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Eat a Peach is the third studio album and the first double album by American rock band the Allman Brothers Band. Produced by Tom Dowd , the album was released on February 12, 1972, in the United States by Capricorn Records .
The cover art features Trucks' son Vaylor, while the back cover featured Oakley's daughter Brittany. [31] The gatefold spread reveals a photo of the band and their extended families. [31] [32] "I have an almost dreamlike memory of the way things were—parties, people giving the horses beer, various people in and out," said Brittany Oakley in ...
Flournoy Holmes is an established visual artist and musician. Growing up in the southern piedmont, Spartanburg South Carolina, the son of two artistically inclined parents, his father was a musician and his mother a ceramics teacher and they encouraged his drawing abilities at an early age.
On AllMusic, Bret Adams said, "It would be easy to argue that individual albums like Idlewild South, At Fillmore East, Eat a Peach, or Brothers and Sisters are more cohesive artistic statements, but no self-respecting rock & roll fan should be without a copy of A Decade of Hits 1969-1979, which includes the cream of those albums."
Eat a Peach is a 1972 album by the Allman Brothers Band. Eat a Peach may also refer to: Eat a Peach (autobiography), a 2020 book by American chef David Chang "Eat a Peach" (Space Ghost Coast to Coast), an episode from the eighth season of the animated series "Eat a Peach", an episode from the fifth season of the television series Six Feet Under
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Synchromism was developed by Stanton Macdonald-Wright and Morgan Russell while they were studying in Paris during the early 1910s. [7] In 1907, Stanton Macdonald-Wright studied the ideas of optical scientists such as Michel-Eugene Chevreul, Hermann von Helmholtz, and Ogden Rood in order to further develop color theory influenced by musical harmonies. [8]