One Way Out (The Allman Brothers Band album)

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One Way Out
Allmanbrothers04 gr.jpg
Live album by The Allman Brothers Band
Released March 23, 2004
Recorded March 25–26, 2003
Genre Blues rock, southern rock, jam
Length 149:02
Label Sanctuary
Producer Michael Barbiero
Warren Haynes
The Allman Brothers Band chronology
S.U.N.Y. at Stonybrook: Stonybrook, NY 9/19/71
(2003)
One Way Out
(2004)
Stand Back: The Anthology
(2004)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 4/5 stars[1]
Robert Christgau A−[2]

One Way Out is a live album by the Allman Brothers Band. It is the first live album to feature Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks together, although both had appeared separately on previous live albums. It was recorded during the group's annual Beacon Theatre run in New York City on March 25 and 26, 2003, and released a year later. This would be the final album released by the band before they disbanded in 2014.

The live version of "Instrumental Illness" was nominated for Best Rock Instrumental Performance at the 47th Annual Grammy Awards, but it lost to "Mrs. O'Leary's Cow" by Brian Wilson.

Reception

Writer Robert Christgau awarded the album an A− rating, calling it the Allman Brothers Band's "best live album of their career because both age and youth suit them, and because [...] they're better now than they ever were".[2] Thom Jurek, writing for AllMusic, praised the album's production, comparing the sound quality to that of a live performance and writing that the "listener is in the mix, not in front of it". Jurek additionally stated that the album "is essential for anyone interested in rock & roll".[1]

In an article for All About Jazz, C. Michael Bailey commented on the novelty of the music, favorably comparing the Allman Brothers Band to others in the jam band movement, 1970s pop radio, and American rock band Little Feat. Bailey specifically praised the band for "completely reconstitut[ing] into units making new music as opposed to simply recapitulating the old".[3] In a separate article for the same publication, Doug Collette called the album "without doubt the document of a truly great rock and roll ensemble playing with as much fire as finesse", and commented on the collaborative nature of the album's production and its improvisational style.[4]

Writing for PopMatters, Adam Williams wrote that One Way Out is "flawless in all respects" and that "all doubts are dispelled as to who the finest live jammers are [...] the Allmans and the Beacon have become synonymous with extended play brilliance."[5]

Track listing

Disc one
No. Title Original album Length
1. "Statesboro Blues"   At Fillmore East 5:22
2. "Don't Keep Me Wonderin'"   Idlewild South 4:12
3. "Midnight Rider"   Idlewild South 3:16
4. "Rockin' Horse"   Hittin' the Note 10:12
5. "Desdemona"   Hittin' the Note 13:27
6. "Trouble No More"   The Allman Brothers Band 3:45
7. "Wasted Words"   Brothers and Sisters 7:51
8. "Good Morning Little Schoolgirl"     9:01
9. "Instrumental Illness" (with 5:36 drum solo) Hittin' the Note 16:42
Disc two
No. Title Original album Length
1. "Ain't Wastin' Time No More"   Eat a Peach 6:29
2. "Come and Go Blues"   Brothers and Sisters 6:03
3. "Woman Across the River"   Hittin' the Note 6:38
4. "Old Before My Time"   Hittin' the Note 5:37
5. "Every Hungry Woman"   The Allman Brothers Band 5:21
6. "High Cost of Low Living"   Hittin' the Note 8:42
7. "Worried Down with the Blues"     7:58
8. "Dreams"   The Allman Brothers Band 12:49
9. "Whipping Post"   The Allman Brothers Band 15:31

Personnel

The Allman Brothers Band

Production

  • Producers: Michael Barbiero and Warren Haynes
  • Recording and mixing: Michael Barbiero
  • Assistant engineers: Mike Scielzi, Joel Singer
  • Tape operator: Hardi Kamsani
  • Stage: Brandon Karp
  • Mastering: George Marino

Charts

Chart (2004) Peak
position
US Billboard 200[6] 190

References

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  6. "The Allman Brothers Band – Chart history" Billboard 200 for The Allman Brothers Band. Retrieved January 22, 2024.