Alan Walden called R&B dynamo Otis Redding"his best friend," and was devastated when the singer died at the age of 26 in a 1967 plane crash.If you had to compare the size of a city to level of musical influence, it would be hard to beat the yawning gap of Macon.
Some of the book’s best anecdotes involve “Traveling with Otis.” Some funny, some brutally stark about Jim Crow south. Like how Walden would put a hole in the bottom of a car so his Black occupants could just relieve themselves through a funnel instead of having to stop—where any gas station or restaurant could be the scene of racially-tinged trouble.
However, his relationship with brother Phil was contentious for much of their lives. Alan charges that Phil’s ego and cocaine abuse often meant a miserly attitude toward sharing credit for successes, even when Alan says he was very involved. “For him to say anything bad about my brother—who gave his wealth and spirit to the band—was just so stupid, because nobody believed in Gregg more than Phil Walden…he drained the company for this band.”
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