Hittin' the Note The Allman Brothers Band

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CD

  • Release Date: 03/18/2003
  • Sales Rank: 28,921
  • Label: SANCTUARY RECORDS
  • UPC: 060768459922
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Hittin' the Note

1LISTENFiring Line 5:17
2LISTENHigh Cost of Low Living 7:52
3LISTENDesdemona 9:20
4LISTENWoman Across the River 5:51
5LISTENOld Before My Time 5:23
6LISTENWho to Believe 5:38
7LISTENMaydell 4:35
8LISTENRockin' Horse 7:23
9LISTENHeart of Stone 5:06
10LISTENInstrumental Illness 12:17
11LISTENOld Friend 6:12

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

It's been almost a decade since the Allmans last holed up inside a studio, and while that span has been a turbulent one -- marked, for one thing, by the contentious departure of guitarist Dickey Betts -- Hittin' the Note shows nary a sign of discord. The band's hallmark sound is essentially unchanged, although new six-string recruit Derek Trucks waxes slightly jazzier and less intense than Betts. Those who are fond of the Allmans' more open-ended explorations can dig into "Instrumental Illness," a 12-minute assay that delivers plenty of cat-and-mouse interplay. The heads-down, no-nonsense boogie crowd will likewise find sustenance, in the form of the snaky opener "Firing Line," as will those who groove to the sort of roadhouse balladry that Gregg Allman has all but perfected over the decades. ("Desdemona," for instance, conjures up images of the Allman classic "Melissa.") Thanks to the gritty bass playing of Oteil Burbridge (and the three-man percussion section), the Allmans have more spring in their step than they have any right to -- and that bounce proves pretty contagious here. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

Hittin' the Noteby Anonymous

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March 15, 2004: I have been collecting albums and cds for the last 20 years, but this one goes on my easy access shelf, I have already had lots of folks ask me what cd is that, I dont tell them till its over, cause I want them to hear all the music first, so far the end result is always the same, man that cd kicks BUTT

Hittin' the Noteby Anonymous

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October 13, 2003: This album is truly eclectic. Between Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks, you have an amazing combination of jazz, blues, fusion, and other inventive forms of rock. The ABB has less of a southern sound in this album while Haynes and Trucks work in their signatures. Every track is very unique.


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