder

- By Russ Bynum and Kristin M. Hall

Gregg Allman, whose bluesy vocals and soulful touch on the Hammond B-3 organ helped propel The Allman Brothers Band to superstard­om and spawn Southern rock, died Saturday, his manager said.

Allman, 69, died peacefully and surrounded by loved ones at his home near Savannah, Georgia, his manager, Michael Lehman, said. Lehman said cancer was the cause of death.

“It’s a result of his reoccurren­ce of liver cancer that had come back five years ago,” Lehman said. “He kept it very private because he wanted to continue to play music until he couldn’t.”

Allman played his last concert in October as health problems forced him to cancel other 2016 shows. In March, he canceled performanc­es for the rest of 2017.

Funeral arrangemen­ts had not been completed Saturday. But Lehman said Allman would be buried alongside his late brother, founding Allman Brothers guitarist Duane Allman, at Rose Hill Cemetery in Macon, where the band got its start nearly five decades ago.

“That’s in his wishes,” Lehman said.

Country musician Charlie Daniels said via Twitter, “Gregg Allman had a feeling for the blues very few ever have hard to believe that magnificen­t voice is stilled forever.”

Born in Nashville, Tennessee, the rock star known for his long blond hair was raised in Florida by a single mother. Allman idolized his older brother, Duane, eventually joining a series of bands with him. Together they formed the nucleus of The Allman Brothers Band.

The original band featured extended jams, tight guitar harmonies by Duane Allman and Dickey Betts, rhythms from a pair of drummers and the smoky, blues-inflected voice of Gregg Allman. Songs such as “Whipping Post,” ”Ramblin’ Man” and “Midnight Rider” helped define what came to be known as Southern rock and opened the doors for such stars as Lynyrd Skynyrd and the Marshall Tucker Band.

In his 2012 memoir, “My Cross to Bear,” Allman described how Duane was a central figure in his life in the years after their father was murdered by a man he met in a bar. The two boys endured a spell in a military school before being swept up in rock music in their teens. Although Gregg was the first to pick up a guitar, it was Duane who excelled at it. So Gregg later switched to the organ.

They failed to crack success until they formed The Allman Brothers Band in 1969. Based in Macon, Georgia, the group featured Betts, drummers Jai Johanny “Jaimoe” Johanson and Butch Trucks and bassist Berry Oakley. They partied to excess while defining a sound that still excites millions.

Their self-titled debut album came out in 1969, but it was their seminal live album “At Fillmore East” in 1971 that catapulted the band to stardom.

Duane Allman had quickly ascended to the pantheon of guitar heroes, not just from his contributi­ons to the Allman band, but from his session work with Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett and with Eric Clapton on the classic “Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs” album. He was killed in a motorcycle accident in October 1971, just months after recording the Fillmore shows. Another motorcycle accident the following year claimed Oakley’s life. .

In a 2012 interview Gregg Allman said Duane remained on his mind every day. Once in a while, he could even feel his presence. “I can tell when he’s there, man,” Allman said. “I’m not going to get all cosmic on you. But listen, he’s there.”

The 1970s brought more highly publicized turmoil: Allman was compelled to testify in a drug case against a former road manager for the band and his marriage to the actress and singer Cher was short-lived even by show business standards.

Cher said via Twitter on Saturday, “IVE TRIED. WORDS ARE IMPOSSIBLE.”

In his memoir, Allman said he spent years overindulg­ing in women, drugs and alcohol before getting sober in the mid-1990s. He said that after getting sober, he felt “brand new” at the age of 50.

“I never believed in God until this,” he said in 1998. “I asked him to bring me out of this or let me die before all the innings have been played. Now I have started taking on some spirituali­sm.”

However, after all the years of unhealthy living he ended up with hepatitis C which severely damaged his liver. He underwent a liver transplant in 2010.

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 ?? Charles Sykes The Associated Press ?? Gregg Allman performs at Eric Clapton’s Crossroads Guitar Festival 2013 at Madison Square Garden.
Charles Sykes The Associated Press Gregg Allman performs at Eric Clapton’s Crossroads Guitar Festival 2013 at Madison Square Garden.

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