I'm 66 years young as well, mate. And I wholeheartedly agree with you. The mid 50s to the late 60s in America were some of the best times in modern human civilization, IMO. Cheers.
I've lived 77 yrs and have never used drugs to get through life. Times have not always been easy, but refuse to give control to drugs that take over one's life. Some things are different that u can't control, don't let take control.
How great for you! You should be proud of yourself. I believe addiction is inherited, so my years of sampling was in the late '60's thru the mid '80's. Learned a lot. Be happy you left it, and are still alive. Also don't waste your time on people that don't like you. Always be true to your yourself. I'm proud of myself ♡ @@DariaLang-u6z
Nothing to be sad about here : it is A CELEBRATION !!!!! WE ARE ZZZ BLESSED INDEED !!!!! WE HAVE HEAVEN .... as John Anderson of YES put it so APTLY ............. we just don't KNOW it .......
Many years ago, Rolling Stone polled their audience... IF YOU WERE STUCK ON A DESERT ISLAND, with but one song to listen to, what would it be? Yep, LOAN ME A DIME won!
and now we have the same 🐂 here at home,that was a tough time thankfully we made it thru. fresh out of h.s, letter and number was pulled mmmm, here we go again.
I'm an 83 yr old great-grandmother and think that if you don't listen to the blues you don't really know what life is about. As a young teen of 12-13, I discovered the blues and a hell of a lot of great musicians. Managed to finally see the Allman Bros in person in 1973 but Duane was already gone. Stood right up at the stage under Gregg's keyboard and didn't move from it until the end. I never had much money but a great life because I knew what to value, even after my ex divorced me and his 2 sons and I'm still listening.
im a proud 70 yr old. The Allmans cancelled (Birmingham, England) when i was due to see them. Unfortunately didnt get to see them but recently saw the nearest band to them. Tedeschi Trucks Band
I classify the Allman Brothers as Southern Rock. I agree, there's music from our day that many generations are unaware of. It may even change their lives.
I remember all these songs myself they were great great bands never to be duplicated again I'm a baby boomer myself and a Vietnam vet so I remember all these songs I'm 70 now great times great bands
A masterpiece of blues. Best axe ever. Have to acknowledge the keyboard and horns were fantastic. And the voice was so much more. Just the best of blues. Who's going to fill their shoes? Can't be done.
Kenny wayne shepard. , joe bonnamassa , marcus king , gary clarke jnr , and many others are keeping the blues alive ...im 67 and love the old stuff but there are great players doing great stuff in 2024 ......
My favorite Duane. Over all the Allman Brothers incredible licks and the tracks he laid on Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs. Also, my favorite Boz vocals.
Age truly is just a number! Tough to hear of so many musicians and singer/songwriters whom impacted me so deeply keep dying though! I have developed a love for some younger 'uns so I can die before them. I look forward to completing my 60s and making it to 81!
Mr. Duane Allman died on my 3rd birthday. I grew up listening to the Allman Brothers Band and have always wanted to be a little older so I could've experienced the music scene that was happening during the mid to late 60's. This is the first time hearing this amazing song. My God, what a great group of musicians that are giving me such a wonderful experience. I cannot express the level of respect that I have for the generations before mine. These photos take me to a time I never known. A more beautiful time that brought the world music that is timeless, from a time that will never be again. I thank you all.
Brother, you are welcome to it all. Enjoy it through all your days. There was never a time like that, and there will never be a time like that again; however, the music lives on forever!
I feel fortunate to have been turned on to the blues.I've been playing blues piano and Chicago blues harp.on stage wit harmonica last 12vyesrs.im still playing and have aboutv90 harmonicas.lol.imb72 feel I have to play. I should have both instruments under mythumb.
If ul iked the Yardbird's,listen to John mayall's 1st 2 records with Clapton, Peter green and mick Taylor. (Got on suit when performing) Mick. U will love.a hard road ,and bare wires of my life.by John mayall.plus the other 35 records. I'm still learning from him the blues piano and harp. He just passed atb90.he was a British Navy seal,and 1st modeling for playgirl magazine. Lol.
Everyone thinks their generation had the best music. I just sent this song to my son. In a day or two, he will send one to me. I may or may not like it. He may or may not like this. The only thing that matters is that we are sharing music together.
Same here. I remember one rainy night driving home from work and this came on the radio (thanks WHFS) and I pulled over into a parking lot, and for the next twelve minutes I tuned out the rest of the world. Starting around the eight minute mark, one of the most expressive, emotional instrumental passages ever.
Totally agree. Our generation was neck deep in FINE MUSIC. It was playing in the house constantly - it defined our youth & filled our days & nights. If we didn't have a record turning we had a choice of fantastic radio stations to tune into. I sure miss good radio.
Once in a very great while ….. 2 great musicians get together … like Boz Scaggs and Duane Allman ….. and they get backed up by great studio artists …. Horn section …. Percussion …. And they create something timeless . When I first heard this tune , I lost track of time and forgot any issues of the day . At least once a week I’ll pour me a glass of wine or pull something from my whiskey collection….. roll a fatty, pull this album out and forget the issues of the day . ✌🏿✌🏿✌🏿🥃🥃🍷🍷
In 1969 The Allman Bros opened a show for LED Zeppelin in a high school gym in Macon Ga, Changed my life forever. Im now 71 and still get chills when i listen to this song.Theres never been anyone like Duane
Omg!! You saw a live show with Led Zepplin and and the Alman brothers. I am kind of hurting, jealous, and so, so sad that I wasn't there. Living here in Calgary, Alberta, Canada(nice place but..) we didn't get as many big stars as other places. But we did get an amazing concert with Jethro Tull. Blew our minds🤣.
The end of an era is upon us folks..I'm 75, been playing B-3 all my life...finally parked it for good this year...was a great run. Moments like these will soon exist in our memories, our vinyl or once in awhile played together just for fun...I miss the old days..don't you?
Class of '70, I value the memories! But I gave up missing them. I decided to keep making top shelf memories. Been a RV nomad for last 5 years and never lived as free. Great-full the avatar is still granting me most requests No generation of music is better than another...we experience things as WE are, not like they are. 🙏🌍☮️☯️🕉️✌️💥🤜🤛
@@MarkTLarry That was deep. Your comment has been physically written in my little log book of "deep thinking"/buzzed situations. Very profound comment. Thank you. I'm 58 and did some drumming /singing/drinking back in the day. Tonight, I had just cought a buzz 🌿, and was going through my Jackson Brown stuff on TH-cam. When it ended I had an Almond Brothers recommendation (because they're usually in the rotation 😉), and stumbled onto this masterpiece. Some scientific agency (or guru), needs to research how the damn planets were aligned from the mid 60's, through the late 70's! So very many talented people. I believe there really was something cosmic happening in the music world back then.
Yes, the days dwindle down to a precious few. I plan to listen to this great music until I breath my last breath. My children will have my record collection and my stereo equipment. Rock on, Brother!
There must have been a shift in the space time continuum. There was music everywhere. Concerts every week. And outdoor festivals every weekend. Bring a blanket ,some pot and some boones farm. People just enjoying life!
This song almost got my family kicked out of our apartment. You heap praise on the crisp sound of your little systems but there is no replacement for a few hundred watts and big loudspeakers.
At 62 i feel blessed that i can now discover the blues that I didn't give a toss about in my younger days. As the saying goes, Young dumb and full of come. If it wasn't for SRV I wouldn't be here.
For me, no one matched SRV on the guitar - I got to see him in a small club in Dallas in the early 80s before he had a record deal - still the greatest musical performance I have ever witnessed!
I live in Alabama, few years back my wife and I spent the day in muscle shoals, we went to all the venues…….it was really a fun day……I was surprised when we went to the studio and did the tour……turns out snoop dog had funded a remodel of the studio! I grew up on the Allman brothers band……to this day I still listen to the ABB….everyday in my car on the cd player. RIP allman brothers gang…..we, all of us, the boomers are coming to the end of the line. We are now the old folks. I would change a thing, this is back when music had a back bone…..it was the real deal.
Zig says not him he was on to allmans and , marshall tucker, scaggs, johhny winters, morrison, joplin ya ya ... like a bee on honey,,66, 67,68,69,wbcn boston underground radio fed us locals, music from muscle shoals, san fran, chi town loved yhem then love them now....
Yep, us boomers grew up during the greatest explosion of original music since the Renaissance! From Bill Haley, to the Beatles, to Jimi Hendrix and Woodstock. What a ride!!!
One of my first favorite songs was Stagger Lee by Lloyd Price....I was 9 years old and grooving to an old, beat up radio we had growing up in rural Oklahoma.
The thing about Duane was he literally slept in a tent in Muscle Shoals just to get the opportunity to record. NO ONE was more suited to the Muscle Shoals sound than him. One special soul.
Never ever get tired of this. That opening bar by duane is a masterpiece. Every player fantastic, but if duane never played anything else this would cement him ask the great soulful guitar player he was. Come on all u shredders take a lesson
This isn't just a song. It isn't just a music video. It's a tribute to the unique folks, who collaborated in a place & a space in time (down south), & they made it shine with a brilliance that has rarely been attained, before or since. 🪄
With no shame I say I have seen Boz about 40 times in concert, and no matter how many times he plays Loan Me A Dime it still grabs my soul and takes me to a place I want to stay in forever. Amazingly awesome. Thank God for talented musicians like these guys. My ears are lucky to hear them.
I’ve seen Boz 7 times and it’s not nearly enough. I’d see him 100 more times if it were possible. I did get to see him in the super group The Rock And Soul Review.
To this day no replacement. Not meaning to insult anybody. 70 years old and I know every note in my head on a song like this. Guitars players know about this and it's melted in our brains.
We were the luckiest generation of all.. They don't make music like this anymore. Allman Brothers was my first concert in PHX az. I was 15. Oh those glorious days.
Four years every time I wax my car I put on the Duane Allman anthology and couldn't wait to hear Boz scaggs and Dwayne Doolittle me a dime and I still listen to it this day and I'm 71 years old
That's so cool, man. I'm 47 now and had Anthology on c.d. and wore my discs out over the years. I liked the "Mean Old World" w/ Clapton and luv the "Shake For Me" w/ Hammond. I could see waxing a car to all those tunes..
Fair trade - being born late 50's a kid in the 60's and a teen in the 70's, which makes me OLD. I traded age for music!!! I got the best of that bargain.
@wavygr Amen to that brother! Everytime I stand up these days, there's two weeks of pain telling me to set back down. Every step. I'm a '54 vintage m'self. Upright and righteous.
Those Swampers at muscle shoals produced a sound that can never be duplicated.....that’s why all the great rock legends had to go there and record with them.....truly amazing....there is a an awesome documentary about them.....far out man....
me too , right from one of the greatest keyboard intros to boz scaggs on vocals to Duane on lead... and you know what it can never be better than this ....fuck it
Just heard that a friend; legendary Manchester musician, poet, historian and raconteur, C.P Lee has died today. Soon after I got the sad news I stumbled across this great performance and it`s mood and sentiment sums up how sad I feel .
My parents are right after the boomers but sti grew up with most of the music. I was radio raised and eventually found songs they never would of none was from their time😂
I bought this album 40 years ago, put it in the turnable and played "Loan Me A Dime" 11 times in a row. The arrangement is outstanding, the horn work is superb, the piano playing, particularly the crescendo at the end is incredible, Boz's voice suits this song, and Duane's guitar playing is otherworldly. Without question, my favorite song of all time. Still sends chills up my spine.
@@PaulC-bw7gb Yes, me also, around the same time bought this album. It is in a classic all by itself. Kinda in the Jonny Winters category of inspired blues rock. A Masterpiece of writing and playing, and is nice and long, we used to put this song on and just let the music flow all around us. What more could you want in a song. It has it all. People now days really don't know about this song. So we have to spread the word. The baby boomers of the previous generation, (us), have to tell the people. With these 3 4 minute songs, really don't tell the story of a song, unless it is done very well. The song these days aren't worth the plastic there put on. So Paul, rock on, don't forget your rock roots, I'm not. Dave in Sierra Vista AZ
I rank it one and two with Goin Down Slow which is the only recording ever made of Duane singing. Put the two of them together and I forget I am human and just become the music....sooo amazing!!!
As some others wrote, I too am a ‘baby boomer’, and was 14 years old when this was first released (now going on 70). I was also a pianist and organist since I was 5, and can relate to the instrumental portions of this piece, as well as the lyrics. It’s a real shame that most of today’s generation doesn’t know what they’re missing out on when they listen to the crap that’s popular now and considered as being good ‘music’ done by ‘talented’ people. We had some great music back in ‘our’ day, and thanks to technology today are fortunate to still be able to watch, listen, and appreciate music, artists, and songs like this 🎶❗️
@@sincityyy73 😆 LOL 👍 Yes, we sure did! Back in the 70’s and 80’s I was working on Wall Street in Manhattan (NYC) as a stock and options day-trader (one of the only and youngest - 24 y.o. - licensed females, that was in this line of work at that time), and everything was about ‘sex, drugs, and rock and roll’, esp in this business! (I won’t deny 🤥 having done any of them either!)
@@elainemeyer5062 Wow, I ran from those guys. They were something else as were other professions. IN 12 YEARS I lived there I only had 2 boyfriends. And my picker was broken with 2. Thankfully were are still here. NYC had its flavors and colors of paw prints.
@@cheri238 👍 Yes, I agree with you! That’s the primary reason why I left the City when I did and began to work in NJ near my home, and then from my home. People who were in that type of business, like me, usually had a ‘burn out’ around their mid-40’s! I’m sure it’s the same with other ones too, plus back then it was considered as being a relatively ‘safe’ city to walk around without needing a weapon!
An undisputed truth: We had the best music back then. The musicians were something else. The times were amazing, and it all came together to be a magic moment in history. Glad I lived it and loved it.
I'm going to be 63, January 1, 2020 and this was the first album, not a 45 single, I ever bought, DUANE ALLMAN ANTHOLOGY I . I laid 300 pennies down on the counter of the only record store, looked at the albums on the wall and liked this cover. From there the only records I bought were from the musicians on that album. I knew it was a dam good album and couldn't stop listening to it You wanna know what I played it on?? Some box I got with my moms' S & H GREEN STAMPS. I dunno how many stamps were pasted in the books. It was like 3 books of stamps. It had 2 removable side speakers and the needle would slide across the album. Had to put a penny on top.
@Bob Burroughs The best music of all was in the 60s and 70s. I am 67 and I I still listen to this. Ya, I grow up, but this music is in my soul and is the essence of me. I grew up in the San Francisco bay area. And Underground rock was what I was listening to. This song was a part of it.There will be another time than that for music. It was magical and I was there to here it all. Dave in Sierra Vista Az
The greatest white boy blues song ever recorded. Nothing else to be said. The first time I heard this on our local college station I had to pull over in my car so I could listen to it. Not just Duane, Boz was also such a fantastic talent.
Beautiful! I first became aware of Boz when he was with Steve Miller. He's just great. Classy dude. Duane's death hit me as hard as Jimi's. I'm vintage, so I recall the plane crash that took out Buddy, Ritchie, and the Big Bopper. I was 12. That one felt like a loss of innocence for me and my music loving buddies. But Duane's demise was as tough as any to take.His playing was so beautiful and mature. No kid stuff, no showing off. His mission was obviously to serve the song in the best way possible. Nobody did it better.
A friend from college and I quit and were living in Cincinnati. Radio WEBN announced that a couple of bands were playing that afternoon for free for the practice. The better known band was about to go on tour and they had to do the first couple of shows without their lead singer who had just had an emergency tonsillectomy. His brother wanted a little experience doing lead. We only lived three blocks away from the venue, the Ludlow Garage, so we went on down. The first group was the NRBQ who were damn good. The second band which was the one missing their lead singer was the Allman Brothers Band. First time Gregg did a whole performance as lead singer.
A great moment in time for real music. Talented people who had dreams and worked hard to to achieve them. Said something about the character of young kids of that era. Don't see it in to many artists of this era, fame comes to easy with minimal talent.
I'm also a baby boomer and it just doesn't get any better than this especially if you are absolutely a blues lover like me. Music lovers who are this generation definitely grew up with the best era of tunes ever ;
Amen, I have to bite my tongue when so many kids listen to what they call music. I'm so grateful I am old enough to have seen most every band that mattered live those were the days.
I've been saying for years that say whatever you will about us Boomers, we had the best music! People are STILL getting blown away by some of the great music we grew up on. I saw a Live Skynyrd vid from a huge arena somewhere, and someone commented that it was sad when you realize your grandparents were cooler than you will ever be!
Always loved this song. Just never understood why Boz went in the direction of music he choose later. That I always turned off, as it was the not this music at all...😮
@@mikebaird8648 : I knew if I lived long enough I would come across someone who would agree with me on how disappointing Boz Scaggs was. Almost everyone I grew up with or went on to know loved Boz's " Lido" period & the music that followed, while hating this recording. The only album that Boz put out that I liked around this period was " Moments." Thank you for putting a smile on my face.🙂✌
There wasn’t a genre that my generation couldn’t enjoy together. Incredible musicians, song writers, performers. Incredible time to be alive. Current “music” just can’t touch it.
I turned 69 this past May and I have to agree with all the folks that are praising the music back from the 60's through the 70's, the absolute best music came from that era. There were so very many great guitarist's emerging from this era and I love them all but, I'm going to go one farther and say that Duane Allman was without question the Greatest Guitar Player of All Time. I can't even begin to imagine what music the Allman Brothers Band would have made if Duane had not died in '71. Now we find ourselves as dinosaurs with the greatest memories of any generation. I for one wouldn't want it any other way. Keep on listening my brothers and sisters...
Hey Brother I know there are bands that are considered better but for my taste they do something for me that I can not even put into words. I'm 71 and their music always makes me feel like i'm back in time and i'm not exaggerating. When possible I turn on all the young people I can onto AB and watch them grow musically.
@@emilykinkade888 How could I add to this!! The internet have given us our voice back. Remembering the songs we love and playing them seconds later. Tell me, if the internet was around when we were young, it would have been awesome. Dave in Sierra Vista Az.
@@TheHealthySquad True, but programs like U Tube, we hijacked some of what the government did not want, and we made it our own. Damm, we the people, changed the direction of what the government wanted and it now, is wonderful. Dave in Sierra Vista Az.
Wyatt Hale Lucky for all of us, we now have apps like Pandora and Spotify and great headphones, which are so great for exploring all music past and present. I also get emails from sites like JamBuzz. Enjoy the journey!
You were born too late, but we have recordings from back in the 1960s that will inspire you for a lifetime, and carry it forward after we who were there are all gone... This was one of the best albums...
It took me twenty years to get the blues. Beginning with THE YARDBIRDS in Nineteen-seventy-six. It took me almost twenty years to understand the music of LED ZEPPELIN. Those guys weren´t heavy metal, those guys weren´t blues, those guys weren´t hard rock, those guys weren´t folk ... those guys were world class. Dear Wyatt, I like your ethusiasm.
@@jenniferwhitewolf3784 Don't forget the 50's an 40's too. The 60's and 70's were the culmination of all genres coming to a peak of creativity. All the right things aligned in that era. There are I believe just as good if not better writers today but if you write songs today there is a larger back catalog of tunes and only so many chords you can put together that sound good. Eventually you will sound like a song from the past. It is inevitable. But that doesn't matter. What matters to me is the sincerity and style of the writer. Of course it doesn't mean that one can't write a new song and not sound like another one but it is getting harder and harder.
Amen Brother! I am the last wave of the Boomers at 62 and we did indeed experience the Last of the great mix of educated, inspired, dedicated and gifted self taught talents to ever make and record Real Music. Tumultuous times bring out the Best and Worst in people and that’s the story of life. I hope that the younger talents such as BBS etc continue to grow in popularity as there seems to be a growing crop of Real Musicians re-emerging after decades of auto tuned, synthesized thump and bump everywhere. Play On.
While my friends were listening to the Archie's, this is what stirred my soul. They had never heard of John Mayall, Blind Faith and certainly not Duane or Boz. Blessed with the best.🎸
Sugar, Sugar -- yeah, that was some sticky shit! Plenty of folks like your old friends, still listening to the same 20 tunes on the radio. We were so fortunate to have people like The Allman's, Boz, Muscle Shoals, Motown, and Stax, as well as the original R&B folks out of Chess, the British Invasion, the great musicians working in LA, etc. It was a great time to grow up and open our minds, and what an awful time to be fading away when so many are closing theirs. Still, this music always makes me happy.
I was always into both sides of the music world.. whatever I missed am going back now and catching up Really love all this concert footage, trivia, and learning what I never knew about the musicians.. Power to the past !!
Born in 1961, both siblings older than I. Grew up with some amazing music. Went to some incredible concerts. I would have to say, The Allman Brothers is one of the best southern rock bands that I've attended.
So damned glad that I at least knew enough to immediately select any unheard song with Duane Allman on it (especially when paired with an artist of Boz's calibur) because I now sit here, at 52, listening to this gem for the very first time ..and I'm being blessed by every note. Brought me to tears before the vocals began. Good God.
Can you imagine being in the Studio with Rick Hall, Boz, Duane and the Swampers. Must have been magical, here we are 50+ years later, still rockin with this stuff
Recorded 51 years ago earlier this month, this song has the guitar wizardry of Duane Allman and the soulful vocals of Boz Scaggs and the backup rhythm section of Muscle Shoals. To me the greatest guitar lead ever, brings tears to my eyes listening to Duane and wonder what music we would of had from him if he didn't die at 24 in a motorcycle accident.
I'm sitting in my living room in muscle shoals Al right now listening to this great music. Gives me goose bumps to think this was being created right down the road when I was 12. What a mark this great sound has made on music.
Back in the 70s, a local San Francisco radio station asked its listeners to name the one song they would want to listen to if stranded on a dessert island, and this one won by a landslide....Duane!! Why did you have to die so young!!
For those who don't know...Boz Scaggs was also in the Steve Miller Band for a spell before leaving for a solo career, which was successful, charting several hits. In fact, it was his second stint with Miller, whom he had met at a young age. They also attended college together in Madison, Wisconsin, and Scaggs was the vocalist for Miller's first band, the Marksmen. They hooked up again later in San Francisco, playing together in Miller's commercially successful band.
I saw Boz when he was either sitting in or in a brief stint with Mother Earth (with Traci Nelson) at the Fillmore East, and he played a super "Loan Me A Dime" - just smoking on the lead guitar!
Boz credited drummer, Roger Hawkins as the man who fanned the Flame on this song, taking the band on a trip they didn't really expect. Roger died a couple of months ago. May he be jamming with all the other Muscle Shoals greats who went on before him.
Yes Boz Scaggs great man great music and was underrated anyway I'm watching right now and love it by the way loan me a dime that's when the phone Boost around we're only 10 cents to make a call cuz we had no cell phones haha what a trip love you all
66 years old. “Those were the days my friend and we thought they would never end.” Unfortunately they did, but fortunately the music of days gone by does live on here in our hearts and souls. Many of us are gone, but many of us continue on. We lived this time, there was no other like it, nor will there ever be! God bless us all and God bless rock and roll!!!
I will be 66 in a week and we truly grew up in the best of life growing up on the beaches of SoCal listening to tunes like this, it brings tears of joy to my eyes when I hear this number as well as a few others
Henry... I'm a decade older than you, so I saw rock 'n' roll in the "Big Bang" year of 1955 (Little Richard, Chuck, Fats, and Bo).That was an exciting sound track to my youth. But the pinnacle of rock 'n' roll was in the late 60s to early 70s. This song shows it at it's best. The song is a blues written by Fenton Robinson, and interpreted by some of the best musicians of our musical lives.
Let's give credit where credit's due. A great song. If you evwr wanted to call a woman you loved back, because your broken heart losing her still ached, this song is it. If you cant relate then you never will. Blues are the essence of our music. You have to feel and live bad times to write like this. This song is very good. It captures not only the past essence of the blues but makes you feel it. A man wishing he could have one more chance. Guys....youve been there havent you? Somebody loan me a dime.... your right.. I sure as hell wish I could call my old time use to be.
I saw Boz Scaggs in concert in 2017. What a time it was. Brought back so many memories. For his encore he played this song. It was truly a religious experience.
Play This At My Funeral In Rememberance of All The Good Ones Gone To Heaven Waiting On Us To Walk Through Heavens Gateway Hmmm Mmmm Yes, YES! Thank You Boy's For Your Inspirational Song Even If Its For A Dime To Help Us Homeless To Find Our Home In Heaven, In Honor Of These Good Boys Playing This Song We Thank You, A-Ka-Boy-Bone-Thaw I'll See You When You See Me, We don't have words for Good Bye!
Inside of a Boz Scaggs cover of a blues standard is an absolute masterpiece of playing by Duane Allman backed by some of the greatest musicians god ever made.
Its 2023 and Im 70 and still this hits me in my heart. Fabulous stuff. I have two sons and both have a wide range of music loves, maybe due to me introduceing them to my favs or them finding their own loves. Music is so important in life.
I wrote my own comment on this song about 6-7 months ago, but to add to yours… I’ve read what I feel/believe are very good 👍 ‘sayings’ re music in general (not only this one) over the past years: #1) ‘Music is Food for the Soul’ #2) ‘I have a therapist, and her name is Music’ #3) ‘Music is a safe high’ #4) This (? his exact words) was said by 📝 🎹 Beethoven: ‘To play a wrong note can be forgiven, but to play without feeling is inexcusable!’ *** These are only some of them, but imo they’re ALL gems 💎! I’m sure both your sons 💕 and appreciation for music is a result of both your reasons! BTW, I’m also close to 70 myself, and if you read my own comment, you’ll see the rest of what I wrote about THIS 🌟 song.
@@elainemeyer5062 Very true stuff. I had a friend, now deceased, who was a psychiatrist. Sometimes when treating a patient and thought it was appropriate, he used the lyrics from the Eagles, Desperado as a teaching aid. Knowing him he probably used other songs as well. Music and lyrics are powerful medicine.
@@beniciomoldenado2315 👍 I agree with you, and thanks for your comment. There are countless songs with lyrics that, if listened to carefully, can be ‘therapeutic’ in a variety of situations. Although some of them may be rather ambiguous, it’s up to an individual to interpret them in a manner in which they can relate to personally. I’m sure your friend used a # of different ones, depending on the individual he was treating. * For 1 example - ‘The Silence’, by the Manchester Orchestra (not to be confused with the ‘Sound of Silence’ by S & G), who are unfortunately, to my knowledge, not a widely known group here in the USA 🇺🇸. But, the lyrics are meaningful in many respects, and I could imagine this would have been a good one to have used in coping with the loss of a loved one. Plus, it happens to be a very beautiful song in general imo!
Aric, Ledizz., Stevie, (A lot of the best, Jimmy too, the (B this is Where it came from)B.B.they all made this happen.)Praise them. The Thrill is on. Wm, have fun. 65, next Moth.
I wonder how muscle Shoals recordings so much extraordinary talent was that by design was it by luck? Or did they make the talent look good or actually I should phrase it did they maximize the skill side of the talent that recorded there? This is objective question I really would be interested in reading the answers
I have a friend that grew up in Muscle Shoals that talks about how in all other parts of Alabama there was heavy racial tension and because of the music, that wonderful sound from game studios, muscle shoals sound studios, that is in the background of this picture, it wasnt happening there. It was about the heart, the souls, the wonderful words and sounds coming from the hearts of the musicians and the times, and the lives going on around them. We need these kind of musicians and hearts and sounds today, right now with all going on in America.
"you sure got that right", thanks. these day lyrical artist are few to many..no-one i've heard since 60/70 era. not one candle held to 'm, salvia best 2wards me too. peace
I'll always be grateful for much of the 60's music, it being there when I needed it most, when, as a Medic during the Vietnam War, once I'd seen and heard enough I refused to wear my uniform to protest that meat grinder of a war and as a result confronted a 15 year prison sentence in Leavenworth Penitentiary. So much of that music had healing qualities to it, saying a lot about its writers and performers. It helped me get through those times and as I age out of this existence I'm very grateful I did what I knew I had to do, and so much of the 60's music made it all possible. Peace.
Yes, I am a baby boomer, yes I made it thru NAM, now at 74 I can still smoke some good pot, and enjoy this song, almost at the end of the line. FTW.
Thanks
i was lucky i think to know guys like you,shit,with me i just missed going to nam,only a year,im glad you didnt get killed there
@@waynecarter4200 thanks
FTW indeed! (You deserve a good "FTW!")
You and me both, brother. We got 50 years on that nightmare.
I'm 66 years of age, this is music they way it should be. No drum machines, no lip sync. Just straight ahead rock music.
I'm 66 years young as well, mate. And I wholeheartedly agree with you. The mid 50s to the late 60s in America were some of the best times in modern human civilization, IMO. Cheers.
no auto tune too
I've lived 77 yrs and have never used drugs to get through life. Times have not always been easy, but refuse to give control to drugs that take over one's life. Some things are different that u can't control, don't let take control.
Pur song ! 😎🙋🌏💚🌓💟Thank-you.
How great for you! You should be proud of yourself. I believe addiction is inherited, so my years of sampling was in the late '60's thru the mid '80's. Learned a lot. Be happy you left it, and are still alive. Also don't waste your time on people that don't like you. Always be true to your yourself. I'm proud of myself ♡ @@DariaLang-u6z
Almost makes me sad this morning..... for the passage of time and the loss of so much. We were so lucky to live through that era
Nothing to be sad about here : it is A CELEBRATION !!!!! WE ARE ZZZ BLESSED INDEED !!!!! WE HAVE HEAVEN .... as John Anderson of YES put it so APTLY .............
we just don't KNOW it .......
God Blessed Us,But at the time,We didn't know it....
This Music Drills My Heart.....
We have memories
Great music... GREAT time in our Lives also.
“Every generation likes to think it’s music was the best. Turns out, ours really was” JG
Amen
A good foundation.
No Shit !!! Peace !!! ( 71and it still make my old get up and feel it )
Real music is born in garages, porches and bars, not corporate suites. A shit ass war adds context.
that's like saying Atari is still the best computer. You're denying evolution.
This was truly the summer of love I fell for my husband when I was 14.. still together in '23
Congrats!!
Congrats--you have good taste-I was in Vietnam in 69 but I wish I would have met a girl like you when I got home--more power to both of you
Hey all I can Say - Really glad for You Both ❤😊 !!!!!
Many years ago, Rolling Stone polled their audience... IF YOU WERE STUCK ON A DESERT ISLAND, with but one song to listen to, what would it be?
Yep, LOAN ME A DIME won!
Quite an achievement in this day and age! 😊
I'm a Boomer too, Nam in 66, two tours, I have everything the Allman brothers band have made. The real soul of the South.
Perfectly stated.
Thank you for your service
Cheers to you
and now we have the same 🐂 here at home,that was a tough time thankfully we made it thru. fresh out of h.s, letter and number was pulled mmmm, here we go again.
Saw them with Marshall Tucker, and Charlie Daniel’s. Allman Brothers wrote such good stuff. Well so did most of our southern rock bands back then 👍🍺
I'm an 83 yr old great-grandmother and think that if you don't listen to the blues you don't really know what life is about. As a young teen of 12-13, I discovered the blues and a hell of a lot of great musicians. Managed to finally see the Allman Bros in person in 1973 but Duane was already gone. Stood right up at the stage under Gregg's keyboard and didn't move from it until the end. I never had much money but a great life because I knew what to value, even after my ex divorced me and his 2 sons and I'm still listening.
May God bless you sweetheart. Peace
God bless you. Rock on.
im a proud 70 yr old. The Allmans cancelled (Birmingham, England) when i was due to see them. Unfortunately didnt get to see them but recently saw the nearest band to them. Tedeschi Trucks Band
BLUES IS WHAT LIFE IS ABOUT,GOD BLESS THANK YOU
I classify the Allman Brothers as Southern Rock.
I agree, there's music from our day that many generations are unaware of. It may even change their lives.
Baby boomers were privileged to be here to listen to the best music ever produced
The best bands in the best musicians and the best lyrics came out of the baby boomer generation and the one just before it
It definitely was a magical era. I do feel privileged! 🤘
Agreed!
So very true..smoke on 😂 ❤..that's life..😅🎉😂
Yes we were
Im so glad to be a baby boomer even though that makes me an old man. Our generation had the BEST music in the history of the world!
Yes we did!!!!
Oh yes, sir, we did - and still do, thanks to modern technology. Gives my heart peace.
I remember all these songs myself they were great great bands never to be duplicated again I'm a baby boomer myself and a Vietnam vet so I remember all these songs I'm 70 now great times great bands
So right...grew up in San Francisco in the 60's.
Yes , we’re all a lot older than we feel Ah? Some times I miss those days.... can’t go back ever tho. Right???.......
A masterpiece of blues. Best axe ever. Have to acknowledge the keyboard and horns were fantastic. And the voice was so much more. Just the best of blues. Who's going to fill their shoes? Can't be done.
Kenny wayne shepard. , joe bonnamassa , marcus king , gary clarke jnr , and many others are keeping the blues alive ...im 67 and love the old stuff but there are great players doing great stuff in 2024 ......
Is barefoot accepted ?
Duane's guitar work was a masterpiece...
He had soul. Ya could just feel it❤😢
Great !
My favorite Duane. Over all the Allman Brothers incredible licks and the tracks he laid on Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs. Also, my favorite Boz vocals.
Duane is okay, but listen to Peter Green on 'fool no more' (Fleetwood Mac live at the BBC-Version) or 'Rollin man' (Shrine '69-Version)!!!
At 81, I'm happy with my life because of the music I lived with....nothing like it, ever. Forever
that's a cool way to look at it. i like it...about 15 yrs younger and i feel the same way.
Age truly is just a number! Tough to hear of so many musicians and singer/songwriters whom impacted me so deeply keep dying though!
I have developed a love for some younger 'uns so I can die before them. I look forward to completing my 60s and making it to 81!
At 69 I also am happy with my life and I can tell you why we feel this way, We lived our lives well.
A friend once told me boz was a joke performer that ended our relationship bye bye moron
@@williamfenton8043 Silk Degrees is one of the most amazing albums ever. Talk about catching lightning in a bottle.
Mr. Duane Allman died on my 3rd birthday. I grew up listening to the Allman Brothers Band and have always wanted to be a little older so I could've experienced the music scene that was happening during the mid to late 60's. This is the first time hearing this amazing song. My God, what a great group of musicians that are giving me such a wonderful experience. I cannot express the level of respect that I have for the generations before mine. These photos take me to a time I never known. A more beautiful time that brought the world music that is timeless, from a time that will never be again. I thank you all.
It was nice when I was 14yo. the Yardbirds .. all the '60s/70s music was different ..
Brother, you are welcome to it all. Enjoy it through all your days. There was never a time like that, and there will never be a time like that again; however, the music lives on forever!
I feel fortunate to have been turned on to the blues.I've been playing blues piano and Chicago blues harp.on stage wit harmonica last 12vyesrs.im still playing and have aboutv90 harmonicas.lol.imb72 feel I have to play. I should have both instruments under mythumb.
If ul iked the Yardbird's,listen to John mayall's 1st 2 records with Clapton, Peter green and mick Taylor. (Got on suit when performing) Mick. U will love.a hard road ,and bare wires of my life.by John mayall.plus the other 35 records. I'm still learning from him the blues piano and harp. He just passed atb90.he was a British Navy seal,and 1st modeling for playgirl magazine. Lol.
Everyone thinks their generation had the best music. I just sent this song to my son. In a day or two, he will send one to me. I may or may not like it. He may or may not like this. The only thing that matters is that we are sharing music together.
Send him "I'll Be Waiting" by Santana off of Moonflower. If you like of course. Peace and love
Fabuloso!
The luckiest generation music-wise. And now with TH-cam we can relive our youth.
Yes we were blessed with this time and space
Amen! I thank TH-cam regularly.
Probably the most underrated song ever. The guitar and organ play send chills up my spine. Glad I grew up listening to music like this.
Same here. I remember one rainy night driving home from work and this came on the radio (thanks WHFS) and I pulled over into a parking lot, and for the next twelve minutes I tuned out the rest of the world. Starting around the eight minute mark, one of the most expressive, emotional instrumental passages ever.
Totally agree. Our generation was neck deep in FINE MUSIC. It was playing in the house constantly - it defined our youth & filled our days & nights. If we didn't have a record turning we had a choice of fantastic radio stations to tune into. I sure miss good radio.
yes, truly feel sorry for the kids today
Amen Brother
Michael Mikulski Agree, such a perfect pairing of Allman’s guitar and Beckett’s organ. They lay the emotional foundation for a fantastic vocal.
Duane and Greg, Boz, Muddy, the Band, Albert King, Paul Butterfield, Mike Bloomfield, Dylan, Jimi - what a time we had!!!
And SRV
yes sir. Had the good fortune to see him twice
Glorious, and we knew it then . . . 68 yr old childless cat lady . . . 😊
Great list. There were so many great bands and musicians then. Let's not forget Joni. CSN&Y also come to mind. So many more....
Oh my, whatever happened to good music? I miss these days.
AUTO TUNE and Idiots.
Join us, your a blues er
The suits took over
We fought every where except at home,we didn't take care of home
Once in a very great while ….. 2 great musicians get together … like Boz Scaggs and Duane Allman ….. and they get backed up by great studio artists …. Horn section …. Percussion …. And they create something timeless . When I first heard this tune , I lost track of time and forgot any issues of the day . At least once a week I’ll pour me a glass of wine or pull something from my whiskey collection….. roll a fatty, pull this album out and forget the issues of the day . ✌🏿✌🏿✌🏿🥃🥃🍷🍷
Excellent
U Nailed it...!
That my man is about the best cool way if looking at issues
Amen.
I want to come over to your house some night. 😁
In 1969 The Allman Bros opened a show for LED Zeppelin in a high school gym in Macon Ga, Changed my life forever. Im now 71 and still get chills when i listen to this song.Theres never been anyone like Duane
That is an incredible story
The emotion of this song subtly rips your heart out with intense passion And diliberate precision thank GOD
I can't imagine Led Zeppelin and Duane together in one night... And Bozz...
Omg!! You saw a live show with Led Zepplin and and the Alman brothers. I am kind of hurting, jealous, and so, so sad that I wasn't there. Living here in Calgary, Alberta, Canada(nice place but..) we didn't get as many big stars as other places. But we did get an amazing concert with Jethro Tull. Blew our minds🤣.
@Jessica T The ABB played in my hometown in South Georgia. The tickets were $3.00. I still have the stubs!
The end of an era is upon us folks..I'm 75, been playing B-3 all my life...finally parked it for good this year...was a great run. Moments like these will soon exist in our memories, our vinyl or once in awhile played together just for fun...I miss the old days..don't you?
Yes I do, but to have lived it, makes it last forever. Rock on wherever you are
Class of '70, I value the memories! But I gave up missing them. I decided to keep making top shelf memories.
Been a RV nomad for last 5 years and never lived as free.
Great-full the avatar is still granting me most requests
No generation of music is better than another...we experience things as WE are, not like they are.
🙏🌍☮️☯️🕉️✌️💥🤜🤛
sure do--incredible musicians--incredible music---rock on
@@MarkTLarry
That was deep.
Your comment has been physically written in my little log book of "deep thinking"/buzzed situations.
Very profound comment. Thank you.
I'm 58 and did some drumming /singing/drinking back in the day.
Tonight, I had just cought a buzz 🌿, and was going through my Jackson Brown stuff on TH-cam.
When it ended I had an Almond Brothers recommendation (because they're usually in the rotation 😉), and stumbled onto this masterpiece.
Some scientific agency (or guru), needs to research how the damn planets were aligned from the mid 60's, through the late 70's!
So very many talented people.
I believe there really was something cosmic happening in the music world back then.
Yes, the days dwindle down to a precious few. I plan to listen to this great music until I breath my last breath. My children will have my record collection and my stereo equipment. Rock on, Brother!
There must have been a shift in the space time continuum. There was music everywhere. Concerts every week. And outdoor festivals every weekend. Bring a blanket ,some pot and some boones farm. People just enjoying life!
Yes, and I spent all of my hard earned money on albums and concerts ‼️Those were the days….😊
Because at that time Music was very, very important to us all. It's what tied our culture together. We all shared the same music.
Yes! We would throw the bottles of Rock n Rye over the side fence and then just walk thru the front gate no problem
Yes, some joints and Boone’s Farm apple wine. Set the way back machine bro
I really miss those days
This song almost got my family kicked out of our apartment. You heap praise on the crisp sound of your little systems but there is no replacement for a few hundred watts and big loudspeakers.
yea, man. I had a pair of big-ass Altec Lansing floor speakers. This was in the early Seventies when you just had to have 12" woofers. Remember?
im 98 now loving this Track still drinking Whiskey and Moon shine and Smoking
OMG ! 👏👏👏👏👏👏
Rock & Roll will never die!
Lol, tell the truth man, Your only 68, but look 98😂 .
Too much partying ! Cheers you old dog!🎉
I an 71 and still singing and smoking. Love these guys.
Given Hell Papps
Sitting with my man, day 18 in hospital. Music is my savior
This cuts to the soul
I hope that things get easier on y'all real soon.
Roll with it (BOTH of you), to better tymes!!
God speed...hope all is well.
Hope your both doing fine Sister. ❤
Get well!
At 62 i feel blessed that i can now discover the blues that I didn't give a toss about in my younger days. As the saying goes, Young dumb and full of come. If it wasn't for SRV I wouldn't be here.
For me, no one matched SRV on the guitar - I got to see him in a small club in Dallas in the early 80s before he had a record deal - still the greatest musical performance I have ever witnessed!
Muscle Shoals is where the greatest ROCKERS ROLLED!! Today's muzik ain't got ANY soul!!
Today's music comes from the music factory 🏭.
Totally agree. Well said.
Thank you Rick Hall
It's not even music
I live in Alabama, few years back my wife and I spent the day in muscle shoals, we went to all the venues…….it was really a fun day……I was surprised when we went to the studio and did the tour……turns out snoop dog had funded a remodel of the studio! I grew up on the Allman brothers band……to this day I still listen to the ABB….everyday in my car on the cd player. RIP allman brothers gang…..we, all of us, the boomers are coming to the end of the line. We are now the old folks. I would change a thing, this is back when music had a back bone…..it was the real deal.
D. Allman could do no wrong on the guitar. Everything he did made everyone he did it with first class.
F’ing FANTASTIC!!!!!
RIP ❤️ the world lost a real talent!
Fifty years ago I was listening to this music without a real sense of how great it really was.
yuppers
Yes the radio could play all day and never a lousy song.
There was so much really great music out there, back then, that sometimes a gem would be lost in the mix. CharlieG
Played the hell out of this song. I had never heard of Boz before this song.
Zig says not him he was on to allmans and , marshall tucker, scaggs, johhny winters, morrison, joplin ya ya ... like a bee on honey,,66, 67,68,69,wbcn boston underground radio fed us locals, music from muscle shoals, san fran, chi town loved yhem then love them now....
Every time I stumble unto this song I have to stop what I am doing and just give it its due. It’s perfection.
and that's what I'm doing now !!☺
Me and you both
I had the pleasure of escorting Boz Skaggs around Scottsdale Ariz. He played guitar and sang everywhere. A cool guy
@@lynnadams7017 That's awesome musical history....thanks for sharing!! We sure did have the best music ever!! Blessings, joy, love and peace, ❤✌❤
Love this.
Yep, us boomers grew up during the greatest explosion of original music since the Renaissance! From Bill Haley, to the Beatles, to Jimi Hendrix and Woodstock. What a ride!!!
I'm still on the train hope it never ends
Saw them all in about 1970 I was in high school
I'm still riding at 65
Every civilization has its peak and decline and the 60s was the high water mark. Contemporary music shows just how far we've fallen.
One of my first favorite songs was Stagger Lee by Lloyd Price....I was 9 years old and grooving to an old, beat up radio we had growing up in rural Oklahoma.
The thing about Duane was he literally slept in a tent in Muscle Shoals just to get the opportunity to record. NO ONE was more suited to the Muscle Shoals sound than him. One special soul.
Camped outside!! Together with Boz, Rick Hall and the Swampers they tore the roof clean off
Yep slept in the parking lot. Toured there in June 23
Never ever get tired of this. That opening bar by duane is a masterpiece. Every player fantastic, but if duane never played anything else this would cement him ask the great soulful guitar player he was. Come on all u shredders take a lesson
This isn't just a song. It isn't just a music video. It's a tribute to the unique folks, who collaborated in a place & a space in time (down south), & they made it shine with a brilliance that has rarely been attained, before or since. 🪄
Yeah man
Agree
Boz just coming into his own and they all knew it.
💖💖💖💖💖💖
Truth.
With no shame I say I have seen Boz about 40 times in concert, and no matter how many times he plays Loan Me A Dime it still grabs my soul and takes me to a place I want to stay in forever. Amazingly awesome. Thank God for talented musicians like these guys. My ears are lucky to hear them.
Amazing. Only seen him 3x's.
You lucky, lucky, LUCKY person!!!😊
So true😊
Awesome,you are correct,I'm 61
I grew up with all but these guys now on a different level.I love reading the comments.And BTW THANKS YOU TUBE
I’ve seen Boz 7 times and it’s not nearly enough. I’d see him 100 more times if it were possible. I did get to see him in the super group The Rock And Soul Review.
To this day no replacement. Not meaning to insult anybody. 70 years old and I know every note in my head on a song like this. Guitars players know about this and it's melted in our brains.
We were the luckiest generation of all.. They don't make music like this anymore. Allman Brothers was my first concert in PHX az. I was 15. Oh those glorious days.
So true. Completely agree.
Totally agree. Along with Bob Dylan’s Desolation Row and Jackson Brown’s Load Out with David Lindsey.
Dwayne Allman would have been 77 years old today. Happy birthday, Dwayne.
If someone said I could only listen to one song, over and over, for the rest of. my life there's a good chance this is the one I'd pick ...
first time I heard this song I was driving home, got home, but couldn't leave the car until the song ended 7 minutes later. Still never turn it off
This is my first time and am amazed.
Four years every time I wax my car I put on the Duane Allman anthology and couldn't wait to hear Boz scaggs and Dwayne Doolittle me a dime and I still listen to it this day and I'm 71 years old
That's so cool, man. I'm 47 now and had Anthology on c.d. and wore my discs out over the years. I liked the "Mean Old World" w/ Clapton and luv the "Shake For Me" w/ Hammond. I could see waxing a car to all those tunes..
Fair trade - being born late 50's a kid in the 60's and a teen in the 70's, which makes me OLD. I traded age for music!!! I got the best of that bargain.
@wavygr Yes , it hurts so very much. It hurts me too. Born in 56
I wouldn't trade my age for youth, having been a part of the 60's n 70's music. Those were the days when music was badas* as all get go.
@wavygr Amen to that brother! Everytime I stand up these days, there's two weeks of pain telling me to set back down. Every step. I'm a '54 vintage m'self. Upright and righteous.
@ TJ
Born in 1957 we share the same parameters. Music is all their is! AND a good system to listen to it through -
@wavygr
"IT HURTS ME TOO"
GRATEFUL DEAD.
Born in 1957. January 1, 1957 no less.
Those Swampers at muscle shoals produced a sound that can never be duplicated.....that’s why all the great rock legends had to go there and record with them.....truly amazing....there is a an awesome documentary about them.....far out man....
Even the British musicians
Patterson Hood’s ( Drive-By Truckers) father on bass… fascinating 😊✌️
The previous statement you read is true, no names were changed to protect the innocent,
th-cam.com/video/hKmGUIM1uAI/w-d-xo.html The movie Muscle Shoals
@@timothylaroe6003 Dave.
I listen to this almost every single day lately. With all the bullshit in the world now (2020) it chills me out and I just get lost in it.
me too , right from one of the greatest keyboard intros to boz scaggs on vocals to Duane on lead... and you know what it can never be better than this ....fuck it
Just heard that a friend; legendary Manchester musician, poet, historian and raconteur, C.P Lee has died today. Soon after I got the sad news I stumbled across this great performance and it`s mood and sentiment sums up how sad I feel .
My parents are right after the boomers but sti grew up with most of the music. I was radio raised and eventually found songs they never would of none was from their time😂
I hear ya, trumps America sucks.
@@ronp1018 A fucking men.
Barry beckett legendary keyboards. So glad I was born in the era of stunning musicians. Our music was real.
I bought this album 40 years ago, put it in the turnable and played "Loan Me A Dime" 11 times in a row. The arrangement is outstanding, the horn work is superb, the piano playing, particularly the crescendo at the end is incredible, Boz's voice suits this song, and Duane's guitar playing is otherworldly. Without question, my favorite song of all time. Still sends chills up my spine.
I bought mine around the same time, maybe 45 years ago. I still play it as often as I can! 🙏
Absolutely! The horns, the piano, and the rest of them rock it the hell out! A masterpiece if there ever was one!
@@PaulC-bw7gb Yes, me also, around the same time bought this album. It is in a classic all by itself. Kinda in the Jonny Winters category of inspired blues rock. A Masterpiece of writing and playing, and is nice and long, we used to put this song on and just let the music flow all around us. What more could you want in a song. It has it all. People now days really don't know about this song. So we have to spread the word. The baby boomers of the previous generation, (us), have to tell the people. With these 3 4 minute songs, really don't tell the story of a song, unless it is done very well. The song these days aren't worth the plastic there put on. So Paul, rock on, don't forget your rock roots, I'm not. Dave in Sierra Vista AZ
Have to (agree 100%} the marrying of all the instruments ... Boz's voice (FANTASTIC) !!! Everyone of these musicians are impecable🙌🙌🙌
Not to mention the whole album is addictive
71 here..we grew up with the best music ever..what a song..!!! Stops me in my tracks..just have to sit down and listen!!
Same as you❤
In my humble opinion the greatest Blues recording of all time ... 50 years later and still so powerful ...
I rank it one and two with Goin Down Slow which is the only recording ever made of Duane singing. Put the two of them together and I forget I am human and just become the music....sooo amazing!!!
Agreed!
ny first time hearing it...as my younguns say, they killed that
The same will be said another 50 years from now.👍
I agree 100 %.
Damn I wish he was still here,who knows what he would have produced,so deep in my heart ❤️
We lost him at 24. Just imagine...
66 year old gal here, our music was simply the best! Stands the test of time and is universally enjoyed like no other era.
You know it, baby! we had the greatest music of all time!
You are old as hell, I'm just 65...
As some others wrote, I too am a ‘baby boomer’, and was 14 years old when this was first released (now going on 70). I was also a pianist and organist since I was 5, and can relate to the instrumental portions of this piece, as well as the lyrics. It’s a real shame that most of today’s generation doesn’t know what they’re missing out on when they listen to the crap that’s popular now and considered as being good ‘music’ done by ‘talented’ people. We had some great music back in ‘our’ day, and thanks to technology today are fortunate to still be able to watch, listen, and appreciate music, artists, and songs like this 🎶❗️
I couldn't agree with you more we also had better drugs.
@@sincityyy73 😆 LOL 👍 Yes, we sure did! Back in the 70’s and 80’s I was working on Wall Street in Manhattan (NYC) as a stock and options day-trader (one of the only and youngest - 24 y.o. - licensed females, that was in this line of work at that time), and everything was about ‘sex, drugs, and rock and roll’, esp in this business! (I won’t deny 🤥 having done any of them either!)
@@elainemeyer5062 Wow, I ran from those guys. They were something else as were other professions. IN 12 YEARS I lived there I only had 2 boyfriends. And my picker was broken with 2. Thankfully were are still here. NYC had its flavors and colors of paw prints.
@@cheri238 👍 Yes, I agree with you! That’s the primary reason why I left the City when I did and began to work in NJ near my home, and then from my home. People who were in that type of business, like me, usually had a ‘burn out’ around their mid-40’s! I’m sure it’s the same with other ones too, plus back then it was considered as being a relatively ‘safe’ city to walk around without needing a weapon!
Who could forget... Good ole 714 lemon ludes... 🤪😜
2 tours in Nam.1967-1969.Welcome home bro.
An undisputed truth: We had the best music back then. The musicians were something else. The times were amazing, and it all came together to be a magic moment in history. Glad I lived it and loved it.
Fucking masterpiece. And I never knew Duane was the lead guitarist. This is one of the best songs ever recorded.
You may know this, Eric Clapton claims Duane was the greatest guitarist ever. Duane is the lead guitar on Clapton’s Layla. Skydog was magical.
Dam sure is!!!
Get Duane Allmans anthology album. I have had it since it came out early 70's. This , Aretha, Dereck and the Dominoes, Wilson Pickett and much more
Petty - Catch Duane on Wilson Pickett's "Hey Jude"....phenomal!
I've heard it a thousand times never new Duane was on it !
THE BEST MUSIC EVER MADE ,, I AM 69 YEARS OLD
I'm going to be 63, January 1, 2020 and this was the first album, not a 45 single, I ever bought,
DUANE ALLMAN ANTHOLOGY I .
I laid 300 pennies down on the counter of the only record store, looked at the albums on the wall and liked this cover.
From there the only records I bought were from the musicians on that album. I knew it was a dam good album and couldn't stop listening to it
You wanna know what I played it on?? Some box I got with my moms' S & H
GREEN STAMPS. I dunno how many stamps were pasted in the books. It was like 3 books of stamps. It had 2 removable side speakers and the needle would slide across the album. Had to put a penny on top.
We remember older folks talking about the good ol days
That was OUR good old days indeed Friend
Be 70 in May 2020
And I am 70, still listening...
@Bob Burroughs The best music of all was in the 60s and 70s. I am 67 and I I still listen to this. Ya, I grow up, but this music is in my soul and is the essence of me. I grew up in the San Francisco bay area. And Underground rock was what I was listening to. This song was a part of it.There will be another time than that for music. It was magical and I was there to here it all. Dave in Sierra Vista Az
I am an old man, but when I hear this, all those memories come rushing back. I do know the music back then was awesome. Thank you.
The greatest white boy blues song ever recorded. Nothing else to be said.
The first time I heard this on our local college station I had to pull over in my car so I could listen to it. Not just Duane, Boz was also such a fantastic talent.
Amen.
Oh it's definitely not a white boy blues song but a great song indeed. Here's who wrote it.
th-cam.com/video/1R5gOSOs9nM/w-d-xo.html
My cousin and me Douglas Reeves used to jam for hours on guitars I miss him 😢
Saw Boz in Macon Ga last night so had to come to " Get Me Some" White Blues Boys"!
If I had a time machine I’d go back to 1970 and go see Duane Allman.
If you went back to the 70s you would't neb come back, Andy!
Yeah! Hurry and don't put it off because he unfortunately dies next year...
Go back to see him - i think to stop him getting on that bike
would be a better use of your time machine .
They used to play for free in Piedmont Park in Atlanta back in the day.
I'll buy the ticket for the Way-Back machine, Andy. You buy the beverages.
There are times when you just need to just sit there, put the headphones on, turn it to 11 and ignore anything and everything else for 13 minutes.
Make it 8 hours, not 13 minutes.
Or ten for Texas Flood SRV!
Amen to that my brother 😎
Copy That!!!
I'm going to be turning 65 soon I had the coolest older brother that turned me on to all kinds of beautiful music and I miss him terribly
Beautiful! I first became aware of Boz when he was with Steve Miller. He's just great. Classy dude. Duane's death hit me as hard as Jimi's. I'm vintage, so I recall the plane crash that took out Buddy, Ritchie, and the Big Bopper. I was 12. That one felt like a loss of innocence for me and my music loving buddies. But Duane's demise was as tough as any to take.His playing was so beautiful and mature. No kid stuff, no showing off. His mission was obviously to serve the song in the best way possible. Nobody did it better.
Y'all put a tear in my eye.
Amen .
Love the Boz too .
Box is everything that ever was...
A friend from college and I quit and were living in Cincinnati. Radio WEBN announced that a couple of bands were playing that afternoon for free for the practice. The better known band was about to go on tour and they had to do the first couple of shows without their lead singer who had just had an emergency tonsillectomy. His brother wanted a little experience doing lead. We only lived three blocks away from the venue, the Ludlow Garage, so we went on down. The first group was the NRBQ who were damn good. The second band which was the one missing their lead singer was the Allman Brothers Band. First time Gregg did a whole performance as lead singer.
Definitely the richest array of Music, may not be fun being physically old, but this shit keeps my heart young!
Very few folks could have stated any better than you just did! . . . Amen to that, Rock Steady.
Keeps the soul alive too . Rock On
@@eileenkidd22 Yes the Heart and Soul, don't want to be numbed out yet!
A great moment in time for real music.
Talented people who had dreams and worked hard to to achieve them.
Said something about the character of young kids of that era.
Don't see it in to many artists of this era, fame comes to easy with minimal talent.
The older I get the harder I push it and real American hippy musee helps
I'm also a baby boomer and it just doesn't get any better than this especially if you are absolutely a blues lover like me. Music lovers who are this generation definitely grew up with the best era of tunes ever ;
Dem blues!!!!
Amen, I have to bite my tongue when so many kids listen to what they call music. I'm so grateful I am old enough to have seen most every band that mattered live those were the days.
I've been saying for years that say whatever you will about us Boomers, we had the best music! People are STILL getting blown away by some of the great music we grew up on. I saw a Live Skynyrd vid from a huge arena somewhere, and someone commented that it was sad when you realize your grandparents were cooler than you will ever be!
I don't know, I thought you died years ago JEd. Put out another good lp with Taj. That'd be nice.
One of the few things that makes me glad to be as old as I am. Great music, great memories, and I'm sure, some great lost memories too.
This recording is a masterpiece. Great vocals by Boz Scaggs & marvelous guitar playing by Duane Allman.
Always loved this song. Just never understood why Boz went in the direction of music he choose later. That I always turned off, as it was the not this music at all...😮
@@mikebaird8648 : I knew if I lived long enough I would come across someone who would agree with me on how disappointing Boz Scaggs was. Almost everyone I grew up with or went on to know loved Boz's " Lido" period & the music that followed, while hating this recording. The only album that Boz put out that I liked around this period was " Moments." Thank you for putting a smile on my face.🙂✌
@@mikebaird8648 He is back doing some blues/jazz stuff agin mate, fear not
@@Quadrant14 Thank's for the knowledge. Fill me in brother, where and when? Really great of you to reach. Thx...
There wasn’t a genre that my generation couldn’t enjoy together. Incredible musicians, song writers, performers. Incredible time to be alive. Current “music” just can’t touch it.
I turned 69 this past May and I have to agree with all the folks that are praising the music back from the 60's through the 70's, the absolute best music came from that era. There were so very many great guitarist's emerging from this era and I love them all but, I'm going to go one farther and say that Duane Allman was without question the Greatest Guitar Player of All Time. I can't even begin to imagine what music the Allman Brothers Band would have made if Duane had not died in '71. Now we find ourselves as dinosaurs with the greatest memories of any generation. I for one wouldn't want it any other way. Keep on listening my brothers and sisters...
Couldn’t have said it any better! Hearing Dwayne for the first time solidified my wonderment of the great sound of a great guitarist.
Hey Brother I know there are bands that are considered better but for my taste they do something for me that I can not even put into words. I'm 71 and their music always makes me feel like i'm back in time and i'm not exaggerating. When possible I turn on all the young people I can onto AB and watch them grow musically.
Agreed
I'm 70, and happy to be a dinosaur. I still have this music.
agree with all of your post. I put Bloomfield in the same stratosphere as DA!
This is the reason for the Internet.
The reason for the internet is Gov't control
The only great ☝.
❤🤺🥓⚓🗻🗽🤽🌬🥁✈🏪🏩🏨
🏤🏭🎠🤹🕯🌬🗽🤺👁💀
@@TheHealthySquad That's true...but at least they throw us a bone with these awesome music videos.
@@emilykinkade888 How could I add to this!! The internet have given us our voice back. Remembering the songs we love and playing them seconds later. Tell me, if the internet was around when we were young, it would have been awesome. Dave in Sierra Vista Az.
@@TheHealthySquad True, but programs like U Tube, we hijacked some of what the government did not want, and we made it our own. Damm, we the people, changed the direction of what the government wanted and it now, is wonderful. Dave in Sierra Vista Az.
Its 2020, I'm 24 years old. And I love the blues. These guys were among the best to ever do it in my little bit if knowledge.
Wyatt Hale Lucky for all of us, we now have apps like Pandora and Spotify and great headphones, which are so great for exploring all music past and present. I also get emails from sites like JamBuzz. Enjoy the journey!
You were born too late, but we have recordings from back in the 1960s that will inspire you for a lifetime, and carry it forward after we who were there are all gone... This was one of the best albums...
Jennifer WhiteWolf I am67...grew up in the thick of it, and loved every minute!
It took me twenty years to get the blues. Beginning with THE YARDBIRDS in Nineteen-seventy-six. It took me almost twenty years to understand the music of LED ZEPPELIN. Those guys weren´t heavy metal, those guys weren´t blues, those guys weren´t hard rock, those guys weren´t folk ... those guys were world class.
Dear Wyatt, I like your ethusiasm.
@@jenniferwhitewolf3784 Don't forget the 50's an 40's too. The 60's and 70's were the culmination of all genres coming to a peak of creativity. All the right things aligned in that era. There are I believe just as good if not better writers today but if you write songs today there is a larger back catalog of tunes and only so many chords you can put together that sound good. Eventually you will sound like a song from the past. It is inevitable.
But that doesn't matter. What matters to me is the sincerity and style of the writer. Of course it doesn't mean that one can't write a new song and not sound like another one but it is getting harder and harder.
Amen Brother! I am the last wave of the Boomers at 62 and we did indeed experience the Last of the great mix of educated, inspired, dedicated and gifted self taught talents to ever make and record Real Music. Tumultuous times bring out the Best and Worst in people and that’s the story of life. I hope that the younger talents such as BBS etc continue to grow in popularity as there seems to be a growing crop of Real Musicians re-emerging after decades of auto tuned, synthesized thump and bump everywhere. Play On.
R.I.P. Duane and Gregg . Y'all are together now.😢
Excuse me😊, I am the last of the last... Good music will never die! Born in 52.
God I hate auto-tune
@@jean4186 -What’s with the “excuse me” and “last of the last”?
@@cavscout62 just playing around
You know they're singing the blues when it makes you cry😢😢😢
I hate your brother
Waaaaay too true....Waaaaay baby, waaaaay
While my friends were listening to the Archie's, this is what stirred my soul. They had never heard of John Mayall, Blind Faith and certainly not Duane or Boz. Blessed with the best.🎸
Can't relate but wish I were there
You know in 1/2 a note if Dwayne or Mayal are on the ax
Sugar, Sugar -- yeah, that was some sticky shit! Plenty of folks like your old friends, still listening to the same 20 tunes on the radio.
We were so fortunate to have people like The Allman's, Boz, Muscle Shoals, Motown, and Stax, as well as the original R&B folks out of Chess, the British Invasion, the great musicians working in LA, etc. It was a great time to grow up and open our minds, and what an awful time to be fading away when so many are closing theirs. Still, this music always makes me happy.
I was always into both sides of the music world.. whatever I missed am going back now and catching up
Really love all this concert footage, trivia, and learning what I never knew about the musicians.. Power to the past !!
@@kwgm8578 ya Radio's pretty much died
Very sad.
Born in 1961, both siblings older than I. Grew up with some amazing music. Went to some incredible concerts. I would have to say, The Allman Brothers is one of the best southern rock bands that I've attended.
Doesn't get any better
Boz & Duane
The Allman brothers spoke to my soul many times since the 60's... and I'm a better man for it.
As Am l....
@ george Fitter
Far out! From the first time I heard it, MIDNIGHT RIDER is mine.
Well said.
Amen
george Fitter and I’m a better woman 💙🎸
And I appreciate you. I’m 66 and we had real music with real instruments
Some songs still give me chills ,not many anymore but this is one
This is one
So damned glad that I at least knew enough to immediately select any unheard song with Duane Allman on it (especially when paired with an artist of Boz's calibur) because I now sit here, at 52, listening to this gem for the very first time ..and I'm being blessed by every note. Brought me to tears before the vocals began. Good God.
Beautiful. Thank you.
Yes, that was easy!
Thank you.
Sweet ride to mellow.
Gave me chills reading this, Ty
Can you imagine being in the Studio with Rick Hall, Boz, Duane and the Swampers. Must have been magical, here we are 50+ years later, still rockin with this stuff
Recorded 51 years ago earlier this month, this song has the guitar wizardry of Duane Allman and the soulful vocals of Boz Scaggs and the backup rhythm section of Muscle Shoals. To me the greatest guitar lead ever, brings tears to my eyes listening to Duane and wonder what music we would of had from him if he didn't die at 24 in a motorcycle accident.
As much as love Clapton, I would trade him for Duane living to a ripe old age.
he was unmatched! better than srv.
Agree. Duane wasn't just a great slide player, he was a great guitar player.
Eat a Peach!
I'm sitting in my living room in muscle shoals Al right now listening to this great music. Gives me goose bumps to think this was being created right down the road when I was 12. What a mark this great sound has made on music.
I haven't heard this but 2,363 times. Will listen again.
you sure
Back in the 70s, a local San Francisco radio station asked its listeners to name the one song they would want to listen to if stranded on a dessert island, and this one won by a landslide....Duane!! Why did you have to die so young!!
@ Beau Diddley
He counts......
Mary Ellen Rossi k
Beau Diddley I will listen every single time ♥️💙♥️
66 years old and my generation got to experience some of the best music ever created.
I’m so glad I grew up in a period of time when music was art. Real musicians was incredible natural talent
I think are generation should be called The "Great music generation".☮
the VOICES were so good, too. Real, no auto tune or voice tricks.
I never required a label.
Truly
Bill Jackson/will never be matched
Our generation .....
For those who don't know...Boz Scaggs was also in the Steve Miller Band for a spell before leaving for a solo career, which was successful, charting several hits. In fact, it was his second stint with Miller, whom he had met at a young age. They also attended college together in Madison, Wisconsin, and Scaggs was the vocalist for Miller's first band, the Marksmen. They hooked up again later in San Francisco, playing together in Miller's commercially successful band.
Duane Allman slept in a pup tent outside the studio when he was a studio muscian in MS
I know...Love Boz! Love Steve Miller in the early days! Children of the Future! Love the Allman Bros!
I saw Boz when he was either sitting in or in a brief stint with Mother Earth (with Traci Nelson) at the Fillmore East, and he played a super "Loan Me A Dime" - just smoking on the lead guitar!
Share this music with iur younger genz. They need it bad. For real.
Boz Scaggs turns 80 years old today!
One of the most perfectly constructed arrangements ever.
Starts with a simmer and is boiling over at the end.
Dont you Love it? omg
I call it cookin..... WHEW!!
Boz credited drummer, Roger Hawkins as the man who fanned the Flame on this song, taking the band on a trip they didn't really expect. Roger died a couple of months ago. May he be jamming with all the other Muscle Shoals greats who went on before him.
@@kenperk9854 RIP. i play this song almost daily ROCK ON
Nothin' out of place.
Not one note.
Boz Scaaggs always on top of the heap. Always under rated. another of the best.
Yes Boz Scaggs great man great music and was underrated anyway I'm watching right now and love it by the way loan me a dime that's when the phone Boost around we're only 10 cents to make a call cuz we had no cell phones haha what a trip love you all
@@davidullman9063 You nailed it man.
66 years old. “Those were the days my friend and we thought they would never end.”
Unfortunately they did, but fortunately the music of days gone by does live on here in our hearts and souls. Many of us are gone, but many of us continue on. We lived this time, there was no other like it, nor will there ever be! God bless us all and God bless rock and roll!!!
I will be 66 in a week and we truly grew up in the best of life growing up on the beaches of SoCal listening to tunes like this, it brings tears of joy to my eyes when I hear this number as well as a few others
I'm 66,and as a 12 year old in San Francisco I would ride my bike to golden gate park and watch the airplane play at the summer of love, thanks!
Henry... I'm a decade older than you, so I saw rock 'n' roll in the "Big Bang" year of 1955 (Little Richard, Chuck, Fats, and Bo).That was an exciting sound track to my youth. But the pinnacle of rock 'n' roll was in the late 60s to early 70s. This song shows it at it's best. The song is a blues written by Fenton Robinson, and interpreted by some of the best musicians of our musical lives.
Let's give credit where credit's due. A great song. If you evwr wanted to call a woman you loved back, because your broken heart losing her still ached, this song is it. If you cant relate then you never will. Blues are the essence of our music. You have to feel and live bad times to write like this. This song is very good. It captures not only the past essence of the blues but makes you feel it. A man wishing he could have one more chance. Guys....youve been there havent you? Somebody loan me a dime.... your right.. I sure as hell wish I could call my old time use to be.
Fenton Robinson wrote it.
I saw Boz Scaggs in concert in 2017. What a time it was. Brought back so many memories. For his encore he played this song. It was truly a religious experience.
That must have been an awesome concert! This is my favorite Boz Scaggs song (along with Duane on that guitar) and the best blues song ever played!
I saw Boz in the old Phoenix Union High School auditorium. Maybe in the 80s. Great show
Play This At My Funeral In Rememberance of All The Good Ones Gone To Heaven Waiting On Us To Walk Through Heavens Gateway Hmmm Mmmm Yes, YES! Thank You Boy's For Your Inspirational Song Even If Its For A Dime To Help Us Homeless To Find Our Home In Heaven, In Honor Of These Good Boys Playing This Song We Thank You, A-Ka-Boy-Bone-Thaw I'll See You When You See Me, We don't have words for Good Bye!
I was his blind date when he came to Scottsdale Ariz. Warner bros did it. I took Boz all over small clubs. ( his choice)
@@lynnadams7017 Awesome.
My father plays this song while we're riding in the truck; spotting deer. This is the music I grew up listening to. It has matured well.
Hi Indira💐💐
you are lucky...thanks dad
Your dad has good taste.
That's illegal
Inside of a Boz Scaggs cover of a blues standard
is an absolute masterpiece of playing by Duane Allman backed by some of the greatest musicians god ever made.
in muscle shoals they got the SWAMPERS .....
you hit it right on the head, what a combo, never happen again
Its 2023 and Im 70 and still this hits me in my heart. Fabulous stuff. I have two sons and both have a wide range of music loves, maybe due to me introduceing them to my favs or them finding their own loves. Music is so important in life.
Turned 78 yesterday and this song still grabs my heart.
Fantastów IM 75
I wrote my own comment on this song about 6-7 months ago, but to add to yours…
I’ve read what I feel/believe are very good 👍 ‘sayings’ re music in general (not only this one) over the past years:
#1) ‘Music is Food for the Soul’
#2) ‘I have a therapist, and her name is Music’
#3) ‘Music is a safe high’
#4) This (? his exact words) was said by 📝 🎹 Beethoven: ‘To play a wrong note can be forgiven, but to play without feeling is inexcusable!’
*** These are only some of them, but imo they’re ALL gems 💎!
I’m sure both your sons 💕 and appreciation for music is a result of both your reasons!
BTW, I’m also close to 70 myself, and if you read my own comment, you’ll see the rest of what I wrote about THIS 🌟 song.
@@elainemeyer5062 Very true stuff. I had a friend, now deceased, who was a psychiatrist. Sometimes when treating a patient and thought it was appropriate, he used the lyrics from the Eagles, Desperado as a teaching aid. Knowing him he probably used other songs as well. Music and lyrics are powerful medicine.
@@beniciomoldenado2315 👍 I agree with you, and thanks for your comment. There are countless songs with lyrics that, if listened to carefully, can be ‘therapeutic’ in a variety of situations. Although some of them may be rather ambiguous, it’s up to an individual to interpret them in a manner in which they can relate to personally. I’m sure your friend used a # of different ones, depending on the individual he was treating. * For 1 example - ‘The Silence’, by the Manchester Orchestra (not to be confused with the ‘Sound of Silence’ by S & G), who are unfortunately, to my knowledge, not a widely known group here in the USA 🇺🇸. But, the lyrics are meaningful in many respects, and I could imagine this would have been a good one to have used in coping with the loss of a loved one. Plus, it happens to be a very beautiful song in general imo!
Whoever put this video together is an artist....Thank You
I agree!!!!!
You got that right
The great muscle shoals Alabama,some of the greatest music in the world was produced there,for real.!!
The Muscle Shoals studio musicians were the ones that gave us outstanding music on probably 80% of the songs that we listened to back then..!👍🏼❤️
Yes,Bob Seger also favored that sound!!!
Aric, Ledizz., Stevie, (A lot of the best, Jimmy too, the (B this is Where it came from)B.B.they all made this happen.)Praise them. The Thrill is on. Wm, have fun. 65, next Moth.
Don't forget Stax or the LA Wrecking Crew!
I wonder how muscle Shoals recordings so much extraordinary talent was that by design was it by luck? Or did they make the talent look good or actually I should phrase it did they maximize the skill side of the talent that recorded there? This is objective question I really would be interested in reading the answers
Did Leon Russell do some work in muscle Shoals as well?
Totally fabulous..... a short life but his music lives on Duane Allman & Boz Scaggs!
This is what I remember from my "youth". I'm 70 now and I remember these great artists. Thank you all!
I have a friend that grew up in Muscle Shoals that talks about how in all other parts of Alabama there was heavy racial tension and because of the music, that wonderful sound from game studios, muscle shoals sound studios, that is in the background of this picture, it wasnt happening there.
It was about the heart, the souls, the wonderful words and sounds coming from the hearts of the musicians and the times, and the lives going on around them.
We need these kind of musicians and hearts and sounds today, right now with all going on in America.
To this day, undeniably the nicest people on the planet in that area. I travel through there frequently, and I have never had an unpleasant encounter.
Good words Lester : make personal words for the planet, because it's all we've got ( words that is).
Music soothes the savage soul
"you sure got that right", thanks. these day lyrical artist are few to many..no-one i've heard since 60/70 era. not one candle held to 'm, salvia best 2wards me too. peace
Music crosses all social and racial boundaries. I wish more people would take interest in the blues.
I'll always be grateful for much of the 60's music, it being there when I needed it most, when, as a Medic during the Vietnam War, once I'd seen and heard enough I refused to wear my uniform to protest that meat grinder of a war and as a result confronted a 15 year prison sentence in Leavenworth Penitentiary. So much of that music had healing qualities to it, saying a lot about its writers and performers. It helped me get through those times and as I age out of this existence I'm very grateful I did what I knew I had to do, and so much of the 60's music made it all possible. Peace.
You rock man. Amazing story.
Badarse✌
You got that right brother
stop raving about your personality when you are attempting to comment on the greatest. You are irrelevant
Damn. We'll said. Thanks for not consenting. I salute you!
I think Duanne Allman has the gift, the touch and the talent at the same time.