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Allman Brothers Band frontman Gregg Allman dies at 69

Posted at 3:56 PM, May 27, 2017
and last updated 2017-05-27 16:44:01-04

MIAMI BEACH, FL – FEBRUARY 27: Gregg Allman performs onstage at Meatopia Presented By Creekstone Farms Sponsored By Thrillist Hosted By Michael Symon during 2016 Food Network & Cooking Channel South Beach Wine & Food Festival Presented By FOOD & WINE at Beachside at Delano on February 27, 2016 in Miami Beach, Florida. (Photo by Gustavo Caballero/Getty Images for SOBEWFF®)

Gregg Allman, the founding member of the Allman Brothers Band who overcame family tragedy, drug addiction and health problems to become a grizzled elder statesman for the blues music he loved, has died. He was 69.

Allman died at his home in Savannah, Georgia, according to a statement posted to his official website. The statement says Allman had struggled with many health issues over the past several years. Allman’s longtime manager and close friend, Michael Lehman, said, “I have lost a dear friend and the world has lost a brilliant pioneer in music.”

The cause of death was not immediately made public.

Cher, to whom Allman was briefly married in the 1970s, reacted on Twitter Saturday afternoon.

“I’ve tried … words are impossible,” she wrote.

Allman — along with older brother Duane Allman and a handful of other musicians including guitarist Dickey Betts and drummer Butch Trucks — helped form the eponymous Southern band whose blend of rock, blues, country and jazz made them one of the biggest and most influential touring acts of the 1970s.

Gregg Allman played the Hammond organ, sang lead vocals and wrote some of the band’s signature songs, including “Midnight Rider” and “Wasted Words,” the ballad “Melissa,” and the blues epic “Whipping Post.” He and Betts took over leadership of the band after Duane was killed in a motorcycle accident in 1971 and before the band broke up for the first time in the late ’70s.

Allman continued recording and touring, both with reunited versions of the Allmans Brothers Band and with his own bands, for some 40 years. The Allman Brothers — inducted into the Rock and Rock Hall of Fame in 1995 — won new legions of fans in recent years with the reorganized group’s epic live shows, especially their unprecedented string of 238 sold-out concerts at New York’s Beacon Theater.

“My love of playing is still the same as when I was 24. In fact, I appreciate it all more and understand it much better,” Allman told the Wall Street Journal in 2015. “I’m grateful for every gold record, good review and award I’ve ever received, but I’m just so into what I’m doing and that’s where my focus is.”