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The Allman Brothers Band Museum, also known as The Big House, is a museum in Macon, Georgia, United States. It was the home to The Allman Brothers Band's original members, their families, and various friends from 1970 to 1973. The Big House was renovated by The Big House Foundation and opened in November 2009 as an interactive museum dedicated ...
Macon City Auditorium: Macon, GA 2/11/72 is a two-CD live album by the Allman Brothers Band. It was recorded at the Macon City Auditorium in Macon, Georgia on February 11, 1972. The third archival concert album from the Allman Brothers Band Recording Company, it was released in 2004. The Macon City show was recorded several months after the ...
The Boomers are a Canadian rock band from Ontario. Also known as The Boomers YYZ. Although their first album What We Do was not initially a commercial success in Canada, it became a cult hit in Germany, leading to a tour in 1991. This success prompted the band to record The Art of Living; the single "You Gotta Know" was a hit in Canada. [1]
West’s impact on Middle Georgia, from the Big House Museum to First Fridays to Gallery West, is profound. The Iowa native will go into his home state’s rock ‘n’ roll hall of fame this weekend.
H&H is a Macon attraction made famous by The Allman Brothers Band. Molly Hatchet and the Wet Willie Band were also regular attendees of the H&H. It has also been the meeting place for civil rights activists, the NAACP and Georgia state presidents and officers. [2]
The band had hits with “Young ... The man who singlehandedly put Macon, Georgia, ... Janis Joplin was so undeniably talented and outspoken that the Boomers who loved her in the ‘60s would’ve ...
Hewell “Chank” Middleton, a close friend to Macon music icon Gregg Allman, has died, the singer’s estate says. Born in 1950, Middleton was a Macon native and died at age 71.
The Allman Brothers, Southern rock band; Bill Berry, member of R.E.M.; lived in Macon in early 1970s; Claudine Clark, R&B musician and composer; Randy Crawford, jazz and R&B singer; Buddy Greene, singer-songwriter, guitar player and harmonica player; gospel music; Ronnie Hammond, lead singer, Atlanta Rhythm Section