Everything about Whipping Post Song totally explained
"
Whipping Post" is a song from
The Allman Brothers Band. Written by
Gregg Allman, the five-minute studio version first appeared on their 1969 debut album
The Allman Brothers Band. But the song's full power only manifested itself in concert, when it was the basis for much longer and more intense performances. This was captured in a classic take on the Allman Brothers' equally classic 1971
double live album At Fillmore East, where a 23-minute rendition takes up the entire final side. It was this recording that garnered "Whipping Post" spots on both
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll list and
Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time list.
History
Gregg Allman was only 21 years old when the song was first recorded. It was written shortly before he joined his brother
Duane Allman to form The Allman Brothers Band. According to the liner notes of Allman's compilation album, the song was inspired by his despair over his failure to make a name for himself as a musician during a late-1960s stint in
Los Angeles. Gregg was on the verge of quitting music altogether when Duane called and said his new band needed a vocalist.
The
blues rock song's lyrics center around a metaphorical
whipping post, an evil woman and futile
existential sorrow. Writer
Jean-Charles Costa described the studio version's musical structure as a "solid framework of [a] song that lends itself to thousands of possibilities in terms of solo expansion. ... [Itis] in modified 3/4 time, building to a series of shrieking lead guitar statements, and reaching full strength in the chorus supported by super dual-lead guitar."
Despite its length, the live "Whipping Post" received considerable
progressive rock radio airplay during the early 1970s, especially late at night or on weekends.
The song also acquired a quasi-legendary role in early 1970s rock concerts, when audience members at
other artists' concerts would jokingly yell out "Whipping Post!" as a request between numbers, echoing the fan captured on
At Fillmore East.
Jackson Browne took note of this occurring during his concerts of the time, and another such instance from 1974 is captured on
Frank Zappa's
You Can't Do That on Stage Anymore, Vol. 2 live album, that caused Zappa to play a southern rock version of his song "
Montana", subtitled "Whipping Floss" (Zappa's band would later learn "Whipping Post" and add it to their repertoire). Zappa recorded a studio version of the song for the
1984 album
Them or Us. Later this same concert "role" would be taken over to a
far greater extent by
Lynyrd Skynyrd's "
Free Bird".
With the advent of
album oriented rock radio formats in the 1980s and later, "Whipping Post" became less visible in the rock consciousness, but upon the reformation of the Allmans in 1989 and their perennial touring it held a regular slot in the group's concert set list rotation.
Other artists
The most well-known rendition of "Whipping Post" by any other artist came in the most unlikely of circumstances, during
Season 4 of the massively popular television competition
American Idol in 2005. Contestant
Bo Bice gave a shot in the arm to
Southern rock with an impassioned performance during the show's semi-finals round, pleasing show judge
Randy Jackson no end and propelling Bice towards an eventual second-place finish. Since then other
Idol contestants have tried their hand at the song as well, leading to it gaining renewed visibility.
Rock cult figure
Genya Ravan produced the best-known recording by a female singer.
Gregg Allman himself performs "Whipping Post" with his outside-the-Allmans Gregg Allman and Friends group's concerts, but in a style that he describes as "its funky, real rhythm n’ blues-like" and in which he plays guitar rather than organ. Allman re-recorded the song for his 1997 album
Searching for Simplicity, giving the song a jazzier groove.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Whipping Post Song'.
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