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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Eat_a_PeachEat a Peach - Wikipedia

    Eat a Peach. Eat a Peach is a 1972 double album by American rock band the Allman Brothers Band, containing a mix of live and studio recordings. Following their artistic and commercial breakthrough with the July 1971 release of the live album At Fillmore East, the Allman Brothers Band got to work on their third studio album.

    • March 12–13, June 27, 1971 (live work), September–December 1971 (studio work)
    • Tom Dowd
    • February 12, 1972
  2. Tracklist:1.Ain’t Wasting Time No More (3:41)2. Les Brers in A Minor (9:07)3. Melissa (3:55)4. Mountain Jam (19:37)5. One Way Out (Live at the Fillmore East/...

    • 70 min
    • 3.6K
    • Live Music
  3. Eat a Peach. Having firmly established themselves as “The Grateful Dead of the South” via their enormously successful 1971 Live at the Fillmore East double album, the Allman Brothers had just begun work on a new studio collection when slide guitarist Duane Allman died in a motorcycle accident. Undaunted, the group rallied together and ...

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  5. Feb 16, 2017 · The group trimmed Duane’s quote to Eat a Peach, and an iconic Southern album found its name. That Good Times story only hit the presses regionally in New York, but Guitar World reprinted the interview in November 1991 and scans of the story in full have been uploaded to fan sites. We’re celebrating the 45 th anniversary of Eat a Peach by ...

  6. Eat A Peach is both The Allman Brothers third studio album and their second live album, due to the compilation-style of it. The album was originally released on February 12, 1972 as a tribute to ...

  7. At Fillmore East (1971) Eat a Peach (1972) Brothers and Sisters (1973) Win, Lose or Draw (1975) Wipe the Windows, Check the Oil, Dollar Gas (1976) Enlightened Rogues (1979) Reach for the Sky (1980) Brothers of the Road (1981) Seven Turns (1990)

  8. Mar 23, 2023 · From tragedy to triumph: The Allman Brothers and the making of Eat A Peach. The afternoon of Friday, October 29, 1971 was an unseasonably warm one in Macon, Georgia. The air was thick with honeysuckle, and the leaves on the poplar and cherry blossom trees were still the stubborn green of summer. Houses along the sleepy streets were decorated ...

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