Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. After some reunions in the following decades featuring updated lineups, the original group of Allman Brothers Band members ...
Dickey Betts, who died Thursday at age 80, really was born a ramblin’ man. He left home at 16 to join the circus and became a renowned guitarist touring the world with the Allman Brothers Band. He ...
Dickey Betts — guitarist, lyricist, vocalist and founding member of The Allman Brothers, died in April at the age of 81. With his passing, only one original member of the seminal Southern rock band ...
The year 1973 was transitional for the Allman Brothers Band. On the one hand, 1971's At Fillmore East and 1972's Eat a Peach had both been successful, reaching No. 13 and No. 4 on the Billboard album ...
THURSTON COUNTY, Wash. — It can be hard work having so much fun on stage, but for more than 10 years, The Olson Bros Band have been bringing their brand of country rock to every corner of the ...
The original Allman Brothers Band, the pre-October 29, 1971 version, was the brainchild of Duane Allman. The aural record of the band from this period has been augmented substantially since the advent ...
Although Larry McCray was the first to record Warren Haynes’ “Soulshine” in 1993, Allman Brothers Band fans most closely associate the track with the Southern rock band’s 1994 album, Where It All ...
The surviving members of the Allman Brothers Band have paid tribute “with deep sadness” to guitarist Dickey Betts, a founding member of the group who died Thursday at age 80. “His extraordinary guitar ...
Guitar legend Dickey Betts, who co-founded the Allman Brothers Band and wrote their biggest hit, "Ramblin' Man," has died. He was 80. The Rock & Roll Hall of Famer died at his home in Osprey, Florida, ...