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The Allman Brothers Band

Instant Live: The Fox Box

Play Instant Live: The Fox Box

Song Lyrics Save Buy
1 Mountain Jam No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
2 Trouble No More Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
3 Midnight Rider Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
4 Wasted Words Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
5 Worried Down with the Blues Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
6 You Don't Love Me No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
7 Ain't Wastin' Time No More Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
8 Rockin' Horse No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
9 Hot 'Lanta Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
10 Melissa Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
11 Come and Go Blues Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
12 Can't Lose What You Never Had No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
13 Why Does Love Got to Be So Sad? No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
14 Franklin's Tower No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
15 Black Hearted Woman Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
16 Dreams Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
17 Mountain Jam (Reprise) No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
18 Mountain Jam (Reprise) [Continued] No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
19 Crowd Noise No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
20 Southbound Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
21 Les Brers in A Minor (Intro) No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
22 Don't Want You No More/It's Not My Cross to Bear No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
23 Statesboro Blues Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
24 Stand Back Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
25 Who's Been Talking No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
26 Soulshine Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
27 Good Clean Fun Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
28 Old Before My Time No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
29 Woman Across the River Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
30 Instrumental Illness No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
31 The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
32 Leave My Blues at Home Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
33 Key to the Highway No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
34 Don't Think Twice No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
35 One Way Out No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
36 Blue Sky Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
37 Dreams Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
38 Les Brers in A Minor No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
39 Layla No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
40 Revival Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
41 Every Hungry Woman Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
42 Done Somebody Wrong Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
43 Hoochie Coochie Man Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
44 Desdemona No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
45 High Cost of Low Living Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
46 44 Blues No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
47 End of the Line No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
48 Dreams Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
49 I Walk on Guilded Splinters No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
50 Stormy Monday Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
51 The Same Thing Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
52 In Memory of Elizabeth Reed Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
53 Georgia on My Mind/In Memory of Elizabeth Reed [Continued] No Lyrics Available Buy song from Amazon MP3
54 Don't Keep Me Wonderin' Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
55 No One to Run With Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
56 Whipping Post Lyrics Buy song from Amazon MP3
  • AMG Review of Instant Live: The Fox Box

    Amg
    Dave Lynch
    All Music Guide

    One might assume that only the most rabid fan of the Allman Brothers would shell out the cash for this live box set cobbled together by the Instant Live concert souvenir mongers and the ABB merchandisers at Hittin' the Note. After all, there are nine discs combining three separate Instant Live sets here; you could put the first one on with darkness falling in the early evening and finish the last disc with the first rays of the morning sun streaming in your window. "Play all night!" indeed. And yet despite the hours of music and the somewhat hefty price tag, The Fox Box sold out its initial 2004 run before being re-released in late 2005. The set's apparent popularity is at least somewhat understandable, particularly among those seeking immersion in the kind of sprawling experience associated with the band in its heyday. After all, as demonstrated by classic double-disc vinyl sets like At Fillmore East and Eat a Peach, back then the Allmans played with such inspiration, expressiveness, and fire that no one would want to wrench them from the stage until they had wrung every last note from their axes, no matter how long it took. Given that the early-2000s band had its strongest lineup in years, a really extended live showcase (dwarfing the One Way Out double-CD set) might seem warranted to some -- and The Fox Box would surely seem to fit the bill.

    The box does make a certain amount of sense from a packaging perspective (although the physical package itself is pretty cheap and cheesy). During their 2004 tour the Allmans could fill up three nights of music with very little repetition, so when they arrived at the Fox Theatre in Atlanta for a three-night run from September 24 through 26, they were able to bring a slew of different music to the ears of the faithful each night. There is some repetition -- three versions of "Dreams" that don't differ substantially from one another and, most egregiously for the home listener, two of those very long drum breaks that really must be experienced live to be appreciated -- but for the most part these nine discs tend not to overlap. Most importantly, there is often true inspiration in the playing and the choice of material, not to mention some genuine unpredictability amidst the sprawl.

    On the first night, the Allmans bookended their show with the beginning and ending of "Mountain Jam," originally split between two sides of Eat a Peach, and the next night featured a similar decision, as they bracketed the show with the introduction and main body of "Les Brers in A Minor." Overall, the music is a nice mix of tried-and-true warhorses, then-recent material from their Hittin' the Note CD, and the occasional cover such as "I Walk on Guilded Splinters" and "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down." Derek & the Dominos' "Why Does Love Have to Be So Sad?" seguing directly into the Dead's "Franklin's Tower" -- with a nice vocal from Oteil Burbridge and "Blue Sky" quotes from the guitars -- is a particularly potent pairing, and "Layla" -- featuring Derek Trucks on slide -- rightfully reclaims the tune as part of the Allman legacy, although the band tends to push the beautiful extended coda just a bit too far into the red. The band is on fire on the first disc of the September 26 show (including "Revival," "Every Hungry Woman," "Hoochie Coochie Man," and "End of the Line"); a fearsomely intense level of energy is achieved during Warren Haynes' "Elizabeth Reed" solo; and the interplay between guitarists Trucks, Haynes, and Jack Pearson on the "Mountain Jam" reprise is pure musical bliss, nostalgic perhaps but that's just fine, as memories of the most beautiful call-and-response dialogues between Duane and Dickey are conjured up. And speaking of Dickey Betts, his finest early songs are here even if his guitar and singing aren't, and Gregg Allman's vocals, quite frankly, provide some soulful heft to a countrified classic like "Blue Sky" without weighing the tune down.

    Still, the Instant Live approach has its shortcomings. The band is recorded well, but whoever is responsible for miking the audience on these recordings, apparently to make sure there is plenty of concert ambience, should either turn those mikes down or unplug the damn things completely. As in the early days, this band is capable of some subtlety, but unlike those early days, certain members of the 21st century audience apparently feel that quieter moments are precisely the best times to scream their friggin' heads off. Hey, everybody loves a party, but why give these particular crazies such prominence in the mix? (Oh, that's right -- they're the ones buying the CDs after the show is over.) Track indexing can also be problematic: the "Mountain Jam" reprise is needlessly split in two, and it would be nice to have the alternative of programming out the drum break that stretches an otherwise killer "Elizabeth Reed" out past the 30-minute mark (and a hot little lues-rocker like "Black Hearted Woman" nearly hits half an hour for the same reason). For the home listener, those drum breaks provide rare examples of the Allmans stretching their jams past inspiration and into longwindedness.

    Regardless, The Fox Box showcases practically everything that the 21st century Allmans could present at their most epic, revealing a band in astoundingly good shape 35 years after its founding. Hearing the group stretch out in 2004 can be a wonderful experience, although if you pop for The Fox Box you might ultimately wish you could edit portions out. There's an absolutely classic four- or five-CD set here, scattered inconveniently across twice as many discs. Unfortunately, the Instant Live concept makes the best stuff difficult to isolate, and The Fox Box is thus a strange mixture of joy and aggravation.

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