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PorkChopSandwiches
01-25-2017, 08:13 PM
Butch Trucks, one of the Allman Brothers Band's founding drummers, died Tuesday evening in West Palm Beach, Florida. He was 69. Page Stallings, Trucks' booking agent, confirmed the veteran musician's death to Rolling Stone, but said a cause of death is currently unknown.

"The Trucks and Allman Brothers Band families request all of Butch's friends and fans to please respect our privacy at this time of sadness for our loss," Trucks' rep said in a statement. "Butch will play on in our hearts forever."

"I'm heartbroken," Gregg Allman said in a statement. "I've lost another brother and it hurts beyond words. Butch and I knew each other since we were teenagers and we were bandmates for over 45 years. He was a great man and a great drummer and I'm going to miss him forever. Rest In Peace Brother Butch."

Alongside drummer and percussionist Jai "Jaimoe" Johnny Johanson, Trucks helped lay the swinging foundation for southern-rock drumming. Jamoe once asked Duane Allman why he wanted two drummers in the group, according to the Allman Brothers biography One Way Out, and the guitarist referenced Otis Redding and James Brown's dual-drummer bands.

"Jaimoe was a real good drummer, but more of a pocket guy … he wasn't really able to handle the power," Allman Brothers guitarist Dicky Betts said in the book. "We needed Butch, who had that drive and strength, freight train, meat-and-potatoes thing. It set Jaimoe up perfectly." Although Jaimoe left and returned to the group in the Eighties, Trucks provided a constant beat throughout the band's lifespan.

Claude Hudson "Butch" Trucks was born in Jacksonville, Florida on May 11th, 1947. He started playing drums in the eighth grade and joined Jacksonville's Englewood High School band, according to Skydog: The Duane Allman Story. His parents were strict Baptists and refused to buy him a drum kit of his own until 11th grade when he promised never to play in an establishment that served liquor. Before graduating high school, he played in two bands – the Vikings and the Echoes – as well as the Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra and Jacksonville Symphonette, where he played tympani. He went on to attend Florida State University where, he once said, he "majored in staying out of Vietnam," and formed a group called the Bitter Ind.

It was at a Bitter Ind. gig in Daytona Beach where Trucks first encountered Gregg and Duane Allman. The latter would later call Trucks and ask him to play drums at a gig. Almost three years later, they would form the Allman Brothers Band.

The group issued its self-titled debut in 1969, but it stalled on the lower half of the Billboard 200 despite the presence of "Whipping Post," a song that would later become a classic-rock staple. The Allmans went on to issue albums at a quick pace and scored their first hit with 1971's At Fillmore East, a double-live LP recorded at the fabled New York City venue. It went platinum and heralded a streak of popularity for the band, which included the albums Eat a Peach (1972, released after Duane Allman's death the prior year), Brothers and Sisters (1973, a Number One album), Win, Lose or Draw (1975) and Enlightened Rogues (1979, their last Top 10 full-length). They would go on to issue several more studio, live and archival LPs through last year.


Although the group had numerous hit songs in the middle of the Hot 100, only 1973's "Ramblin' Man," off Brothers and Sisters, made it into the upper echelons, peaking at Number Two. Instead of gearing toward writing hits, the Allmans established themselves as a live force.

It was onstage, where the group's ability to meld into one unit – when they were "hitting the note," to use a phrase they said often in the Seventies – was best on display. "Hittin' the note is reaching that point where you can't do any wrong," Trucks once said, according to Skydog. "With us, when we're playing music, it's where the brain goes away and the body just does what it's supposed to do, and there's no thought and there's no question, and no matter what you do, it's right. It's getting to that spiritual level where the communication is total, but it's not mental."

The Allmans broke up and re-formed three times in the ensuing decades, and when they reunited a final time – for a stretch that lasted 1999 to 2014 – they brought in Trucks' nephew Derek to play guitar.

After the group's breakup, Butch played gigs under his own name and formed a new group, Butch Trucks and the Freight Train Band. The group had shows already booked for this spring, though Butch would play what would be his last show on January 6th.

In an interview with Rolling Stone last year, Trucks reflected on the Allman Brothers Band's unexpected status as headliners. "We were in another universe," he said. "We were out spreading the gospel of this music we had discovered. We never thought that we would be more than an opening act. Atlantic Records was riding our ass constantly to get Gregg out from behind the organ, stick a salami down his pants and jump around the stage like Robert Plant. We told them to go fuck themselves. 'We're playing this for ourselves. We've tried it your way before. We didn't make any money and we had a miserable time.'

"[By the time of the Fillmore East show], we decided, 'OK, we don't care if we don't make any money. We're having the time of our lives,'" he continued. "Little by little, people started understanding what we were doing. But it had to start with us. Once the crowd got in and we could feed on their energy, we'd feed it back to them."

DemonGeminiX
01-25-2017, 09:13 PM
:rip:

Damn. I was just listening to a few of their albums.

DemonGeminiX
01-26-2017, 12:55 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FUvxRjYqjEQ&ab_channel=AllmanBrothersonMV

PorkChopSandwiches
01-26-2017, 04:47 PM
:tup:

PorkChopSandwiches
01-26-2017, 04:58 PM
EXCLUSIVE: Allman Brothers Band drummer Butch Trucks shot himself in the head in his waterfront Florida condo in a horrific scene witnessed by his artist wife of 25 years

Butch Trucks suffered a gun shot wound to the head and died Tuesday in his waterfront condo in West Palm Beach, Florida at the age of 69

A woman caller who is unidentified on the transcript but described as 'hysterical' dialed 911 at 6:02 p.m.

The dispatcher noted his wife Melinda witnessed Trucks pulling the trigger

Although he was breathing when police arrive, Trucks expired seconds later

Palm Beach County court records show Trucks appeared to be wrestling with financials problems

In 2011, Trucks had to sell his prized home in Palm Beach for $2 million when it was possibly worth twice as much to pay off a $800,000 mortgage

Last year, the IRS filed two liens against the condo to force Trucks to pay additional taxes for 2013 and 2014 for a total of more than $540,000

He was considered by Rolling Stone magazine as one of the top 10 drummers in rock history

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4157864/Allman-Brothers-drummer-Butch-Trucks-shot-head.html

DemonGeminiX
01-26-2017, 05:13 PM
Wow. Had no idea he was in financial dire straits.

PorkChopSandwiches
01-26-2017, 05:27 PM
Crazy his wife watched him pull the trigger

PorkChopSandwiches
01-26-2017, 05:28 PM
Having to sell your 2,000,000 house to pay off your 800,000 mortgage is not what I would call a problem to die over

DemonGeminiX
01-26-2017, 06:03 PM
You don't really know his spending habits... he may have burned through that $2 million and was on the ropes.

PorkChopSandwiches
01-26-2017, 06:09 PM
true, but from the story it stated that.

DemonGeminiX
01-26-2017, 07:26 PM
It also said the IRS had a lien on his house for around $500K. He was obviously pulling a Willy Nelson.

PorkChopSandwiches
01-26-2017, 07:33 PM
But Willie just smokes weed and lets it all roll off his back :lol:

DemonGeminiX
01-26-2017, 11:39 PM
Well, there's the problem.... Butch needed more weed in his life.