The song uses a B-A-E progression, and the song's lyrics were inspired by a T-shirt that writer Phil Palmer saw an infant wearing which read "Daddy's No. 1 Angel". Due to a fold in the shirt, Palmer initially read it as "Daddy's No Angel".
began performing "I'm No Angel" live in the mid-1980s and cut the song as a demo in hopes of ending his post-1977 absence from recording. Michael Caplan, a rookie a&r man at Epic and an admitted "longtime, serious Allman Brothers Band fan" would recall "I found Gregg's four-song demo cassette in my boss's garbage...I listened to and the first song was 'I'm No Angel' which I thought was great. So I got in touch with Willie Perkins and Alex Hodges and signed Gregg to Epic." The recollection of Perkins is that Hodges was contacted by veteran Epic A&R man Lennie Petze with an interest in signing Allman to Epic, Petze having given a stack of demos to independent radio consultant Bill Bennett to listen to on a flight from New York City to Los Angeles: the demos included Allman's "I'm No Angel" which Bennett had reported back to Petze he could successfully pitch to at least one hundred radio stations. Following Petze's call to Hodges, Perkins brought Allman to CBS RecordsNew York City headquarters to meet Michael Caplan and Epic vice-president Frank Rand: Caplan and Rand would soon afterwards sign Allman to Epic ensuant to seeing perform at a New Jersey gig. The track features Allman's gruff vocals in a Bruce Springsteen sound-alike way, New Orleans music-based statement of boasting yet acknowledging of fault-strewn purpose. Critics noted the song's suitability for Allman in light of his hellraiser persona. Laden with 1980s production touches from Rodney Mills such as heavy keyboards and drums, the record helped revive Allman's image with 1980s pop and rock audiences, and may have even indirectly contributed to the Allman Brothers Band's successful reformation two years later. In subsequent years, "I'm No Angel" was part of Allman's solo concert repertoire, and has also been played by the Allman Brothers Band, with most of the pop gloss of the original recording eliminated.
Personnel
Gregg Allman-Hammond Organ, lead vocals
Dan Toler-guitar
Tim Heding-keyboards
Bruce Waibel-bass guitar
David Frankie Toler-drums
Chaz Trippy-percussion
Charts
Other covers
Allman's former wife Cher identified with the song, and performed it in the high-profile opening slot of her 1989-1990 Heart of Stone Tour.
The song was the soundtrack for sketch in the Saturday Night Live episode hosted by Josh Brolin in 2008. In the skit, a pregnant woman flirts with a patron while the song plays. In her 2014 book Yes Please, Poehler reveals that she and the co-writer of the sketch, Emily Spivey, were "obsessed" with the song and had been trying for years to shoehorn it into a sketch.