Several weeks before the gold certification of
At Fillmore East and their rehabilitation, the band headed to
Miami's
Criteria Studios to work on their third studio album. Once again they'd be working with producer
Tom Dowd, whom had been instrumental in the successful recording and production of
At Fillmore East. The band laid down the initial tracks for "
Blue Sky". The band saved money on studio time by writing and debuting songs on the road. The band worked on three songs: "Blue Sky", an
instrumental titled "The Road to Calico" (which would eventually develop into "Stand Back", with added vocals) and "Little Martha", the only song solely credited to Duane Allman. The band laid down these three songs and went back on the road for a short run of shows, and at this point several checked into rehab. After Duane's death, the band held a meeting on their future; it was clear all wanted to continue, and after a short period, they returned to the road. Drummer
Butch Trucks later said, "We all had this thing in us and Duane put it there. He was the teacher and he gave something to us—his disciples—that we had to play out."'s death in late 1971 Following Duane's death, which severely impacted his younger brother, organist/lead vocalist/songwriter
Gregg Allman, lead guitarist
Dickey Betts gradually took over as group leader. The band returned to Miami in December to complete work on the album. Twiggs Lyndon, the band's former head roadie, joined them; he had just completed a stay in a psychiatric hospital stemming from his 1970 arrest for the murder of a concert promoter at one of the band's shows. Lyndon became the band's production manager. The band recorded three more tracks with Dowd, including "Melissa", "Les Brers in A Minor", and "
Ain't Wastin' Time No More". Allman's death provided the band with motivation: "We were all putting more into it, trying so hard to make it as good as it would have been with Duane. We knew our driving force, our soul, the guy that set us all on fire, wasn't there and we had to do something for him," said Trucks. The heroin addictions had taken their toll on the band members; Gregg Allman later said, "We were taking vitamins, we had doctors coming over and sticking us in the ass with
B12 shots every day. Little by little by little, we crawled back up to the point where we were standing erect." The other material on
Eat a Peach comes from live recordings. Dowd later said, "When we recorded
At Fillmore East, we ended up with almost a whole other album's worth of good material, and we used [three] tracks on
Eat a Peach. Again, there was no
overdubbing". Dowd started the
mixing process for
Eat a Peach but had run overtime and was called to commitments with
Crosby, Stills and Nash; longtime Allman friend and colleague Johnny Sandlin took over for the remaining mixes. Sandlin later said of the mixing process, "As I mixed songs like "Blue Sky," I knew, of course, that I was listening to the last things that Duane ever played and there was just such a mix of beauty and sadness, knowing there's not going to be any more from him". He was particularly proud of his mixing work on the album, but was angry because he did not receive credit, only a "special thanks". Completing the recording of
Eat a Peach raised each members' spirits. Said Allman, "The music brought life back to us all, and it was simultaneously realized by every one of us. We found strength, vitality, newness, reason, and belonging as we worked on finishing
Eat a Peach". "Those last three songs ... just kinda floated right on out of us ... The music was still good, it was still rich, and it still had that energy—it was still the Allman Brothers Band." ==Composition==