Mountain Jam
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| "Mountain Jam" | |
|---|---|
| Instrumental by The Allman Brothers Band | |
| from the album Eat a Peach | |
| Released | 1991 (Ludlow), 2003 (AIPF), July 1971 (Fillmore), 1972 (Eat A Peach) |
| Recorded | April 1970 (Ludlow), July 1970 (AIPF), March 1971 (Fillmore/Eat A Peach) |
| Genre | Jam rock, instrumental rock |
| Length | 44:00 (Ludlow Garage), 17:27/28:20 (Atlanta International Pop Festival), 33:41 (Fillmore/Eat a Peach) |
| Label | Polydor, Epic / Legacy, Capricorn Records |
| Songwriters | |
"Mountain Jam" is an improvised instrumental jam by The Allman Brothers Band, based on Donovan's 1967 hit song "There Is a Mountain". Performed throughout the group's career, "Mountain Jam" was originally released in 1972 on the album Eat a Peach, as recorded at the Fillmore East concert hall in March 1971 (during the same sessions that produced their prior live double album At Fillmore East). It is this rendition, that takes up two sides of that vinyl album,[1] that is best known. As a composition, it is credited to all six band members – Duane Allman, Gregg Allman, Dickey Betts, Jai Johanny Johanson, Berry Oakley, and Butch Trucks – as well as to Donovan Leitch.
Other live recordings were released on the Allmans albums Fillmore East, February 1970, Live at Ludlow Garage: 1970, Live at the Atlanta International Pop Festival: July 3 & 5, 1970, The Fillmore Concerts, and deluxe edition of At Fillmore East (1971). Notably, Live at the Atlanta International Pop Festival: July 3 & 5, 1970 contains two recordings of the song, the second of which features guest musicians Johnny Winter on slide guitar and Thom Doucette on harmonica. Renditions by the 2000s era of the group can be found on the retrospective live albums Cream of the Crop 2003, The Fox Box (2004), and Warner Theatre, Erie, PA 7-19-05. A performance from the band's final concert in 2014 is included on the album Final Concert 10-28-14.
Writers such as musician-critic Tony Glover for Rolling Stone and group biographer Scott Freeman have examined at length the structure regarding, and extolled the virtues of, the Eat a Peach performance.[2][3] Not quite as enthusiastic is Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic, who assesses it as "a sprawling 33-minute jam that may feature a lot of great playing, but is certainly a little hard for anyone outside of diehards to sit through."[4]
The Mountain Jam festival, held in Upstate New York beginning in 2005 and at which the Allmans appeared twice, is named after the instrumental.[5]
Duane Allman was not a fan of Donovan in particular, but liked the happy-sounding melody and found it a good underpinning for improvisation.[6] It had joined the group's concert repertoire by May 1969;[7] the first known recording of a performance was done on May 4, 1969, at Central City Park in Macon, Georgia. It represented the kind of open-ended numbers that the group was employing to demonstrate their instrumental abilities and soon became of the highlights of their shows.[7] By early 1970, performances were stretching to a half hour in length.[8] However, the performances were often rambling and without direction.[3] It continued to evolve,[7] and gained more specificity and focused sectioning.[3] It was typically the closing number of their shows.[8]
An April 1970 performance at Ludlow Garage, a music venue in Cincinnati, produced a 44-minute "Mountain Jam" that was released two decades later on the album Live at Ludlow Garage: 1970.[8] One writer, the Duane Allman biographer Randy Poe, has felt this superior to the Eat a Peach rendition.[8] In contrast, Bruce Eder of AllMusic considers it "searing though somewhat disjointed",[9] and David Browne of Rolling Stone says that "only die-hard Allmanites will want to wade through" it at its "forty-four mind-boggling minutes" of length.[10]
Two July 1970 performances of "Mountain Jam" occurred at the 1970 Atlanta International Pop Festival, the first that was interrupted by a rain delay and the second, two days later, with guest musician Johnny Winter joining in.[11] Both performances also featured quasi-member Thom Doucette on harmonica.[8] While a couple of Allman Brothers numbers appeared on the 1971 triple live album The First Great Rock Festivals of the Seventies, "Mountain Jam" was not one of them; that would have to wait for the 2003 release Live at the Atlanta International Pop Festival: July 3 & 5, 1970, which included both day's performances.[12] Writer Thom Jurek considers the second performance to be superior to the Eat a Peach one.[12]
Origin and influences
There was much interplay in the development of this song between The Allman Brothers Band and another highly influential jam band, the Grateful Dead. According to the book Bill Graham Presents, one night at the Fillmore East in early 1970, when The Allman Brothers were there with the Grateful Dead and Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac, stagehand Allan Arkush came into an area where Duane Allman, Peter Green, and Jerry Garcia were jamming together on "There Is a Mountain".[13] In its full band form, "Mountain Jam" can be heard in a 31-minute rendition from the Allman Brothers' regular set during these shows, as captured on the record Fillmore East, February 1970.[8] In The Music Box, John Metzger said, "... The highlight of this album ... is the nearly 31-minute 'Mountain Jam' that drips with a colorfully electrified intensity."[14]
Preceding this, the Grateful Dead had briefly referenced "There Is a Mountain," both live and in studio. They can be heard quoting a few bars of it in their song "Alligator" on their 1968 album Anthem of the Sun. An example of the Garcia incorporating the "There Is a Mountain" riff can be heard at the 4:53 mark on the version of "Alligator" they performed at their August 21, 1968, show at the Fillmore West.[clarification needed] They also played a 55-second sequence hinting at "There Is a Mountain" to transition between "Going Down the Road Feeling Bad" and "Not Fade Away" on November 6, 1970, at Capitol Theater in Port Chester, New York.[15] It is unclear whether any of these uses were an influence on Duane Allman adopting "There Is a Mountain" for use by the Allman Brothers beginning in 1969.
Conversely, subsequent to the Eat a Peach release, at the conclusion of the Summer Jam at Watkins Glen on July 28, 1973, there was a 22:57 version of "Mountain Jam" performed by members of the Allmans, the Dead, and the third act on the festival bill, The Band.[16] Still another collaboration came at the end of 1973, when Garcia was among those joining the Allmans for "Mountain Jam" at the end of a long, nationally broadcast New Year's Eve show at the Cow Palace in San Francisco.[17]