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The original leaders of
Gov't Mule,
Warren Haynes and Allen Woody, were well known to
Allman Brothers fans for their stint in Southern rock's most famous native sons. In 1989,
Haynes became the second replacement for
Duane Allman, providing a good foil for
Gregg Allman and
Dickey Betts on guitar and vocals; Woody filled out the
Allman sound on bass. Five years after their debut, the duo joined drummer Matt Abts in the side project
Gov't Mule, a band in which
the Allman Brothers' influence was apparent but complicated with the psychedelic, bluesy power trio feel of
Cream.
Gov't Mule debuted in 1995 with a self-titled album on Capricorn Records, followed by the stellar concert date
Live at Roseland Ballroom. The studio follow-up,
Dose, appeared in early 1998; another concert set,
Live...With a Little Help from Our Friends, followed a year later, with the complete show appearing as a four-disc limited-edition set. A new studio effort,
Life Before Insanity, appeared in early 2000. A vital member of the band was lost, however, on August 26, 2000, when Woody was found dead in a hotel room in New York City. The band had been preparing to record its next album, and after a time,
Gov't Mule finally decided to carry on with the project, this time with guest bassists ranging from Flea to
Bootsy Collins. The two-volume Deep End series for ATO Records was the result.
Phish bassist
Mike Gordon also got involved in the project, filming the recording of the albums for a planned documentary. In mid-September 2001, the group hit the road for a six-week tour in support of Deep End, Vol. 1; Oteil Burbridge filled in as bassist for most of the dates.
The second volume of
Live...With a Little Help from Our Friends appeared in 2002, and the
Deepest End: Live in Concert CD and DVD in 2003. One year later saw the release of Déjà Voodoo,
Gov't Mule's first studio effort since Woody's death. It featured his official replacement, bassist Andy Hess, as well as new keyboardist Danny Louis. The same lineup released
High & Mighty in 2006. The two-volume Benefit Concert series followed in 2007. In 2009,
Gov't Mule issued
By a Thread, their first studio album in three years. Hess was replaced by bassist Jorgen Carlsson, and the album featured a guest appearance by
ZZ Top guitarist
Billy Gibbons. In 2010, the Evil Teen imprint issued
Mulennium, a three-disc package that commemorated
Gov't Mule's complete 1999 New Year's Eve concert at Atlanta's historic Roxy Theater with the band's original lineup. The concert also included guest appearances by
the Black Crowes,
Little Milton, and Audley Freed.
After an extended recording break in which
Haynes recorded his first solo album,
Gov't Mule returned to the studio.
Shout was issued in September of 2013. It contained 11 new songs, and was accompanied by a bonus disc that featured a host of guest vocalists (including
Toots Hibbert,
Jim James,
Dr. John,
Steve Winwood, and
Elvis Costello) fronting the band on different versions of the same tracks. In 2014,
Haynes and Abts began to commemorate the band's 20th anniversary with a series of archival recordings. The first,
Dark Side of the Mule, featured 90 minutes of
Pink Floyd covers and three hours of music and video recorded on Halloween 2008 at the Orpheum Theater in Boston, Massachusetts. It appeared late in 2014 and was followed by Sco-Mule, a set compiled from two in-the-vault recordings of a 1999 live date with guest jazz guitarist
John Scofield. In the spring of 2015, the band released
Dub Side of the Mule, a document of their fabled New Year's Eve 2006 performance at the Beacon Theater in New York. The multiple-disc release included an hour-long reggae set with
Toots Hibbert, and guest appearances from
Gregg Allman and
John Popper. In the spring of 2016, Evil Teen announced the archival release,
The Tel-Star Sessions. It contained newly mixed and mastered versions of the original trio's earliest -- and never previously released -- 1994 demos, cut at Tel-Star Studios in Florida in 1994. The first single, a cover of
ZZ Top’s "Just Got Paid," was released to the internet upon announcement, and was followed by the ten-track album in September.
On November 8, 2016 -- Election Day --
Gov't Mule began work on a new album in New York City with the working title
Revolution Come...Revolution Go. According to
Haynes, throughout that first day, the band half joked about what would happen if Donald Trump became president. The next afternoon, they understood that their title had been prescient. Produced by
Haynes in collaboration with Gordie Johnson and Don Was, and cut in Austin (guitarist
Jimmie Vaughan contributed to the track "Burning Point") as well as New York. The set's first single, "Stone Cold Rage," evoked the atmosphere of social unrest from coast to coast. The remainder of the double-album's 14 songs were split between topical songs, personal ruminations (
Haynes had recently become a father and had lost some close friends), and a cover of
Blind Willie Johnson's "Dark Was the Night, Cold Was the Ground." In June 2017, almost seven months and one day after sessions for
Revolution Come...Revolution Go commenced, the album hit the street. ~ John Bush & Thom Jurek