On any given night, Southern blues rocker Devon Allman will look over at Duane Betts and experience a bit of dรฉjร vu.
He sees Bettsโs famous father Dickey, who for decades shared the stage with Allmanโs famous father Gregg in the Allman Brothers Band.
โItโs pretty wild looking over (at Duane). I swear sometimes Iโm looking over at Dickey,โ Allman said from a tour stop in Birmingham, Alabama, early this month.
The younger Betts is the special guest on the maiden tour of Allmanโs months-old Devon Allman Project. The show pulls into Fox Tucson Theatre, 17 W. Congress St., on Friday, May 25.
โWe met in โ89 on the Allman Brothers reunion tour. I was like 17, he was like 12,โ Allman, 45, recalled. โThen we started to go out there and really work ourselves and we ran into each other in L.A., Atlanta and London. Weโd end up on some of the same festivals and the same bills. We did a couple of cruises together where I would sit in with his dad. We just kind of kept in touch.โ
The Devon Allman Project, a six-piece band comprised of โsix cats that all play at the top of their game,โ is the latest musical incarnation for Allman, whose nearly 20-year Southern rock and blues career has included fronting a couple of bands and performing solo, recording nine albums along the way. Allman put it together late last year, months after his father died in spring 2017 of liver cancer at the age of 69.
During our phone call, Allman gave us a preview of Fridayโs show and his new band, and said his father would be proud that his legacy and music is resonating with a new generation of fans.
Months of silence, then a big comeback: โWhen my father passed, I was like, you know, Iโve never taken a year off. Iโm going to do it now and kind of huddle around my family and deal with this. When I started to realize, hey, I canโt sit around forever, I got to get back to work. I just thought it would be cool to come back a lot bigger and stronger. So instead of a four-piece band, I have a six and weโre bringing Duane out. ... Duane is just really killing it. And we close the show with a round of tipping our hats to our heroes, and that includes our dads.โ
Keeping dadโs memory and music alive: โI think he would be proud today knowing that a bit of that catalogue still gets to move people. Weโve had instances almost every night on this tour where people are weeping. I think thatโs a testament. I think weโre reminding them of a pretty glorious time of their lives.โ To help kind of summon that energy in some older folks is really amazing, and to see the younger kids that maybe didnโt get to see our dads still get to experience that flavor of music has been really cool.
Giving young people an alternative: โThe crap they play on the radio is like the fast food of music. People are starting to realize that fast food isnโt all that great for you. The same thing with music. I think the more plastic crap with no soul out there that they feed the kids on the airwaves and the internet, the smart ones are going to go, โMan, this isnโt music, this isnโt soulful.โ And it doesnโt mean that it has to be our genre; Iโm not trying to be a music snob within our genre. I listen to thrash metal. I listen to Nigerian jazz, and, no kidding, everything in between. But the stuff like the drum machines and synthesizers. Some people can make art out of it and a lot of other people just make a lot of noise with it.โ
Bigger, badder super band: โIโve always tried to kind of shake it up. I had a band called Honey Tribe. I was in a band called Royal Southern Brotherhood. Then I did the solo thing for a few years. This is called the Devon Allman Project. Itโs badass; itโs six cats that all play at the top of their game. I kind of stole the best cats from St. Louis and then I got Nicholas David who was on the TV show โThe Voice,โ the finalist. Heโs a badass keyboard player and just a helluva cat. Weโve got a cat (R. Scott Bryan) who was in Sheryl Crowโs band during her big years. Heโs our percussionist and background vocalist. They are all really cool.โ
When heโs not on stage, you might find him in the kitchen: โOh hell yes I cook. I have a hot sauce, itโs award-winning and we sell a lot of it. Itโs actually really good. ... I donโt cook on the road; the road isnโt very conducive of bringing out all your spices and utensils. ... I do have barbecues or big dinners at my house for my band.โ



