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  1. www.facebook.com › people › Eat-a-PeachEat a Peach - Facebook

    Eat a Peach. 3,085 likes · 8 talking about this. A live tribute to The Allman Brothers Band and related classic rock artists.

  2. 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
  3. Mar 23, 2023 · Rolling Stone tried to earn back the good graces of the band with a review that called them “the best goddamned band in the land” and the album “a simultaneous sorrowed ending and hopeful beginning”. It was in the US chart by early March, and climbed to No4. As it turned out, Eat A Peach was a brief respite from more tragedy and trouble ...

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  5. Feb 12, 2022 · It is, in fact, the title by which most people know the seminal Southern band’s work. Yet its successor, Eat A Peach, isn’t far behind in terms of widespread recognition and for good reason: it is an equally accurate summation of their talents as musicians and posits the group as recording artists quickly learning the advantages of the ...

  6. Eat A Peach "Peach". 285 likes. Peach is a band of authentic musicians embracing their dreams. The taste for southern rock took them

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  7. Dec 14, 2012 · Buy Eat a Peach. A unique hybrid album that bridges two eras of The Allman Brothers Band, the 1972 double album Eat a Peach was recorded prior to and in the wake of the tragedy which took the life of lead guitarist Duanne Allman. Allman was killed in a motorcycle accident in October 1971 and the album is a tribute to him and his fantastic ...

  8. Jan 15, 2006 · The entire wing of prog-rock — Yes, Pink Floyd, ELP — would not conceptually exist without the gatefold cover. The Allman Brothers’ ”Eat a Peach” (1972) — one studio disc and one live — opened up to a bucolic fantasy landscape, as though glimpsing the heaven recently deceased Duane Allman had flown to. The Ohio Players’ single ...

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