Long Live the ABB: Conversation from the Crossroads of Southern music, history, and culture with historian Bob Beatty

"A once in a lifetime experience." Warren Haynes on kicking the Allman Brothers back into gear

5 min · 8 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio "A once in a lifetime experience." Warren Haynes on kicking the Allman Brothers back into gear

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Warren Haynes turns 66 today. It’s hard for me to even describe how much Warren has influenced me as a fan of the Allman Brothers, as a student of the Allman Brothers, as a scholar of the Allman Brothers. Haynes has been an ABBsolute constant from the minute I discovered the band in 1993. Back then, everybody talked about the magic that the band had recaptured in the Dreams reunion and subsequent tour. And sure enough, when I saw the Allman Brothers Band for the first time in November 1993 [https://www.longlivetheabb.com/i/136377479/which-brings-me-to-long-live-the-abb] (with Warren and Allen Woody), I remember thinking, “I cannot believe this band is still this good.” Warren is probably one of the world’s most generous souls. It flows throughout his music. And it also comes through in the way he talks about the legacy of the Allman Brothers Band as a musical institution. Warren respects the heritage he is a part of. It’s one of his most endearing qualities. “I’ve always maintained that if I was going to join a band I grew up listening to, the Allman Brothers Band would be at the top of that list. It’s a once in a lifetime experience. And it’s also something you can never prepare for. No one is ever prepared for the opportunity to join a band that is an institution like that. I was preparing myself for an entirely different career trajectory and that just came along and disrupted the apple cart in a good way.” A 5-tool player. He’s obviously renown for his guitar playing. But Haynes is also a great singer, songwriter, and arranger. He is also a phenomenal onstage musical director. (I can only think about two or three times over 30+ years I’ve seen Warren live where he was not clearly the person directing things onstage.) Butch Trucks: “Warren is one of the greatest guitar players alive today. He is also a great singer and songwriter. He brings all of these elements to the band and a solid presence that gives us a real focal point when we play. He does take charge of the music when we play and I doubt if we could play the way we do if he didn’t. He does it in such a way that he pulls everyone together without stepping on anyone’s toes. It is a very tough thing to do and he does it very well.” In 1989, Warren and Allen Woody brought spirit to the Allman Brothers Band—an energy that kicked the band in the ass. “When the band called me in 89 about the reunion, one of the first things we talked about was that we needed to get back to 69, 70, 71 where the band started because if we could get back there, then the sky’s the limit. But we had to see if the new band and this new chemistry could capture that sound and that feeling.⁠ Dickey told me several times they felt like they just backed out of the music business because the environment that was going on at the time was so different, they felt like they didn’t belong. But then Robert Cray started having some success. Stevie Ray Vaughan came on the scene and was really knocking people out, and at the same time, the Grateful Dead’s audience was getting bigger and bigger. Dickey said to me, ‘You know, somewhere in between, there is us. So maybe it’s time for us to come back.’ ⁠So the Allman Brothers band came back by being themselves, and I think that’s why it lasted as long as it did. Now, people look at that music as being timeless.” The group’s Woodstock ‘94 set—the festival’s 25th anniversary—was a highlight. “I remember it being a pretty inspired performance. I mean, there was 300,000 people there, so just the adrenaline rush alone was making for some great music. But the Allman Brothers Band always walked on stage ready to take no prisoners. When I joined the band the first rehearsals were inspiring, but not to the extent that the first show was because it’s showtime, it goes up to another level. By the time we got to Woodstock in ’94, the band had been playing together for five years and was really strong.” Warren and Derek From 2001-2014, Warren and Derek Trucks anchored the longest-running Allman Brothers Band lineup. Their partnership was truly something special. “[Derek & I] were together in the Allman Brothers for about 13 years, but we had played hundreds of times on stage together prior to that. A healthy dose of rivalry can be a part of that, it just can’t be trying to outdo each other. We both come from a world in which we listen to a lot of the same music and love the same styles of music and the same approaches to music, so we’re kind of looking for the same result from what we are doing. Once that chemistry is established, being able to build upon it and play together week after week, month after month, year after year, takes it to a completely other level.” PLAY ALL NIGHT! DUANE ALLMAN & THE JOURNEY TO FILLMORE EAST [https://www.amazon.com/dp/0813069505] Haynes made the Play All Night [https://www.longlivetheabb.com/p/reflecting-on-3-years]Wall of Fame [https://www.longlivetheabb.com/p/reflecting-on-3-years] Jimmy Carter in an Allman Brothers shirt [https://longlivetheabb.printful.me/] This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.longlivetheabb.com/subscribe [https://www.longlivetheabb.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

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52 episodios

episode Spend money on experiences, not things artwork

Spend money on experiences, not things

Greetings from Stockholm. We’re visiting our daughter Tyler, who’s here for a study abroad. While touring Scandinavia, this adage/wisdom from my cousin Brad came to mind. Here’s the full conversation: Thanks for reading, y’all. Brought to you by the paid members of the Long Live the ABB community. MUSHROOM MAGICIANS (Founding Members): Steve Marshall, Brent W. Hammond, Ken Lupson, Laura McCarty PAID MEMBERS: Chris Harvey, Allen Barnes, Baileys Mike, sswoger, Bob Johnson, Bruce Miles, Buddy Lewis, Caroline Doolittle, Chuck Zumwalt, Clifford Morse, Craig Stephens, Dennis Newton, Denny, Ed Ashton, Ed Pokorny, F. D., Frank Young, Gary Wonwayout, Gary Williamson, George Holman, James Reynolds, James Yerrill, JD Guitar, Jeff Kushmerek, Jeff Schein, Jerry K, JoaquinDinero, Joe, Joe Sokohl, Joel Berger, Joel Tanzer, John Dolan, John Haughey, Jordan David, Joseph Lilly, Kenton Lee, Kevin Walker, Kurt Nielsen, Long Live the ABB, Mark Leitner, Martha Haynes, Peter Poulos, Phillip Page, Preston Root, Randy Woodall, Ray Tillman, Robert Porter, Rose Brandt, Surrender Cobra, Taylor Kropp, Tim Langan (Hot ‘Lanta Tim), Tina Christopher, Tom Pragliola, Tony Gioia, Wade McCurdy, Bob and Laura, Gary Smith, Wiszowa, Cwktwo, Hlnbkt, Cabinetsales, Art Dobie, Stanleyglennie8, Danbookin This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.longlivetheabb.com/subscribe [https://www.longlivetheabb.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

Ayer2 min
episode Greetings from Earth School artwork

Greetings from Earth School

The Unending Conversation The first time I encountered Kenneth Burke’s concept of the Unending Conversation was in 1997. It was my first semester of graduate school in a class called, Modern Rhetorical Theory. I’ve carried the ideal that life is an unending conversation ever since. It’s a central precept of my teaching, my writing, my way of seeing the world. The good thing is, I’m surrounded by people who do likewise. Earth School This video is from an upcoming episode of Conversation from the Crossroads with Richard M Josey [https://substack.com/profile/134691672-richard-m-josey], my pal and fellow maker of good trouble. He hipped me to his term, Earth School—the idea that a life well-lived means continuing to learn, to grow. People get it instantly when I use the term Earth School. It’s not something I have to explain. I offer it to you as a way to think about the kind of ancestor you want to be. Music is the ultimate unending conversation This is very much true for the Allman Brothers and extended family of bands/musicians. The core of this publication is in my subhead: Conversation from the Crossroads of Southern music, history, and culture. Long Live the ABB is the lens I use to explore those ideas. Here’s one example of that in action, my comments on a Karl Paulnack’s truly magical “2003 Address to the Parents of the Freshman Class”—Why Music Matters: The Unending Conversation [https://www.longlivetheabb.com/p/why-music-matters]. 🍄Play All Night! Duane Allman & the Journey to Fillmore East [https://www.amazon.com/dp/0813069505]🍄 BUY PLAY ALL NIGHT [https://www.amazon.com/dp/0813069505] This episode brought to you by the paid members of the Long Live the ABB community. 🍄 MUSHROOM🍄 MAGICIANS 🍄 Steve Marshall, Brent W. Hammond, Ken Lupson, Laura McCarty 🍑 PEACH🍑 PALS🍑 Allen Barnes, Baileys Mike, sswoger, Bob Johnson, Bruce Miles, Buddy Lewis, Caroline Doolittle, Chuck Zumwalt, Clifford Morse, Craig Stephens, Dennis Newton, Denny, Ed Ashton, Ed Pokorny, F. D., Frank Young, Gary Wonwayout, Gary Williamson, George Holman, James Reynolds, James Yerrill, JD Guitar, Jeff Kushmerek, Jeff Schein, Jerry K, JoaquinDinero, Joe, Joe Sokohl, Joel Berger, Joel Tanzer, John Dolan, John Haughey, Jordan David, Joseph Lilly, Kenton Lee, Kevin Walker, Kurt Nielsen, Long Live the ABB, Mark Leitner, Martha Haynes, Peter Poulos, Phillip Page, Preston Root, Randy Woodall, Ray Tillman, Robert Porter, Rose Brandt, Surrender Cobra, Taylor Kropp, Tim Langan (Hot ‘Lanta Tim), Tina Christopher, Tom Pragliola, Tony Gioia, Wade McCurdy, Bob and Laura, Gary Smith, Wiszowa, Cwktwo, Hlnbkt, Cabinetsales, Art Dobie, Stanleyglennie8, Danbookin Thanks for joining me on the journey. Until next time… This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.longlivetheabb.com/subscribe [https://www.longlivetheabb.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

31 de may de 20262 min
episode The Allman Brothers story is a story of the South. And that is also my story. artwork

The Allman Brothers story is a story of the South. And that is also my story.

The Allman Brothers Band’s story intersects with my own. I grew up in a South still shaped by segregation, Massive Resistance, and decisions that kept Black communities excluded from the means of power. The integrated Allman Brothers Band offered a powerful informal protest against the South's racial mores. How I found liberation in history. FULL EPISODE This video is an excerpt from a recent Conversation from the Crossroads: [https://www.longlivetheabb.com/p/crossroads-garcia1]“I wanted to get in the game” History, storytelling, and making sense of the South [https://www.longlivetheabb.com/p/crossroads-garcia1] Lagniappe Sending this one out again. Very proud of this collaboration with my daughter Ryan. VIDEO ESSAY: “Walk out on that stage and do it.” Bill Graham, Fillmore East, and the mighty Allman Brothers Band [https://youtu.be/jIPzxynIP8M] 🍄Play All Night! Duane Allman the Journey to Fillmore East [https://www.amazon.com/dp/0813069505]🍄 BUY PLAY ALL NIGHT [https://www.amazon.com/dp/0813069505] MERCH Fillmore East ad. [http://merch.longlivetheabb.com/] Jimmy Carter in an ABB t-shirt. [http://merch.longlivetheabb.com/] Brought to you by the paid members of the Long Live the ABB community. Join now. 🍄 MUSHROOM🍄 MAGICIANS 🍄 Steve Marshall, Brent W. Hammond, Ken Lupson, Laura McCarty 🍑 PEACH🍑 PALS🍑 Allen Barnes, Baileys Mike, sswoger, Bob Johnson, Bruce Miles, Buddy Lewis, Caroline Doolittle, Chuck Zumwalt, Clifford Morse, Craig Stephens, Dennis Newton, Denny, Ed Ashton, Ed Pokorny, F. D., Frank Young, Gary Wonwayout, Gary Williamson, George Holman, James Reynolds, James Yerrill, JD Guitar, Jeff Kushmerek, Jeff Schein, Jerry K, JoaquinDinero, Joe, Joe Sokohl, Joel Berger, Joel Tanzer, John Dolan, John Haughey, Jordan David, Joseph Lilly, Kenton Lee, Kevin Walker, Kurt Nielsen, Long Live the ABB, Mark Leitner, Martha Haynes, Peter Poulos, Phillip Page, Preston Root, Randy Woodall, Ray Tillman, Robert Porter, Rose Brandt, Surrender Cobra, Taylor Kropp, Tim Langan (Hot ‘Lanta Tim), Tina Christopher, Tom Pragliola, Tony Gioia, Wade McCurdy, Bob and Laura, Gary Smith, Wiszowa, Cwktwo, Hlnbkt, Cabinetsales, Art Dobie, Stanleyglennie8, Danbookin This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.longlivetheabb.com/subscribe [https://www.longlivetheabb.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

30 de may de 20262 min
episode The whole is greater than the sum of its parts: the founding ethos of the Allman Brothers Band artwork

The whole is greater than the sum of its parts: the founding ethos of the Allman Brothers Band

A clip from a recent podcast with John Lynskey, where we talked about the Allman Brothers Band as the ultimate team—players locked in with improvised intensity that very few bands ever match. Put simply, the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. That ethos was a founding principle of the band, and it inspired both of our professional lives as teachers and historians. When our conversation turned to the uniqueness of the Allman Brothers’ approach, John nailed a key difference between the Allmans and the Grateful Dead: the Allmans always found that crossroads home. And don’t miss the shout-out to the original Gov’t Mule—some of the most intense rock and roll either of us has ever experienced. FULL EPISODE Lagniappe In the full episode, we discussed our amazement at seeing the Warren Haynes/Allen Woody version of the Allman Brothers Band. Here’s an example from the last year they were in the band: “Dreams” 5/1/96. 🍄Play All Night! Duane Allman the Journey to Fillmore East [https://www.amazon.com/dp/0813069505]🍄 BUY PLAY ALL NIGHT [https://www.amazon.com/dp/0813069505] Brought to you by the paid members of the Long Live the ABB community. MUSHROOM MAGICIANS: Steve Marshall, Brent W. Hammond, Ken Lupson, Laura McCarty PAID MEMBERS: Allen Barnes, Baileys Mike, sswoger, Bob Johnson, Bruce Miles, Buddy Lewis, Caroline Doolittle, Chuck Zumwalt, Clifford Morse, Craig Stephens, Dennis Newton, Denny, Ed Ashton, Ed Pokorny, F. D., Frank Young, Gary Wonwayout, Gary Williamson, George Holman, James Reynolds, James Yerrill, JD Guitar, Jeff Kushmerek, Jeff Schein, Jerry K, JoaquinDinero, Joe, Joe Sokohl, Joel Berger, Joel Tanzer, John Dolan, John Haughey, Jordan David, Joseph Lilly, Kenton Lee, Kevin Walker, Kurt Nielsen, Long Live the ABB, Mark Leitner, Martha Haynes, Peter Poulos, Phillip Page, Preston Root, Randy Woodall, Ray Tillman, Robert Porter, Rose Brandt, Surrender Cobra, Taylor Kropp, Tim Langan (Hot ‘Lanta Tim), Tina Christopher, Tom Pragliola, Tony Gioia, Wade McCurdy, Bob and Laura, Gary Smith, Wiszowa, Cwktwo, Hlnbkt, Cabinetsales, Art Dobie, Stanleyglennie8, Danbookin This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.longlivetheabb.com/subscribe [https://www.longlivetheabb.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

28 de may de 20263 min
episode "Like-minded people have a way of finding each other" Brotherhood, lost tapes, and keeping the Allman Brothers story alive artwork

"Like-minded people have a way of finding each other" Brotherhood, lost tapes, and keeping the Allman Brothers story alive

Episode Overview John Lynskey taught history at Miami’s Columbus High School for thirty years, coached for twenty, and served as assistant principal for seven. Upon retirement, he moved to Macon to work hands-on with the Big House Museum, where he had served on the board since day one. He has produced more than two dozen archival releases for the Allman Brothers Band, co-wrote Allman Joy: Keeping the Beat with Duane and Gregg with drummer Bill Connell, and spent two decades as a driving force behind Hittin’ the Note magazine. But I knew John well before I knew of his connection to the Allman Brothers Band. In the early 1990s at UCF, some of my good buddies were Columbus guys, John’s guys. Lynskey was their history teacher and coach, full stop. Decades later, Mario sent a photo at John’s retirement. Talk about mushroom magic. Mario’s text arrived within minutes of it dawning on me that their beloved history teacher was John Lynskey, my fellow Allman Brothers historian and whose work I’ve been mining for decades. Our Crossroads John and I share multiple intersections. We are historians who found the Allman Brothers Band through the music and grew fascinated with the entirety of their story. We both understand what it means to sit in an archive and chase a review that might not surface for five months after an album dropped. We believe music is a primary source, a band is a team, and community is what happens when like-minded people stop pretending they don’t need each other. When I launched Play All Night [https://www.amazon.com/dp/0813069505] in Miami in October 2022, John flew down to host an event. Like the teacher and coach he is, Lynskey teed me up to tell Duane’s remarkable story in a bookstore packed with his students. That night I met Abel Sanchez of MiamiStadium on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/miamistadium/], a sports, history, and culture site that became a model for my work at Long Live the ABB. The Conversation (Picking up where we left off in part 1) During the 1989 Dreams reunion, John saw two shows he never thought would happen at Sunrise Musical Theatre in Fort Lauderdale. He knew who Warren Haynes was. Allen Woody was a revelation. He blew the room away. Dickey was still in his ABBsolute prime. Haynes pushed him into a different role—the push-pull that had been missing since Duane. We agreed Dan Toler and Dickey played too similarly for that tension to exist. We talked about my first show—November 13, 1993. I went expecting a nostalgia act. I got on the bus that night. I was unaware that Dickey had just returned from a rough patch and the Florida dates were a test run. The band broke out “Mountain Jam” for the first time in years. It was a concession from Dickey upon returning to the band. I asked John for archival favorites by year. 5/2/70 Swarthmore; 3/13/70 Warehouse, NOLA; 2/28/71 Brewer Fieldhouse with John’s favorite “Dreams;” 4/8/72 Manley Fieldhouse [https://www.longlivetheabb.com/p/manley-fieldhouse-1972]; 9/26/73 Nassau Coliseum. We talked about the dearth of Duane era bootlegs. Mike Callahan, the band’s soundman, apparently had a footlocker full of tapes. The footlocker disappeared when he got sideways with disreputable people. It’s probably sitting at the bottom of Tampa Bay. Allman Joy: Keeping the Beat with Duane and Gregg is one of my favorite books in the Allman Brothers canon. The book fills gaps. Duane’s first marriage. The Anchor Motel brawl with Shriners in Nashville. The Boutwell Studios session in Birmingham where the tapes vanished. Duane and Gregg running into Yardbirds Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck in New York—young musicians chatting, none of them knowing what they would become. I asked John for his favorite projects. Hittin’ the Note ran twenty years. The Trouble No More box set gave John an unlimited word count and earned Grammy consideration. The Laid Back deluxe reissue gathered everything Gregg recorded in that era. A Gregg Allman documentary, Gregg Allman: The Music of My Soul, is coming to seventy-five theaters this summer. Like-minded people have a way of finding each other. John has watched it happen through Columbus High School and through the music of the Allman Brothers Band. Upgrade to support the Conversation from the Crossroads. 🍄Play All Night! Duane Allman the Journey to Fillmore East [https://www.amazon.com/dp/0813069505]🍄 BUY PLAY ALL NIGHT [https://www.amazon.com/dp/0813069505] Resources * Bob Beatty, Play All Night: Duane Allman and the Journey to Fillmore East—https://www.amazon.com/dp/0813069505 [https://www.amazon.com/dp/0813069505]. * Bill Connell with John Lynskey, Allman Joy: Keeping the Beat with Duane and Gregg (2023). * Scott Freeman, Midnight Riders: The Story of the Allman Brothers Band (1995). * Abel Sanchez, Miami Stadium on Instagram—www.instagram.com/@miamistadium [http://www.instagram.com/@miamistadium] This episode brought to you by the paid members of the Long Live the ABB community. MUSHROOM MAGICIANS: Steve Marshall, Brent W. Hammond, Ken Lupson, Laura McCarty PAID MEMBERS: Allen Barnes, Baileys Mike, sswoger, Bob Johnson, Bruce Miles, Buddy Lewis, Caroline Doolittle, Chuck Zumwalt, Clifford Morse, Craig Stephens, Dennis Newton, Denny, Ed Ashton, Ed Pokorny, F. D., Frank Young, Gary Wonwayout, Gary Williamson, George Holman, James Reynolds, James Yerrill, JD Guitar, Jeff Kushmerek, Jeff Schein, Jerry K, JoaquinDinero, Joe, Joe Sokohl, Joel Berger, Joel Tanzer, John Dolan, John Haughey, Jordan David, Joseph Lilly, Kenton Lee, Kevin Walker, Kurt Nielsen, Mark Leitner, Martha Haynes, Peter Poulos, Phillip Page, Preston Root, Randy Woodall, Ray Tillman, Robert Porter, Rose Brandt, Surrender Cobra, Taylor Kropp, Tim Langan (Hot ‘Lanta Tim), Tina Christopher, Tom Pragliola, Tony Gioia, Wade McCurdy, Bob and Laura, Gary Smith, Wiszowa, Cwktwo, Hlnbkt, Cabinetsales, Art Dobie, Stanleyglennie8, Danbookin This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.longlivetheabb.com/subscribe [https://www.longlivetheabb.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

14 de may de 20261 h 1 min