When it’s time for leaving, I hope you’ll understand

Throughout the 1960s, most rock bands had two guitarists — a rhythm guitarist who played chords and established the song’s basic structure, and a lead guitarist who provided the multi-note solos that soared above it all and often stole the spotlight.

Then in 1969 came The Allman Brothers Band, which featured two supremely talented lead guitarists in Duane Allman and Dickey Betts. One would play lead while the other supported on rhythm, then they’d switch roles. Most impressive, though, was when they played lead guitars simultaneously. In the studio, these passages were precise and rehearsed, but on stage (and captured on live albums), Allman and Betts were master improvisationalists. Hearing the way these guitarists played off one another, giving each other room while adding a harmony solo to the melody solo, was truly special, and it was a primary reason the Allman Brothers were regarded, for a while, as the best band in the country.

Dickey Betts in the 1990s

Duane Allman died shockingly young, at 24, in a motorcycle accident just as the band was becoming successful. And now Dickey Betts has died as well, succumbing to cancer and pulmonary disease at age 80 last week.

As Betts put it in “One Way Out,” the 2014 biography of the band, “Because of the name of the band, a lot of people assumed Duane was the lead player and I was the rhythm guy. He was so charismatic and I was more laid back then. But he went out of his way to make sure people understood we were a twin-guitar band. ‘That was Betts who played that solo, not me,’ he would say. ‘We have two lead guitarists in this damn band!’

“Duane and I talked about how scared we got whenever the other played a really great solo. But then he’d chuckle and say, ‘This isn’t a contest. We can make each other better and do something deep.””

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Betts was drawn to music at a young age, learning ukulele at age five, then mandolin, banjo and guitar as his hands got bigger. His musical family listened to a lot of country music, Western swing and bluegrass, and as a teen, Betts became fascinated with rock ‘n’ roll and the blues. He played many dozens of gigs with different rock bands all over Florida and up the East Coast. In 1967, he met bassist Berry Oakley and formed Second Coming.

Betts in 1968

“In our band, Berry and I would take a standard blues and rearrange it,” Betts said. “We were really trying to push the envelope. We wanted to play the blues in a rock style like what Cream and Hendrix were doing. We liked taking some of that experimental stuff and putting a harder melodic edge to it. One of our favorite things to do was to jam in minor keys, experimenting freely with the sounds of different minor modes. We allowed our ears to guide us, and this type of jamming eventually served to inspire the writing of songs like ‘In Memory of Elizabeth Reed.’

“But we weren’t some garage band. We were a nightclub band. We had brought ourselves up in the professional world actually playing in bars, and that gives you a lot more depth. Duane and his brother were doing the same thing, so we all had a lot of miles under our belt when we met, despite our ages.”

When The Allman Brothers Band came together in 1968, they featured two drummers (Butch Trucks and Jai Johanny “Jaimoe” Johnson), bassist Oakley, Gregg Allman on vocals and organ, and the Betts-Allman guitar attack. They focused on blues with a rock edge, and while their self-titled debut album in 1969 performed poorly on the charts, it established them as a force to be reckoned with.

Betts’ first attempts at songwriting, which came on their next LP, “Idlewild South,” were impressive indeed. “Revival” opened the album with a burst of uptempo optimism — “People can you feel it, love is everywhere” — while the instrumental track “In Memory of Elizabeth Reed” built on an infectious riff and showcased both Betts’ and Allman’s complementary styles.

The Allman Brothers front line (from left): Duane Allman, Dickey Betts, Berry Oakley in 1970

But the band knew that something was missing from those first albums. They didn’t capture the excitement and ferocious output you’d hear when they played in concert, and they knew they needed their next release to be a double live album, where they had the chance to stretch out and show their phenomenal skills as an improvisational jam band.

“At Fillmore East” was that album, produced by the great Tom Dowd from performances at the famed New York City venue in March 1971, featuring seven extended songs over four sides. In particular, “Whipping Post” and “Liz Reed” were a revelation, showing how the guitarists had been inspired by freeform jazz greats like John Coltrane and Miles Davis, and the album ended up peaking at #13.

Said Betts: “It’s very hard to go freestyle with two guitars. It’s easy to sound like two cats fighting if you’re not careful. Duane would almost always wait for me to come up with a melody and then he would join in on my riff with the harmony. A lot of his notes are not the notes you would choose if you sat down to write it out, but they always worked. Our band came along at a wonderful time for improv, and we felt free to just play and work things out on the fly. Doing that gave it all a certain spark.”

They toured relentlessly and also continued writing and recording new material for their next album. Betts wrote the sunny, joyous “Blue Sky,” a love song to his then-wife, a Native American named Sandy Blue Sky, “but I decided to drop the pronouns and make it like I was thinking of the spirit, like I was giving thanks for a beautiful day. It made it broader and more relatable. It was a bad marriage, but it led to a great song.”

Betts said he and Allman often played acoustic guitars together backstage and in hotel rooms and buses, working out things they would later play electrically. “Little Martha,” a brief instrumental duet on Dobro guitars, came out of that.

Betts and Allman working out arrangements on acoustic guitars, 1971

Then, as the album was nearing completion, disaster struck. In a flash, Duane Allman, the band’s spark plug and spiritual leader, was gone. “We thought about breaking up and all forming our own bands,” said Betts, “but the thought of just ending it and being alone was too damn depressing.”

Thom Doucette, harmonica player and Duane’s confidant, noted, “It was kind of a leaderless operation there for a while. It very easily could’ve ended right there, but Betts pulled it out of the fire. Dickey’s personality and ego were pretty big, so he sort of took over. Someone had to, and Gregg hated responsibility and confrontation, and didn’t want to do it.”

The album, “Eat a Peach,” reached #4 and included both live and studio tracks, both with and without Duane’s contributions. On the road, the group proceeded as a five-piece, though Betts found it frustrating. “I had to learn to play Duane’s slide guitar parts, and we no longer had that dual guitar thing going. But we got through it by just playing, all the time. It’s all we knew how to do, and it’s what Duane would’ve wanted.”

Betts leading the band in 1972-73, with Gregg Allman (left) and Jaimoe (right)

The entire band tended to be excessive in their use of drugs and alcohol, but Oakley took Duane’s death particularly hard, diving deeper into the escape they provided. When he was killed in October 1972 under eerily similar circumstances, again the remaining members were faced with how to proceed. As Betts put it, “We found another bass player in Lamar Williams, but replacing Duane with another guitarist was simply out of the question.”

The answer, they found, lay in using a different instrument as the second lead: the virtuoso keyboard work of Chuck Leavell, who’d been playing with Dr. John. “When we added Chuck, it gave us a new wrinkle that energized us,” said Betts. “I’m not sure the band would’ve lasted as long as it did if it weren’t for Chuck. He was such a strong player.”

Betts, meanwhile, hit his stride as a songwriter, composing four of the seven tracks that comprised their 1973 album “Brothers and Sisters,” which reigned as #1 in the US for two weeks that autumn. The galloping “Southbound,” the front-porch country blues track “Pony Boy” and the exhilarating instrumental “Jessica” (with Leavell featured prominently) showed the diversity of Betts’ musical influences. His leanings toward country music manifested themselves most famously on “Ramblin’ Man,” which peaked at #2 as their highest charting single ever.

The song initially met some resistance from within. Drummer Butch Trucks recalled, “We knew ‘Ramblin’ Man’ was a good song, but it didn’t sound like us. It was too country to even record. But we made a demo to send to Merle Haggard or someone, and ended up getting into that long guitar jam (with guest guitarist Les Dudek adding the dual lead), which kind of fit us. So we put it on the album after all, and it ended up being our biggest hit.”

The fame that came with that album and single proved to be a double-edged sword. It made them a bigger concert draw than ever, packing arenas, stadia and festivals, but it also ramped up the partying and internal tension. For his part, Betts dipped his toe in solo waters with the country-heavy “Highway Call” LP in 1974, while Gregg Allman became more withdrawn and distracted by his own solo album (“Laid Back”) and tour, and a whirlwind relationship with pop star Cher. When he was threatened with prison on drug charges, he chose immunity by testifying against his roadie/drug dealer, which left such a bad taste that the band broke up in 1976.

Betts in 1976

A self-described workaholic during that period, Betts soldiered on with a new band and album, “Dickey Betts & Great Southern,” which saw Betts teaming up with guitarist Dan Toler on seven songs all written by Betts, notably the seven-minute piece “Bougainvillea.” A second Great Southern LP, “Atlanta’s Burning Down,” followed.

When Allman and Betts mended fences to reunite The Allman Brothers Band in 1979, it would be with Toler and bassist David Goldflies in the lineup in place of Leavell and Williams, who chose not to participate. The group came storming back with the strong “Enlightened Rogues” album, which made the US Top Ten, but again, there were storm clouds on the horizon, this time because of new record label demands and changing tastes in the music industry.

Betts (right) with Toler at a 1979 concert in Cleveland (photo by Bruce Hackett)

“When the music trend started turning away from blues-oriented rock towards more simple, synthesizer-based dance music arrangements,” Betts said, “the suits at Arista Records started pushing us hard in that direction, but we were never able to do that convincingly, mostly because we didn’t want to. Sure, we wanted a hit, but not if we had to make concessions. We broke up in ’82 because we decided we just better back out, or we would ruin what was left of the band’s image.”

Betts and Allman each kept their tools sharp through the Eighties by playing clubs with their own bands, and when the 4-LP box set “Dreams” was released in 1989 to commemorate the Allman Brothers’ 20th anniversary, the time seemed right to try again.

The arrival of the classic rock radio format created a favorable climate, as did the emergence of blues guitar virtuoso Stevie Ray Vaughan. “He opened the whole thing up,” said Betts. “He just would not be denied, and kept making those traditional urban blues records, and people got to appreciating the blues again. We didn’t want to record without touring first, but it was hard to tour without a record to support and generate interest. The box set took care of that.”

With both Trucks and Jaimoe back on drums, and Betts’ colleagues Warren Haynes and Allen Woody on slide guitar and bass, the band was reborn a third time, churning out three new studio albums in four years (“Seven Turns,” “Shades of Two Worlds” and “Where It All Begins”), liberally sprinkled with great Betts songs. The group performed nearly 100 dates annually, and not only were original fans thrilled to have the group back in the picture, but a new generation of listeners embraced their music as well.

Betts (right) with Warren Haynes, 1993

Still, as always with this star-crossed band, problems surfaced. First Allman and then Betts fell victim to their own addictions and excesses, sometimes missing shows because of an inability to perform (Allman) or a mercurial temper and difficult ego (Betts).

“Dickey was capable of being really great, knowledgeable about all sorts of things, musical genres, art, news of the world, all of that,” said Danny Goldberg, the band’s manager for a spell. “But he was also capable of being really mean and physical, mostly when he was drinking. People were scared of him.”

In 2000, Betts lost two close friends within a few days of each other, which threw him for a loop and exacerbated his demons. Betts became so difficult to work with that the rest of the band felt they had no choice but to move on without him. Sadly, he never performed nor recorded with his old bandmates again after that.

In the years since, Betts stayed as active as his deteriorating health would allow, playing clubs and releasing a handful of live albums on smaller labels. When Allman was near death in 2017, working on one last album, he contacted Betts and asked him to join the sessions, but time ran out before that could happen.

Betts mellowed quite a bit in his final years, refusing to badmouth Allman or other members in the press. He was more than willing to concede his own part in the estrangement that plagued his relationships. “Substance abuse is an occupational hazard of being a musician,” he reflected. “It’s like working in an industrial waste factory. That shit is around, and so easy to get. And you can go for three hours and feel like a king, but it doesn’t work in the long run. Man, I’ve been there.”

Betts in 2018

In the wake of Betts’ death last week, Haynes spoke highly of his compadre’s musical talent. “Dickey played awesome straight traditional blues, but he also had this Django Reinhardt-on-acid side of him that was very unique. Most cats that can play blues as convincingly as Dickey cannot stretch out to that psychedelic thing like he could.”

Duane Allman’s daughter, 55-year-old Galadrielle Allman, spoke glowingly about how Betts and her father created magic together. “It’s so hard to respond to losses like this, to try to comprehend that we all just keep losing the originals, the creators, the artists who wrote the book,” she said. “My father could not have reached the heights he reached without Dickey beside him. They raised one another up and created a sound together that changed music. We are so lucky that, although everything else eventually goes, the music stays.”

R.I.P., Dickey. I’m cranking up your music a lot these days…

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The playlist below collects Allman Brothers Band songs written (and usually sung) by Betts, as well as songs he wrote for his solo LPs. Perhaps my favorite, “In Memory of Elizabeth Reed,” appears twice — in the incendiary electric version from 1971, and again in a live acoustic performance from 1995.

Thankfully, not everybody was kung fu fighting

Each spring for the past six years, I have taken a look back at the albums that were released 50 years ago and done my best to select what I considered the Top 15. In 2018, sizing up the best LPs of 1968 wasn’t too difficult, because singles still ruled the roost at that point, and there simply weren’t that many superlative albums out there. That began changing in 1969, and each year since has become more and more challenging. The list of albums of 1971 in particular was an embarrassment of riches; I concluded there were upwards of 60 choices that were worthy candidates to make the Top 15 cut.

As I reviewed the roughly 350 albums released during the calendar year 1974, I realized I was going to struggle to find 15 LPs I thought were consistently superb. Frankly, it just wasn’t as great a year musically as the previous five. Sure, there were eight or ten that were easy to identify, but after that, there were a couple dozen “B”-grade choices. How to choose? Some of the year’s biggest sellers (like Marvin Hamlisch’s soundtrack to “The Sting” or Elton John’s “Caribou”) or even the Album of the Year Grammy winner (Stevie Wonder’s “Fulfillingness’ First Finale”) just didn’t light my fire, and paled when compared to the work of lesser known bands that had grabbed my attention that year.

Making “Best Of” lists has always been a subjective endeavor. What is the criteria for developing the list? Are these simply my favorites, or are they perhaps the biggest sellers, or maybe the most influential albums of that particular year?

Consequently, as is almost always the case, many (maybe most) of my readers will vociferously object to some of my selections.  You might howl in protest that one of your favorites was demoted to the “honorable mention” bin, or omitted entirely.  To that, I say:  Sorry ’bout that.  This is my blog, and I call ’em the way I see ’em.  Feel free to come up with your own list or maybe publish your own blog if you’re sufficiently motivated.

Meantime, I hope you enjoy the Spotify playlists below.  The first one features five songs from each of my Top 15 albums of 1974, while the second one includes three songs from each of the honorable mentions that didn’t quite make my list.

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“Court and Spark,” Joni Mitchell

From her modest debut LP in 1968 through her stunning 1972 album “For the Roses,” Joni Mitchell built a fanatical following (mostly women but also men like me) who were thunderstruck by her confessional lyrics and increasingly sophisticated songwriting. In early 1974, the mainstream music audience finally took notice of this unparalleled artiste through the sleek brilliance of “Court and Spark,” the highest charting record of her career (thanks to two hit singles, “Help Me” and “Free Man in Paris,” the album reached #2 on US charts). With the jazzy backing of musical pros like Tom Scott and the L.A. Express, Mitchell’s songs dipped and soared through many moods, from the raw emotion of “People’s Parties” and “The Same Situation” to the breezy rock ‘n roll of “Raised on Robbery” and the intellectual creativity of “Down to You” and “Trouble Child.”

“What Were Once Vices are Now Habits,” The Doobie Brothers

This hard-working band out of San Jose smoked so much pot in their formative days that they chose to name themselves The Doobie Brothers, and they ended up one of the most popular bands of the decade, with three vocalists, two guitarists and two drummers. Their catalog during the 1971-1975 period was evenly split between the no-nonsense rock of Tom Johnston and the more folk/country material by Patrick Simmons. Coming close on the heels of two superb albums (1972’s “Toulouse Street” and 1973’s “The Captain and Me”) came the wryly titled “What Were Once Vices Are Now Habits,” which featured the group’s first #1 single (“Black Water”). This LP is every bit as consistent as its predecessors — fine acoustic tunes like “Spirit,” “Tell Me What You Want” and “Another Park, Another Sunday”; and hard-driving rockers like “Eyes of Silver,” “Road Angel” and “Daughters of the Sea.”

“Pretzel Logic,” Steely Dan

The songwriting duo of Donald Fagen and Walter Becker had reached the Top Ten twice on their debut LP, then stretched out with longer tracks on their 1973 follow-up, “Countdown to Ecstasy.” Beginning with “Pretzel Logic,” Steely Dan ceased being a working band and became more of a studio outfit featuring as many as 20 different guitarists, keyboardists, bassists and drummers appearing on the various songs. And what infectious, well-crafted songs they were! “Parker’s Band,” “Night By Night,” “Barrytown,” “Charlie Freak,” “With a Gun” and the bluesy title track offered fascinating lyrics and Fagen’s immediately identifiable voice. I never much cared for the overplayed single “Rikki Don’t Lose That Number,” but it wasn’t for nothing that it became their highest-charting hit (#4 on US charts). As satisfying as this album is, the best of Steely Dan was yet to come.

“Mother Lode,” Loggins and Messina

In 1970, Jim Messina had left Poco and been hired as a producer at Columbia Records, where he was assigned to work with newcomer singer-songwriter Kenny Loggins. Messina contributed so much to the debut effort that it ended up being titled “Kenny Loggins with Jim Messina Sittin’ In,” and the two men became a best-selling duo over the next six years. Messina’s country rock leanings juxtaposed beautifully with the more emotional songs Loggins was writing, and by 1974, they reached what is arguably their peak on the aptly titled “Mother Lode.” Incredibly, there were no hit singles (whose fault is that?!), but track after track features brilliant musicianship and stellar vocals. Messina’s “Be Free,” “Move On” and “Changes” were memorable, but Loggins’ songs were even better, especially “Brighter Days,” “Time to Space,” “Growin'” and “Fever Dream.”

“Souvenirs,” Dan Fogelberg

Illinois-born Fogelberg got his start as a session musician and songwriter in Nashville, and the debut album he recorded there (“Home Free”) offered appealing folk rock with a strong country influence. His next move was relocating to Los Angeles, where he was taken under the wing of the great Joe Walsh, whose sharp production gave “Souvenirs” an immediate vitality in its rockers and ballads alike. Walsh played electric guitar on most tracks and brought in members of his band, The Eagles and Crosby and Nash to participate. But it was Fogelberg and his material that were the real attraction. While “Part of the Plan” was the upbeat single, “As the Raven Flies,” “Illinois” and “There’s a Place in the World for a Gambler” competed for attention. Meanwhile, softer tunes like “Song From Half Mountain,” “Changing Horses” and “Souvenirs” cemented his reputation as one of the better balladeers of the ’70s.

“Bad Company,” Bad Company

The early ’70s saw the formation of countless “supergroups” comprised of survivors of other bands who teamed up with great hopes for superstardom. Most of these failed to find the necessary personal and musical chemistry necessary to find a big audience. The exception, though, was England’s Bad Company, which brought together vocalist Paul Rodgers and drummer Simon Kirke (both formerly with Free), guitarist Mick Ralphs from Mott the Hoople and bassist Boz Burrell of King Crimson. Launched on Led Zeppelin’s new Swan Song record label, Bad Company’s self-titled debut album took the rock world by storm in 1974, reaching #1 on US album charts as the first of five Top Ten albums. “Can’t Get Enough” and “Movin’ On” were hit singles, but you could hear songs like “Ready For Love,” “Rock Steady,” “Seagull” and the moody title track all over rock radio stations that year.

“461 Ocean Boulevard,” Eric Clapton

The unrequited love that Clapton felt for George Harrison’s wife Pattie may have led to some of the most anguished blues songs in rock history (especially “Layla”), but it also sent him spiraling into heroin addiction that almost killed him in 1971-1973. With the help of friends like Pete Townshend, Clapton found recovery, and began writing more spiritual lyrics and melodies. The result was the noticeably understated LP “461 Ocean Boulevard,” named after the Miami house he rented while the album was being recorded. Low-key tunes like “Give Me Strength” and “Please Be With Me” featured Clapton on Dobro, while shimmering synthesizers highlighted “Let It Grow.” The fiery electric guitar solos Clapton had built his career on were evident only on the closing track, “Mainline Florida.” Perhaps most unexpected was his cover of Bob Marley’s reggae tune “I Shot the Sheriff,” a surprising #1 hit single.

“Feats Don’t Fail Me Now,” Little Feat

The late great guitarist/singer/songwriter Lowell George formed Little Feat in 1970 with keyboardist Bill Payne, drummer Richie Hayward and bassist Roy Estrada. Their first two albums were critically praised but failed to chart, precipitating Estrada’s departure and the arrival of second guitarist Paul Barrère, bassist Kenny Gradney and percussionist Sam Clayton, all of whom added vocals as well. This new lineup still featured George’s slide guitar and vocals, but the songs now took on a New Orleans-style funk, and their first LP, “Dixie Chicken,” attracted a wider audience. It wasn’t until the release of “Feats Don’t Fail Me Now” in 1974 that the band reached the high 30s on the US album charts, thanks to killer tracks like “Oh Atlanta,” “Rock and Roll Doctor,” “The Fan,” “Cold Cold Cold/Tripe Face Boogie” and the title song. I played the hell out of this album that year and became a huge fan from then on.

“Crime of the Century,” Supertramp

Named after the 1908 book “The Autobiography of a Super-Tramp,” this British prog-rock band was led from their founding in 1970 by two singer-songwriters, Roger Hodgson and Rick Davies, who had different backgrounds and musical influences. Hodgson had gone to boarding school and preferred pop rock, while Davies was working class and leaned toward blues and jazz. While they co-wrote a lot of the band’s catalog, they more often wrote separately, each taking lead vocals on their own songs. They first hit paydirt in 1974 with their third LP, “Crime of the Century,” a Top Five album in the UK and Canada and cracking the Top 40 in the US. Hodgson’s light, airy voice took center stage on “Dreamer” and “School,” while Davies meatier, gruff vocals carried “Bloody Well Right” and the title track. Five years later, they had an international #1 album with “Breakfast in America.”

“Slow Dancer,” Boz Scaggs

While in high school in Dallas, William “Boz” Scaggs met Steve Miller, eventually following him to San Francisco, where he joined The Steve Miller Band as its second guitarist, singer and songwriter. After two albums, Scaggs chose to go solo, and his 1969 debut LP, recorded with the famed Muscle Shoals studio musicians in Alabama, also featured a young Duane Allman on the legendary 12-minute blues track “Loan Me a Dime.” He began developing a “blue-eyed soul” sound over his next three releases, and by 1974, his LP “Slow Dancer” received broad critical praise. Motown producer/writer Johnny Bristol co-wrote much of the album with Scaggs, including standout tracks like “Angel Lady,” “You Make It So Hard,” “Hercules” and the title cut. The album gave strong hints of what was to come on his phenomenal “Silk Degrees” album in 1976.

“Walking Man,” James Taylor

I never understood why Taylor’s fifth album, “Walking Man,” was so underrated and underplayed on radio. Critics said it was “listless” and “unremarkable,” but that’s not the way I saw it upon its release in June 1974. Looking for something a little different, Taylor moved from L.A. to a New York studio, employing a different producer and a raft of new backing musicians to support his latest material. The title tune and “Let It All Fall Down” (a diatribe against then-President Nixon), both strong songs, failed to chart as singles, and although the album reached #13, it simply didn’t get the attention it deserved, which is a crying shame. I strongly urge you to check out appealing tracks like “Hello Old Friend,” “Me and My Guitar,” “Ain’t No Song,” “Rock and Roll is Music Now” and Taylor’s cover of Chuck Berry’s “The Promised Land.”

“Dragon Fly,” Jefferson Starship

Jefferson Airplane singer/songwriter/guitarist Paul Kantner, a science fiction buff, put together a remarkable “solo” record in 1970 called “Blows Against the Empire,” which was partially credited to something called Jefferson Starship (actually members of the Grateful Dead and CSNY). When the Airplane broke up a couple years later, Kantner and paramour Grace Slick decided they liked the name Jefferson Starship, recruited guitarist Craig Chaquico and others to the lineup, and released “Dragon Fly,” the first of four strong LPs that charted well in the ’70s. Songs like “Ride the Tiger,” “All Fly Away,” “Devil’s Den” and “That’s For Sure” put the spotlight on the soaring Kantner/Slick vocal blend, while the welcome surprise track “Caroline” featured the return of Airplane founder Marty Balin, who became a mainstay in the group’s lineup for the “Red Octopus,” “Spitfire” and “Earth” albums that followed.

“War Child,” Jethro Tull

After critics incorrectly labeled Tull’s 1971 LP “Aqualung” a concept album, leader Ian Anderson responded by writing “the mother of all concept albums,” the brilliant prog rock piece “Thick as a Brick,” followed in 1973 by its darker cousin, “A Passion Play,” another 45-minute song stretching out over two sides. Fans loved both, but critics pounced on the latter, calling it “difficult to absorb.” Anderson relented on the next project, returning to regular-length tracks with a more festive atmosphere. “War Child” had been envisioned as a fanciful film soundtrack, but the movie was scrapped, and ten of the 20 songs the band had recorded became the next Tull album, an accessible disc that reached #2 and spawned the lightweight single “Bungle in the Jungle.” Far better were meatier tunes like “The Third Hoorah,” “Back Door Angels,” “War Child,” “Sea Lion” and “Skating Away on the Thin Ice of the New Day.”

“So What,” Joe Walsh

You’ve got to give Walsh a lot of credit. He was a triple threat (guitar, voice and songwriting) on the first three James Gang albums in 1969-1971, then established himself in 1972-73 as a formidable solo artist with his “Barnstorm” and “The Smoker You Drink, the Player You Get” LPs. In 1974, he not only produced and made major contributions to Dan Fogelberg’s breakthrough “Souvenirs” LP (see above), but he also simultaneously used the same cast of L.A.-based musical cohorts on his third solo album “So What,” the second of three Top Ten releases. Walsh’s oeuvre was hard rock with strong melodic elements, and this album featured such career highlights as “Welcome to the Club,” “County Fair,” “Time Out,” “Falling Down” and a remake of “Turn to Stone,” first heard on the “Barnstorm” album. By 1976, Walsh became a member of The Eagles while still periodically recording popular solo discs.

“Late For the Sky,” Jackson Browne

As a songwriter, Browne was regarded as a sort of prodigy, composing quality songs like “These Days” while still in his teens. Other artists like Linda Ronstadt, Nico and Tom Rush covered Browne’s songs before he eventually won his own record deal in 1971. Right out of the gate, he found success with his debut album and its singles, “Doctor My Eyes” and “Rock Me on the Water.” The 1973 follow-up, “For Everyman,” was even better, with his own version of “Take It Easy” (a 1972 hit for The Eagles). Less than a year later, critics were falling over themselves raving about “Late For the Sky,” which offers some of the most timeless songs in his career, especially the pensive “Fountain of Sorrow” and heartbreaking ode to a lost friend, “For a Dancer.” Add the title song and the apocalyptic “Before the Deluge,” and you’ve got one of 1974’s most respected works.

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Dave Mason,” Dave Mason; “Heart Like a Wheel,” Linda Ronstadt; “Walls and Bridges,” John Lennon; “On the Border,” The Eagles; “Living and Dying in 3/4 Time,” Jimmy Buffett; “The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway,” Genesis; “Somethin’s Happening,” Peter Frampton; “Second Helping,” Lynyrd Skynyrd; “Fulfillingness’ First Finale,” Stevie Wonder; “Country Life,” Roxy Music; “Burn,” Deep Purple; “Not Fragile,” Bachman-Turner Overdrive; “Sundown,” Gordon Lightfoot; “Overnight Sensation,” Raspberries; “A New Life,” Marshall Tucker Band; “AWB,” Average White Band; “Eldorado,” Electric Light Orchestra; “Mirage,” Camel; “Bridge of Sighs,” Robin Trower.

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