THE ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND : THE ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND / BROTHERS AND SISTERS

    The Allman Brothers Band
  1. Don't Want You No More
  2. It's Not My Cross to Bear
  3. Black Hearted Woman
  4. Trouble No More
  5. Every Hungry Woman
  6. Dreams
  7. Whipping Post
    Brothers And Sisters
  8. Wasted Words
  9. Ramblin' Man
  10. Come and Go Blues
  11. Jelly, Jelly
  12. Southbound
  13. Jessica
  14. Pony Boy

Label : Mercury / Polydor

Length : 71:23

Released : 1969 (The Allman Brothers Band) / 1973 (Brothers And Sisters)

Review from AllMusic (The Allman Brothers Band) : This might be the best debut album ever delivered by an American blues band, a bold, powerful, hard-edged, soulful essay in electric blues with a native Southern ambience. Some lingering elements of the psychedelic era then drawing to a close can be found in "Dreams," along with the template for the group's on-stage workouts with "Whipping Post," and a solid cover of Muddy Waters' "Trouble No More." There isn't a bad song here, and only the fact that the group did even better the next time out keeps this from getting the highest possible rating.

Review from AllMusic (Brothers And Sisters) : Brothers and Sisters, the Allman Brothers Band's first new studio album in two years, shows off a leaner brand of musicianship, which, coupled with a pair of serious crowd-pleasers, "Ramblin' Man" and "Jessica," helped drive it to the top of the charts for a month and a half and to platinum record sales. This was the first album to feature the group's new lineup, with Chuck Leavell on keyboards and Lamar Williams on bass, as well as Dickey Betts' emergence as a singer alongside Gregg Allman. The tracks appear on the album in the order in which they were recorded, and the first three, up through "Ramblin' Man," feature Berry Oakley - their sound is rock-hard and crisp. The subsequent songs with Williams have the bass buried in the mix, and an overall muddier sound. The interplay between Leavell and Betts is beautiful on some songs, and Betts' slide on "Pony Boy" is a dazzling showcase that surprised everybody. Despite its sales, Brothers and Sisters is not quite a classic album (although it was their best for the next 17 years), especially in the wake of the four that had appeared previously, but it served as a template for some killer stage performances, and it proved that the band could survive the deaths of two key members.