Jaimoe remembers Gregg: "There's not anybody I ever heard who sang with more truth and passion than Gregory."
Gregg Allman, 12/8/47-5/27/17 - gone 7 years ago today. The week he passed away, I spoke to Jaimoe for Rolling Stone. Here's our conversation.
Gregg Allman passed away seven years ago today, on May 27, 2017. Earlier that morning, I reunited on phone with my cChinese bandmate Woodie Wu, after not talking to him for seven years. It was a day of highs and lows. I was preparing to leave for Beijing in a few days and as the shock wore off, I started hoping they wouldn’t have the funeral too soon. Alas, it was the next weekend in Macon and I missed it.
Rolling Stone asked me to interview Jaimoe about Gregg, which I did early in the morning from Beijing, then worked to write it up and send it to them. I nbever got paid for this work. so it’s mine now, and here you go below… with the recent passing of Dickey Betts, Jaimoe is now the last surviving original member of the Allman Brothers Band. He’s turning 80 on July 8 - and he’s come out of retirement to play with my band Friends of the Brothers, which just blows my mind, so… Come See Jaimoe with Friends of the Brothers! click for tickets: June 23, City Winery NYC; July 11, The Keswick Theatre, Glenside, PA.
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JAIMOE ON GREGG ALLMAN, INTERVIEWED APPROX. MAY 29, 2017, FROM BEIJING. THIS ORIGINALLY RAN IN ROLLING STONE.
Gregory was the last member to join the Allman Brothers band but there never was any question that he would do so. I was the first person Duane [Allman] signed on and he told me from the very start: “There’s only one person who can sing in the band I’m putting together and that’s my baby brother.”
Duane was in Muscle Shoals, Alabama working on sessions with cats like Wilson Pickett when Phil Walden, who had been Otis Redding’s manager, signed him to a deal. My friend Jackie Avery, a great songwriter, said, “Jai, I’m telling you, I ain’t never heard anyone play like this cat before.” So he drove to Muscle Shoals with a tape of songs he had written, hoping Duane might pick one or two up for his new band. I had played on the demo. Duane listened to the whole thing and Jackie said his only question was, “Who’s the drummer?”
Jackie said I should go meet and play with this guy; that he was really good and had serious backing. My friend Charles “Honeyboy” Otis had told me, “If you want to make some money, go play with those white boys.” And truthfully that’s what I was thinking of when I went to Muscle Shoals, because I had been playing on the rhythm and blues circuit and they did business “old school.” In other words, we weren’t paid jack shit but we did get our band uniforms and transportation [paid for].
“When the six of us got together, we became what we were looking for.”
I was going to New York City to pursue my dream of being a jazz drummer because I figured if I was going to starve to death, it might as well be doing something I love. But as soon as I met Duane and played with him, that all went away. It became about the music; only the music. It was the greatest music I ever played and I knew this was it. I wasn’t going anywhere without him. Two days after meeting Duane, all of my dreams came true. We didn’t have a nickel but we were all just as happy as could be, doing exactly what we wanted to do.
We went to Jacksonville and lots of people started jamming with us as Duane put together everyone he wanted for the band: Dickey Betts on guitar, Berry Oakley on bass and another drummer, Butch Trucks. We drove to Jacksonville and he knocked on Butch’s door and said, “This is Butch, my old drummer. Meet Jaimoe, my new drummer.” And then he drove away and left me there! We didn’t know what to say to each other, so Butch and I set up our drums and just started playing. We never talked about working out parts. From that moment on, we just played and it just worked. He set me up beautifully. Everything I’ve ever played that someone said was great was because Butch set me up.
So we had everyone there but Gregg and some people have said over the years that Duane was trying to do something different. Maybe they were fighting, but it’s not true. He told me that Gregg put a spell on women and all this stuff but there was never a doubt that he would be the singer. He was just waiting until he had all the other pieces in place before he called Gregory, who was in Los Angeles.

Reese Wynans [who went on to play with Stevie Ray Vaughan] had been playing keyboards. But Gregory finally arrived, on March 26th, 1969, and my first impression was that he looked like a television star. He was so handsome. He looked like a star actor or athlete; he was kind of a big guy – a hell of a lot bigger than Duane – who weighed 80 pounds soaking wet. But when he started singing and I heard how good he was, I wasn’t surprised. Not at all.
Duane had hipped me to what a great singer his baby brother was. It’s all he talked about, and Duane had a very specific vision in mind for the band. Everyone else he got was great and even greater together, so I figured Gregory would be the same. And he was. When the six of us got together, we became what we were looking for and who we were looking for and it was clear as a bell. It was just a great bunch of guys playing and it was just so natural. We never talked about what we were doing or told each other what to do. Everyone just played.
At that time, I really thought that there were only a few special gifted white people that could play music and I was soon to discover the reason for a lot of that was simply the fact that they were so busy imitating that they never walked out of it and into themselves. It was sitting there waiting and Gregg and Duane did that right away. Hell, the first song he sang was Muddy Waters’ “Trouble No More” and he sounded great but he sounded like himself. He had that right from the first day I met him. He had been working it out for years already, even though he was just maybe 21.

I played with Otis Redding and Percy Sledge and saw Ray Charles and B.B. King and every other great and I’ll tell you this: there’s not anybody I ever heard who sang with more truth and passion than Gregory. He was at the very top of whatever what was going on with singers. And that shit about him being “one of the great white blues singer” is straight bullshit. He’s a great blues singer. A great singer, period – and those lyrics he would write were incredible. The amazing thing about Gregory Allman is the fact that his music and influences were based on rhythm and blues but his songwriting was so influenced by people like [Bob] Dylan and Jackson Browne and other people who wrote poems. Combining those two things is what made him so unique.
He came in with “My Cross to Bear” and “Whipping Post” and “Dreams” and all these great, great songs. My wife was just asking me: how does someone so young write songs so mature? I don’t know, but he did and what he influenced us to do behind was him was very unique. We were all very influenced by each other. You had no choice but to be very good at what you were doing because it was reflections of what you were hearing and everyone around us was so good! His voice and his lyrics were like two more instruments, which had a huge impact on what we played.
And Gregory was a hell of a keyboard player, too, and his great singing overshadowed his organ playing. Less is more is supposed to be a big thing now; well, he was doing it big a long time ago. What’s interesting is he could play a solo that was just eight bars, but was perfect. With what he played, he didn’t need to play no more. He could play exactly what needed to be played.
Gregg went through some hard times and had some rough periods, but he was always in the music and giving it his all. He had the Allman Brothers and he had his solo band, and he really liked the way that focused on the songs and on accompanying his singing. In 1974, he took out a band with a damn orchestra that was incredible; one of the most underrated bands ever. And I think in the last few years, after the Allman Brothers Band finished, he started getting his band right where he wanted it. My band [Jaimoe’s Jasssz Band] played quite a few shows with him over the past few years and I loved listening to him in his own group, with more focus on his singing and playing.
I will really miss playing with Gregg and hearing Gregg’s music, and I must say, those words, man. The words were as much a part of his life as the voice and they came from his life. Where else could they come from? We’re all reflections of the lives we lead. For years, I didn’t pay that much attention to his lyrics and then they hit me! So powerful. But I’ll miss the person more than anything. Yes, I’ll miss the person the most. I’ll miss Gregory very much.
My fourth book, Brothers and Sisters: the Allman Brothers Band and The Album That Defined The 70s, was published July 25, 2023, by St. Martin’s Press. It was the third consecutive one to debut in the New York Times Non-Fiction Hardcover Bestsellers List, following Texas Flood: The Inside Story of Stevie Ray Vaughan and One Way Out: The Inside History of the Allman Brothers Band. My first book, Big in China: My Unlikely Adventures Raising a Family, Playing the Blues and Becoming a Star in Beijing, about my experiences raising a family in Beijing and touring China with a popular original blues band, was optioned for a movie by Ivan Reitman’s Montecito Productions. I am also a guitarist and singer with two bands, Big in China and Friends of the Brothers, the premier celebration of the Allman Brothers Band.
I was fortunate to meet and talk with Gregg after a concert in Rochester,NY June 2016. I was given a backstage pass by a gentleman who was sitting next to me. He was a former roadie for the band from 73-76. He went by the name Gyro. We were met by Greggs best friend Chank and brought up to the Green room. There were a couple of people there who left and it was just me and Gyro. Then Gyro told Gregg who he was and Gregg immediately remembered him and was very glad to see him. I introduced myself and we talked for about 20 minutes mostly small stuff. He was already working on Southern Blood and out of nowhere mentioned that Duane should have never left Muscle Shoals. It gave me chills! He was very cool and kind! Today I will be listening to a tribute to Dickey Betts on local radio.
Thanks for sharing! Can't believe Rolling Stone stiffed you for this wonderful interview.