The Allman Brothers Band: Brothers of the Road

The Allman Brothers Band: Brothers of the Road

1998 ""
The Allman Brothers Band: Brothers of the Road
The Allman Brothers Band: Brothers of the Road

The Allman Brothers Band: Brothers of the Road

8.3 | 1h53m | en | Documentary

In these two live concerts, rock's legendary Allman Brothers Band whip up the kind of excitement their fans have loved for years. This pioneering Southern rock band, including Gregg Allman and Dickey Betts, blazes through their classics in a concert performance live from Gainesville, Florida. Then the band rocks for more than an hour at the Capitol Theater. Also included is rare footage of an on-the-road hotel room jam session and a peek at a private acoustic "unplugged-style" session in a recording studio.

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8.3 | 1h53m | en | Documentary , Music | More Info
Released: December. 29,1998 | Released Producted By: Lightyear Entertainment , Monarch Entertainment Bureau Inc. Country: Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

In these two live concerts, rock's legendary Allman Brothers Band whip up the kind of excitement their fans have loved for years. This pioneering Southern rock band, including Gregg Allman and Dickey Betts, blazes through their classics in a concert performance live from Gainesville, Florida. Then the band rocks for more than an hour at the Capitol Theater. Also included is rare footage of an on-the-road hotel room jam session and a peek at a private acoustic "unplugged-style" session in a recording studio.

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Cast

Gregg Allman , Butch Trucks

Director

Veronica Loza

Producted By

Lightyear Entertainment , Monarch Entertainment Bureau Inc.

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Reviews

ccthemovieman-1 This is the Allman Brothers in concert at the Capitol Theater in the mid-to-early 1980s. Also on the tape is a two-song, 10-minute unplugged session. I found this - maybe because it was different - to be the most interesting segment to watch and hear. Greg Allman just plays and sings by himself on "Come and Go Blues." I appreciated his acoustic guitar work on that number.The rest of this is the ordinary Allman Brothers concert, meaning good songs but nothing visually to offer. Most of it solid, hard-driving rock and blues with some excellent guitar playing by Dickie Betts. However, since so much of the music is the same, it gets to be too much after awhile. A good slow, bluesy-type number in the middle would have improved this tape a lot. On personal tastes, I always thought "One Way Out" was their best number and it sounds great here, too. The 13-minute "The Judgment," featuring a long drum solo, was nothing special, unless you enjoy long drum solos.