Allman Brothers Fillmore 3 x BDA set 1st pix etc..

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New 3 disc Blu ray Audio set. 2014 triple Blu-ray 5.1 surround sound & hi-res 96/24 stereo format box set of the legendary 1971 Fillmore East Recordings from four shows on March 12th & 13th, 1971 produced by Tom Dowd. After years on the road the band reached their pinnacle here. Bill Graham's theatre with a state of the art PA & Joshua light show always brought out the best in artists that performed on the stage. Graham called the ABB his favorite band & chose them as the closing act at the Fillmore East when he shut it down on June 27th, 1971. That legendary performance is also included in this set. Contains 37 tracks including 15 that are previously unreleased. For years fans have clamored for the release of this material. The unique guitar interplay between the late Duane Allman & Dicky Betts is legendary & unique. Includes deluxe 34 page booklet with extensive liner notes by Hittin' the Note fan site editor John Lynskey.
 

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At Fillmore East: The 1971 Fillmore Recordings

By C. MICHAEL BAILEY, Published: July 19, 2014
Nothing warms the heart cockles of a late-Baby Boomer more than a discussion of music, specifically that of his or her childhood. Baby Boomers are a boisterous and opinionated bunch regarding their music, fully justified in believing that the period between mid-1950s and mid-1970s was, in the words of VH1 Executive Director Bill Flanagan, a "Golden Age" in American Music. Restrict that conversation to the best live rock recordings and the dialog shifts to a high simmer, under pressure, threatening rebellion or all-out apocalypse at any moment as I was to learn with my graded publication of "The Best Live Rock Recordings."

Were the reader to select that hot link, he or she would find that an editor had decided to limit my title with the appended " (1969—79)." I respectfully disagreed with that restriction then then and continue to now. Since writing this series, I have heard only a handful of live recordings that deserved to be included in this list and the subsequent "The Best Live Rock Recordings—The Best of The Rest." One such recording that immediately comes to mind is Jerry Lee Lewis' crime scene of a concert Live at the Star Club, Hamburg (Bear Family, 1962/1999). To my mind, there has been no comparable live rock recordings since Little Feat's Waiting for Columbus (Warner Brothers, 1978). There! I said it! But, that, along with the death threats I received for my honest appraisal of Led Zeppelin's The Song Remains the Same (Swan Song, 1976), are digressions and discussions for another time.

The 1970s saw the rise of the "Southern Rock" phenomenon manifesting in the quadrilateral of Lynyrd Skynyrd; Marshall Tucker Band, ZZ Top and the Allman Brothers Band. For every popular pejorative applied to this music: "Redneck Rock," "Cracker Country" or the like, the music still defined the era regionally and nationally. The musical Wotan of this movement was the Allman Brothers Band, whose candle burned incandescently in the original format for a little over two years. While the band's two studio recordings, Allman Brothers Band (Capricorn. 1969) and Idlewild South (Capricorn, 1970) were critically well received, like The Band and Little Feat, the Allman Brothers were destined to lay waste on the concert stage. The last number of years have seen the release of a plethora of live recordings, pre- and post-Duane Allman's and Berry Oakley's deaths. But it was the unusually productive period between March and July 1971 at New York City's Fillmore East that is formalin-fixed into a generation's collective unconscious, manifesting itself as the two-LP sets At Fillmore East (Capricorn, 1971) and Eat a Peach (Capricorn, 1972).

The near-myth surrounding the Allman Brothers Band's March 11-13 and June 27, 1971 Fillmore concerts is now hardening into a more-or-less factual account supported by the audio recordings with the current The 1971 Fillmore East Recordings. The same may also be said for the recorded account, which has been, up until now, a mess. The original two-LP release was largely culled from a series of four shows performed on March 12 and 13, 1971 at New York City's Fillmore East Auditorium. Since that time At Fillmore East has seen multiple releases on compact disc, each with differing levels of sonic cleansing, digital alchemy and the pornographic revelation of unreleased material.

While a superior musical document in itself, At Fillmore East has existed as a robust but incomplete torso, like that of Mozart's Requiem, neither fully annotated or, ultimately, realized. Several of the songs recorded from the March 1971 Fillmore concerts not included on At Fillmore East were carelessly strewn across Eat A Peach ("Trouble No More" and "Mountain Jam"), Duane Allman: An Anthology ("Don't Keep Me Wondering"), Duane Allman: An Anthology, Volume 2 ("Midnight Rider"), and The Allman Brothers Band: Dreams ("Drunken- Hearted Boy"). "One Way Out" which appeared first on Eat a Peach was the only song not actually recorded March 1971. It was recorded on June 27, 1971 at the final Fillmore concert before the hall closed. Prior to the release of The Fillmore Concerts in 1992, this discography accounted for all of the music in release from the famous March and June 1971 shows.

The Fillmore Concerts (1992) contained the first unreleased material from the Allman's famous stand at the Fillmore up to that time. Perhaps the greatest difference between At Fillmore East and The Fillmore Concerts outside of the additional material added is the digital editing on "In Memory of Elizabeth Reed" and "You Don't Love Me," combining the superior pieces of the multiple takes of each performed during the four shows. Needless to say, this was controversial. This bit of Tom Dowd wizardry also magnifies an additional issue to be considered: the amount of material drawn upon for the extant releases.

History documents that two shows each were performed on not only Friday, March 12th and Saturday, March 13th, the dates from which the bulk of the material was drawn but also Thursday, March 11th. My best Jethro Bodine cyphering around the time of the release of At Fillmore East, Deluxe Edition, (Mercury, 2003) had me considering the 13 songs making up At Fillmore East, Deluxe Edition as a typical ABB performance during this period. Were that true, then there would exist ostensibly 52 tracks of performances for March 12th and 13th, and 78 tracks if the March 11th shows are included. I was spectacularly wrong as I had failed to consider that the average Allman Brothers Band concert of the period was between six and nine songs. I take this time to correct my error.

The next Fillmore East revelation (of previously unreleased material) was the release of the Eat a Peach, Deluxe Edition, Mercury, 2006 which liberated the entire June 27th show from the vaults making for a tidy complete document of that performance closing the Fillmore East. When the Eat a Peach, Deluxe Edition was released, a glimmer of hope appeared that a responsible rendering of the 1971 Fillmore East shows may finally surface.

What is finally revealed in The 1971 Fillmore East Recordings are 28 songs recorded over four March 12th and 13th shows with an additional 9 songs from the June 27th show for a total of 37 pieces making up this new collection. Fourteen of these 37 performances were previously unreleased (though available as bootlegs for years). What begs explanation was the fate of the two sets recording on March 11th. What became of them, this famous concert with a horn section? The story is part of Allman Brothers lore. Randy Poe details the colorful tale of the March 11th sets in his book Skydog: The Duane Allman Story (Back Beat, 2006):

Tom Dowd was back to produce [At Fillmore East], but this time he was flying by the seat of his pants. He hadn't even planned to be in New York when the live album was being cut. "I was supposed to be in Europe," [said Dowd] ...Dowd had been in Africa working on the film Soul to Soul. From there he planned to vacation in Rome, but when his plane touched down, he discovered it was snowing. "I looked and thought, 'I don't need Rome in the snow,'" [said Dowd]. So, Dowd caught the next plane to Paris, eventually arriving in New York at the crack of dawn on March 10.

After checking into a motel near the Atlantic Records office, [Dowd] slept all day. The following afternoon he called Jerry Wexler to let him know he was in town. "That's great," said Wexler, "because the Allman Brothers are recording tonight at the Fillmore. With such short notice, Dowd had no time to speak to Duane [Allman] or any of the other band members. He took a taxi down to the Fillmore East and hopped into the truck that housed Location Recorders' mobile studio.

"The band didn't even know I was back," said Dowd. "I'm sitting in the truck and prompting the engineers. So the band comes on stage and all of a sudden I hear horns and I nearly wet my pants, I went out of the truck, I mean, tear-assing down. And when they came off, I grabbed them and said, 'Get the fucking horns out of my life. They are out of tune, they don't know the songs—whose stroke of genius was this?'"

When the band finally calmed him down, they asked Dowd if they could keep one horn player [Rudolph "Juicy" Carter, a friend of Jaimoe's] and Thom Doucette on harmonica. He agreed, but the [March 11th] show was a lost cause. "The first show, half the tracks that I could have used were wasted because I had horns on guitar parts, and they were terrible. "It was pretty grim," said Dowd. "So that night, in order to make a point, we went up to my studio with the tapes under my arms, and I played the whole concert back to them. They were sitting there and said, 'Yeah, you're right.' The next night [March 12th], I didn't have to worry about the horns."

It is delicious to consider what would have happened if a proper horn section had been assembled and given charts prepared by someone like Allen Toussaint as happened for The Band on Rock of Ages (Capitol, 1972). But, alas, it was not to be.

With any questions about the value of the March 11th set safely addressed, this release of The 1971 Fillmore East Recordings finally goes the distance in making up for a gratuitous, money- grubbing release schedule of the Fillmore East material over the past 40 years. We finally have the Allman Brothers Band's Holy Grail, definitive and complete as possible. So, what do these reunited 37 performances have to tell us all this time later? Plenty.

First, the Allman Brothers Band's closest musical relative was the Grateful Dead. The two bands frequently performed together, when the ABB was on the West Coast, and both were kindred spirits in the musical ether that would be known as jam band rock. While the ABB in its original configuration released much less live music, the music that exists is of a consistently higher quality than the majority of the millennia of live Dead tapes that exist. Yes, the two were apples and oranges to a point, one can hear much of the Dead in "Mountain Jam" and a dense slice of the ABB in any performance of "Turn on Your Love Light." Head to head Duane Allman forged a molten sound that the Jerry Garcia and the Dead would only approach (for instance think side two of the original two-LP set of Live/Dead (Warner Bros., 1969)) but never achieve. This may not the point of our discussion, but it does bear considering.

The 37 performances on The 1971 Fillmore East Recordings represent 13 different songs, which allow comparison and analysis of the sound evolution taking place in a compressed space of history. The Allman Brothers Band performed 300 concert dates in 1970. That type of performance schedule will improve any band if it does not kill them first and the evidence of this fire refinement is heard on these recordings. But evolution in the moment, as with all jazz, is evident even in this closed space of time.

These Fillmore East shows produced the most perfect electric blues performances on record, before or since. Perfect in the sense that the band proceeds as a tuned unit with each soloist tuned into the other, inspiring one another equally. All three were selected as original release performances. Blind Willie McTell's "Statesboro Blues," originally a 1928 Victor Race Record in McTell's signature Piedmont 12-string guitar version opens every performance. Duane Allman's conception of the song was derived from the rendition he heard on Taj Mahal's 1968 debut, Taj Mahal (Columbia Legacy) with Ry Cooder playing slide guitar. The versions are comparable, but Allman completed the piece, rounding out is arrangement and providing a dense sound wall Mahal could not achieve with is modest forces when compared with the Allman Brother Band. Taken from the first set on March 13th, it all began with, "Okay...The Allman Brothers Band." Duane Allman's slide guitar, plays note perfect, in the introduction and then behind an equally inspired Gregg Allman vocals. Duane Allman solos first, exploding out of the turnaround (a performance device he was too perfect on other pieces). After another verse, Richard Betts adds one of his most coherent solos, full of country pathos, whiskey and smoke.

Elmore James' "Done Somebody Wrong" was originally recorded by the Canton, Mississippi native for Fire Records in 1960, with a B-side of "Fine Little Mama." From the second set on March 12th, Duane Allman converts this original shuffle into a stop-time blues that again employs his formula of a slide guitar introduction and accompaniment behind Gregg's robust vocals. Sometime-band member Thom "Ace" Doucette adds a searing blues solo, at tempo, that makes one wonder what might have been had he formally joined the band. Betts again provides a tight and cogent solo, followed by another verse and then the breath-taking dual guitar break introducing Duane's scintillating slide spotlight, ultimately ending the song as it was started, with the slide guitar.

Finally there is the pinnacle of the short-form electric blues in the June 27th performance of the Elmore James/Sonny Boy Williamson II classic "One Way Out." Previously performed by the band during the second set of the March 13th show, that version is stilted and nor fully realized. Doucette's harmonica offers a nice touch in the earlier performance, but not nice enough to correct for Gregg's poor timing and Duane's tentative playing. That all changes in the late Spring when Bett's lays down and extended introduction full of funk and sweat, downshifted into a penetrating momentum that is never lost in the song's 5:24. Betts simmers behind Gregg's vocals before igniting into his finest solo on record. Betts and Allman trade eights over the dual drummers before Duane's trademark emergence into his precisely-structured solo. Gregg ends the song in a soulful, Southern Leibestod. This is the only way to remember The Allman Brothers Band.

Blues rave-ups are not the be-all and end-all of the band. Three pieces provide vehicles for the standard tuning playing that Duane Allman and Richard Betts made famous. Betts' superb "In Memory of Elizabeth Reed" enjoys four probing performances, all at a very high level of musicianship. It is doubtless that the presence of saxophonist Juicy Carter mars the March 12th performances. Had Carter had more practice time, and the band employed more carefully arrangements, the horn would have been more than appropriate. Tom Dowd must have shit a brick during these recordings. However, there is nothing but inspired guitar playing here.

"You Don't Love Me," a Willie Cobbs piece originally recorded for VeeJay Records in Memphis in 1960, serves as the extended blues jam for the band. Always durable, it is established with an opening riff laying down the sonic law. It is presented in four slightly differing versions in this series each populated with robust guitar playing and percussion highlights. This is the cooker of the concerts, when the band was intent on finishing the audience off with a sonic machine gun blast. "You Don't Love Me" exist alongside the band's greatest achievement, "Whipping Post," a modern blues motif employing a crazy modulating time signature that stirs the earth's molten core. All three of these pieces allow the band to exercise their collective grasp of performance dynamics and dramatics. Any of these vehicles could be classified as jazz and the most exciting type. Allman and Betts' guitar interplay operates at a dangerously high level here. Even at it most flawed...this is superior to anything since...

After 40 years of an unforgivably negligent, aimless and commercially exploitative release schedule, finally someone has gotten it right, the persistent monument to live and improvised rock music. This is the definitive document of four nights in 1971 that continue to captivate and haunt our collective imaginations. Do you want to hear perfect jazz...listen to this and fuck every one else....

An Abbreviated The 1971 Fillmore Recordings Discography:

The Allman Brothers Band at Fillmore East, Polydor Records, 1971/1986
Eat a Peach, Polydor, 1971/1986
Duane Allman Anthology, Volume 1, Polydor, 1972/1986
Duane Allman Anthology, Volume 2, Polydor, 1974/1987
Dreams, Polydor, 1989
The Fillmore Concerts, Polydor, 1992
The Allman Brothers Band at Fillmore East (Deluxe Edition), Mercury, 2003
Eat a Peach (Deluxe Edition), Mercury, 2006
Skydog: The Duane Allman Retrospective, Rounder, 2013
The 1971 Fillmore East Recordings, Mercury, 2014

Track Listing: CD1 - March 12, 1971 – First Show: Statesboro Blues (previously unreleased); Trouble No More (previously unreleased); Don’t Keep Me Wonderin’ (previously unreleased); Done Somebody Wrong (previously unreleased); In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed (previously unreleased); You Don’t Love Me (previously unreleased).

CD2 - March 12, 1971 – Second Show: Statesboro Blues (previously unreleased); Trouble No More; Don’t Keep Me Wonderin’ (previously unreleased); Done Somebody Wrong; In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed (previously unreleased); You Don’t Love Me; Whipping Post; (previously unreleased); Hot ‘Lanta.

CD3 - March 13, 1971 – First Show: Statesboro Blues; Trouble No More; Don’t Keep Me Wonderin’; Done Somebody Wrong (previously unreleased); In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed; You Don’t Love Me; Whipping Post (previously unreleased).

CD4 - March 13, 1971 – Second Show – Part 1: Statesboro Blues (previously unreleased); One Way Out (previously unreleased); Stormy Monday; Hot ‘Lanta; Whipping Post.

CD5 - March 13, 1971 – Second Show – Part 2: Mountain Jam; Drunken Hearted Boy (with Elvin Bishop).

CD6 - June 27, 1971 – FILLMORE EAST Closing Show: Introduction by Bill Graham (previously unreleased); Statesboro Blues; Don't Keep Me Wonderin'; Done Somebody Wrong; One Way Out; In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed; Midnight Rider; Hot Lanta; Whipping Post; You Don't Love Me.

Personnel: Duane Allman: lead, slide guitar; Gregg Allman: vocals, Hammond B3 organ; Berry Oakley: bass guitar, vocals; Dickey Betts: lead guitar; Jaimoe: drums, percussion; Butch Trucks: drums, tympani; Thom Doucette: harmonica; Rudolph “Juicy” Carter: saxophones; Bobby Caldwell: percussion.

Record Label: Mercury Records

Style: Jam Band
 
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/at-fill...-recordings-by-c-michael-bailey.php?width=768


At Fillmore East: The 1971 Fillmore Recordings

By C. MICHAEL BAILEY, Published: July 19, 2014
Nothing warms the heart cockles of a late-Baby Boomer more than a discussion of music, specifically that of his or her childhood. Baby Boomers are a boisterous and opinionated bunch regarding their music, fully justified in believing that the period between mid-1950s and mid-1970s was, in the words of VH1 Executive Director Bill Flanagan, a "Golden Age" in American Music. Restrict that conversation to the best live rock recordings and the dialog shifts to a high simmer, under pressure, threatening rebellion or all-out apocalypse at any moment as I was to learn with my graded publication of "The Best Live Rock Recordings."

Were the reader to select that hot link, he or she would find that an editor had decided to limit my title with the appended " (1969—79)." I respectfully disagreed with that restriction then then and continue to now. Since writing this series, I have heard only a handful of live recordings that deserved to be included in this list and the subsequent "The Best Live Rock Recordings—The Best of The Rest." One such recording that immediately comes to mind is Jerry Lee Lewis' crime scene of a concert Live at the Star Club, Hamburg (Bear Family, 1962/1999). To my mind, there has been no comparable live rock recordings since Little Feat's Waiting for Columbus (Warner Brothers, 1978). There! I said it! But, that, along with the death threats I received for my honest appraisal of Led Zeppelin's The Song Remains the Same (Swan Song, 1976), are digressions and discussions for another time.

The 1970s saw the rise of the "Southern Rock" phenomenon manifesting in the quadrilateral of Lynyrd Skynyrd; Marshall Tucker Band, ZZ Top and the Allman Brothers Band. For every popular pejorative applied to this music: "Redneck Rock," "Cracker Country" or the like, the music still defined the era regionally and nationally. The musical Wotan of this movement was the Allman Brothers Band, whose candle burned incandescently in the original format for a little over two years. While the band's two studio recordings, Allman Brothers Band (Capricorn. 1969) and Idlewild South (Capricorn, 1970) were critically well received, like The Band and Little Feat, the Allman Brothers were destined to lay waste on the concert stage. The last number of years have seen the release of a plethora of live recordings, pre- and post-Duane Allman's and Berry Oakley's deaths. But it was the unusually productive period between March and July 1971 at New York City's Fillmore East that is formalin-fixed into a generation's collective unconscious, manifesting itself as the two-LP sets At Fillmore East (Capricorn, 1971) and Eat a Peach (Capricorn, 1972).

The near-myth surrounding the Allman Brothers Band's March 11-13 and June 27, 1971 Fillmore concerts is now hardening into a more-or-less factual account supported by the audio recordings with the current The 1971 Fillmore East Recordings. The same may also be said for the recorded account, which has been, up until now, a mess. The original two-LP release was largely culled from a series of four shows performed on March 12 and 13, 1971 at New York City's Fillmore East Auditorium. Since that time At Fillmore East has seen multiple releases on compact disc, each with differing levels of sonic cleansing, digital alchemy and the pornographic revelation of unreleased material.

While a superior musical document in itself, At Fillmore East has existed as a robust but incomplete torso, like that of Mozart's Requiem, neither fully annotated or, ultimately, realized. Several of the songs recorded from the March 1971 Fillmore concerts not included on At Fillmore East were carelessly strewn across Eat A Peach ("Trouble No More" and "Mountain Jam"), Duane Allman: An Anthology ("Don't Keep Me Wondering"), Duane Allman: An Anthology, Volume 2 ("Midnight Rider"), and The Allman Brothers Band: Dreams ("Drunken- Hearted Boy"). "One Way Out" which appeared first on Eat a Peach was the only song not actually recorded March 1971. It was recorded on June 27, 1971 at the final Fillmore concert before the hall closed. Prior to the release of The Fillmore Concerts in 1992, this discography accounted for all of the music in release from the famous March and June 1971 shows.

The Fillmore Concerts (1992) contained the first unreleased material from the Allman's famous stand at the Fillmore up to that time. Perhaps the greatest difference between At Fillmore East and The Fillmore Concerts outside of the additional material added is the digital editing on "In Memory of Elizabeth Reed" and "You Don't Love Me," combining the superior pieces of the multiple takes of each performed during the four shows. Needless to say, this was controversial. This bit of Tom Dowd wizardry also magnifies an additional issue to be considered: the amount of material drawn upon for the extant releases.

History documents that two shows each were performed on not only Friday, March 12th and Saturday, March 13th, the dates from which the bulk of the material was drawn but also Thursday, March 11th. My best Jethro Bodine cyphering around the time of the release of At Fillmore East, Deluxe Edition, (Mercury, 2003) had me considering the 13 songs making up At Fillmore East, Deluxe Edition as a typical ABB performance during this period. Were that true, then there would exist ostensibly 52 tracks of performances for March 12th and 13th, and 78 tracks if the March 11th shows are included. I was spectacularly wrong as I had failed to consider that the average Allman Brothers Band concert of the period was between six and nine songs. I take this time to correct my error.

The next Fillmore East revelation (of previously unreleased material) was the release of the Eat a Peach, Deluxe Edition, Mercury, 2006 which liberated the entire June 27th show from the vaults making for a tidy complete document of that performance closing the Fillmore East. When the Eat a Peach, Deluxe Edition was released, a glimmer of hope appeared that a responsible rendering of the 1971 Fillmore East shows may finally surface.

What is finally revealed in The 1971 Fillmore East Recordings are 28 songs recorded over four March 12th and 13th shows with an additional 9 songs from the June 27th show for a total of 37 pieces making up this new collection. Fourteen of these 37 performances were previously unreleased (though available as bootlegs for years). What begs explanation was the fate of the two sets recording on March 11th. What became of them, this famous concert with a horn section? The story is part of Allman Brothers lore. Randy Poe details the colorful tale of the March 11th sets in his book Skydog: The Duane Allman Story (Back Beat, 2006):

Tom Dowd was back to produce [At Fillmore East], but this time he was flying by the seat of his pants. He hadn't even planned to be in New York when the live album was being cut. "I was supposed to be in Europe," [said Dowd] ...Dowd had been in Africa working on the film Soul to Soul. From there he planned to vacation in Rome, but when his plane touched down, he discovered it was snowing. "I looked and thought, 'I don't need Rome in the snow,'" [said Dowd]. So, Dowd caught the next plane to Paris, eventually arriving in New York at the crack of dawn on March 10.

After checking into a motel near the Atlantic Records office, [Dowd] slept all day. The following afternoon he called Jerry Wexler to let him know he was in town. "That's great," said Wexler, "because the Allman Brothers are recording tonight at the Fillmore. With such short notice, Dowd had no time to speak to Duane [Allman] or any of the other band members. He took a taxi down to the Fillmore East and hopped into the truck that housed Location Recorders' mobile studio.

"The band didn't even know I was back," said Dowd. "I'm sitting in the truck and prompting the engineers. So the band comes on stage and all of a sudden I hear horns and I nearly wet my pants, I went out of the truck, I mean, tear-assing down. And when they came off, I grabbed them and said, 'Get the fucking horns out of my life. They are out of tune, they don't know the songs—whose stroke of genius was this?'"

When the band finally calmed him down, they asked Dowd if they could keep one horn player [Rudolph "Juicy" Carter, a friend of Jaimoe's] and Thom Doucette on harmonica. He agreed, but the [March 11th] show was a lost cause. "The first show, half the tracks that I could have used were wasted because I had horns on guitar parts, and they were terrible. "It was pretty grim," said Dowd. "So that night, in order to make a point, we went up to my studio with the tapes under my arms, and I played the whole concert back to them. They were sitting there and said, 'Yeah, you're right.' The next night [March 12th], I didn't have to worry about the horns."

It is delicious to consider what would have happened if a proper horn section had been assembled and given charts prepared by someone like Allen Toussaint as happened for The Band on Rock of Ages (Capitol, 1972). But, alas, it was not to be.

With any questions about the value of the March 11th set safely addressed, this release of The 1971 Fillmore East Recordings finally goes the distance in making up for a gratuitous, money- grubbing release schedule of the Fillmore East material over the past 40 years. We finally have the Allman Brothers Band's Holy Grail, definitive and complete as possible. So, what do these reunited 37 performances have to tell us all this time later? Plenty.

First, the Allman Brothers Band's closest musical relative was the Grateful Dead. The two bands frequently performed together, when the ABB was on the West Coast, and both were kindred spirits in the musical ether that would be known as jam band rock. While the ABB in its original configuration released much less live music, the music that exists is of a consistently higher quality than the majority of the millennia of live Dead tapes that exist. Yes, the two were apples and oranges to a point, one can hear much of the Dead in "Mountain Jam" and a dense slice of the ABB in any performance of "Turn on Your Love Light." Head to head Duane Allman forged a molten sound that the Jerry Garcia and the Dead would only approach (for instance think side two of the original two-LP set of Live/Dead (Warner Bros., 1969)) but never achieve. This may not the point of our discussion, but it does bear considering.

The 37 performances on The 1971 Fillmore East Recordings represent 13 different songs, which allow comparison and analysis of the sound evolution taking place in a compressed space of history. The Allman Brothers Band performed 300 concert dates in 1970. That type of performance schedule will improve any band if it does not kill them first and the evidence of this fire refinement is heard on these recordings. But evolution in the moment, as with all jazz, is evident even in this closed space of time.

These Fillmore East shows produced the most perfect electric blues performances on record, before or since. Perfect in the sense that the band proceeds as a tuned unit with each soloist tuned into the other, inspiring one another equally. All three were selected as original release performances. Blind Willie McTell's "Statesboro Blues," originally a 1928 Victor Race Record in McTell's signature Piedmont 12-string guitar version opens every performance. Duane Allman's conception of the song was derived from the rendition he heard on Taj Mahal's 1968 debut, Taj Mahal (Columbia Legacy) with Ry Cooder playing slide guitar. The versions are comparable, but Allman completed the piece, rounding out is arrangement and providing a dense sound wall Mahal could not achieve with is modest forces when compared with the Allman Brother Band. Taken from the first set on March 13th, it all began with, "Okay...The Allman Brothers Band." Duane Allman's slide guitar, plays note perfect, in the introduction and then behind an equally inspired Gregg Allman vocals. Duane Allman solos first, exploding out of the turnaround (a performance device he was too perfect on other pieces). After another verse, Richard Betts adds one of his most coherent solos, full of country pathos, whiskey and smoke.

Elmore James' "Done Somebody Wrong" was originally recorded by the Canton, Mississippi native for Fire Records in 1960, with a B-side of "Fine Little Mama." From the second set on March 12th, Duane Allman converts this original shuffle into a stop-time blues that again employs his formula of a slide guitar introduction and accompaniment behind Gregg's robust vocals. Sometime-band member Thom "Ace" Doucette adds a searing blues solo, at tempo, that makes one wonder what might have been had he formally joined the band. Betts again provides a tight and cogent solo, followed by another verse and then the breath-taking dual guitar break introducing Duane's scintillating slide spotlight, ultimately ending the song as it was started, with the slide guitar.

Finally there is the pinnacle of the short-form electric blues in the June 27th performance of the Elmore James/Sonny Boy Williamson II classic "One Way Out." Previously performed by the band during the second set of the March 13th show, that version is stilted and nor fully realized. Doucette's harmonica offers a nice touch in the earlier performance, but not nice enough to correct for Gregg's poor timing and Duane's tentative playing. That all changes in the late Spring when Bett's lays down and extended introduction full of funk and sweat, downshifted into a penetrating momentum that is never lost in the song's 5:24. Betts simmers behind Gregg's vocals before igniting into his finest solo on record. Betts and Allman trade eights over the dual drummers before Duane's trademark emergence into his precisely-structured solo. Gregg ends the song in a soulful, Southern Leibestod. This is the only way to remember The Allman Brothers Band.

Blues rave-ups are not the be-all and end-all of the band. Three pieces provide vehicles for the standard tuning playing that Duane Allman and Richard Betts made famous. Betts' superb "In Memory of Elizabeth Reed" enjoys four probing performances, all at a very high level of musicianship. It is doubtless that the presence of saxophonist Juicy Carter mars the March 12th performances. Had Carter had more practice time, and the band employed more carefully arrangements, the horn would have been more than appropriate. Tom Dowd must have shit a brick during these recordings. However, there is nothing but inspired guitar playing here.

"You Don't Love Me," a Willie Cobbs piece originally recorded for VeeJay Records in Memphis in 1960, serves as the extended blues jam for the band. Always durable, it is established with an opening riff laying down the sonic law. It is presented in four slightly differing versions in this series each populated with robust guitar playing and percussion highlights. This is the cooker of the concerts, when the band was intent on finishing the audience off with a sonic machine gun blast. "You Don't Love Me" exist alongside the band's greatest achievement, "Whipping Post," a modern blues motif employing a crazy modulating time signature that stirs the earth's molten core. All three of these pieces allow the band to exercise their collective grasp of performance dynamics and dramatics. Any of these vehicles could be classified as jazz and the most exciting type. Allman and Betts' guitar interplay operates at a dangerously high level here. Even at it most flawed...this is superior to anything since...

After 40 years of an unforgivably negligent, aimless and commercially exploitative release schedule, finally someone has gotten it right, the persistent monument to live and improvised rock music. This is the definitive document of four nights in 1971 that continue to captivate and haunt our collective imaginations. Do you want to hear perfect jazz...listen to this and fuck every one else....

An Abbreviated The 1971 Fillmore Recordings Discography:

The Allman Brothers Band at Fillmore East, Polydor Records, 1971/1986
Eat a Peach, Polydor, 1971/1986
Duane Allman Anthology, Volume 1, Polydor, 1972/1986
Duane Allman Anthology, Volume 2, Polydor, 1974/1987
Dreams, Polydor, 1989
The Fillmore Concerts, Polydor, 1992
The Allman Brothers Band at Fillmore East (Deluxe Edition), Mercury, 2003
Eat a Peach (Deluxe Edition), Mercury, 2006
Skydog: The Duane Allman Retrospective, Rounder, 2013
The 1971 Fillmore East Recordings, Mercury, 2014

Track Listing: CD1 - March 12, 1971 – First Show: Statesboro Blues (previously unreleased); Trouble No More (previously unreleased); Don’t Keep Me Wonderin’ (previously unreleased); Done Somebody Wrong (previously unreleased); In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed (previously unreleased); You Don’t Love Me (previously unreleased).

CD2 - March 12, 1971 – Second Show: Statesboro Blues (previously unreleased); Trouble No More; Don’t Keep Me Wonderin’ (previously unreleased); Done Somebody Wrong; In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed (previously unreleased); You Don’t Love Me; Whipping Post; (previously unreleased); Hot ‘Lanta.

CD3 - March 13, 1971 – First Show: Statesboro Blues; Trouble No More; Don’t Keep Me Wonderin’; Done Somebody Wrong (previously unreleased); In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed; You Don’t Love Me; Whipping Post (previously unreleased).

CD4 - March 13, 1971 – Second Show – Part 1: Statesboro Blues (previously unreleased); One Way Out (previously unreleased); Stormy Monday; Hot ‘Lanta; Whipping Post.

CD5 - March 13, 1971 – Second Show – Part 2: Mountain Jam; Drunken Hearted Boy (with Elvin Bishop).

CD6 - June 27, 1971 – FILLMORE EAST Closing Show: Introduction by Bill Graham (previously unreleased); Statesboro Blues; Don't Keep Me Wonderin'; Done Somebody Wrong; One Way Out; In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed; Midnight Rider; Hot Lanta; Whipping Post; You Don't Love Me.

Personnel: Duane Allman: lead, slide guitar; Gregg Allman: vocals, Hammond B3 organ; Berry Oakley: bass guitar, vocals; Dickey Betts: lead guitar; Jaimoe: drums, percussion; Butch Trucks: drums, tympani; Thom Doucette: harmonica; Rudolph “Juicy” Carter: saxophones; Bobby Caldwell: percussion.

Record Label: Mercury Records

Style: Jam Band

300 concert dates in ONE YEAR(1970):yikes
 
I got the 3disc BR set. It is 5.1 throughout but band in front crowd in rear. Glad I have the original quad.
 
Do people like this 5.1 BR set as I don't see very much information on this and did some reading about this on the net as its such a historic recording and yet not much information on QQ about this.
I am still waiting on my Idlewild South to arrive and as talented as the Allman Brothers are I was never a big fan of this band but I am giving some of these legend acts another chance and am curious as to what I was missing.
From reading about this release it sounds like it the sound is as good as ever but the 5.1 is like what Bob R. says music is presented from the front speakers only and crowd noise in back.

peter
 
Do people like this 5.1 BR set as I don't see very much information on this and did some reading about this on the net as its such a historic recording and yet not much information on QQ about this.
I am still waiting on my Idlewild South to arrive and as talented as the Allman Brothers are I was never a big fan of this band but I am giving some of these legend acts another chance and am curious as to what I was missing.
From reading about this release it sounds like it the sound is as good as ever but the 5.1 is like what Bob R. says music is presented from the front speakers only and crowd noise in back.

peter

Yes in front centric, as an allman brothers fan its essential.

looking at the song titles you would think that there was not much variety from set to set but there is so much variety in each song its does not get boring, I find it less tedious/more inetersting than say endless King Crimson jams in a box set.
 
Whoa, a lot of writing here, did somebody mention Cocaine? As I have said before I am a ABB at Fillmore East expert starting with 8 track to all formats, including seeing the boys Live At Winterland in SF with Duane Allman, he died 3 months later. I have all the Hi Res versions including the 3 disc BD-A. I just purchased and am listening now to the stereo 24/96 download, which is possibly the best I have ever heard or is it? I will say it straight, the 3 disc BD-A is better, the best, because of the 5.1 disc, the ambient rears completely engulf my listening area, exactly like a real concert and I have been to a thousand rock concerts and zero classical concerts. The problem is the content 4 shows over 2 nights, Disc 1&2. Disc 3 is three months later, Closing Of Fillmore East, ( read the booklet that comes with the set) back to the problem, having grown up with every note and nuance ingrained in my soul the 3 disc set left me wanting the original track list in order even though sonically you will not find better. My McIntosh disc player has on screen menu where I can take any track and create a play list or re order of tracks, but it is a hassle only because I'm too lazy. I would be smart to do this but I am not. Listening now to the HDTracks 24/96 download vs the SACD, the 3 disc, the LP, the cassette, the 8 track, the RBCD, whatever, I am stoked with the quality and track order of this monumental recording as a download. Between the download and the 3 disc BD-A, that is it for me unless the next format comes out with a hologram of the band in my living room.
 
What would have made this the ultimate would have been to have the original album quad mix on disc three, there would have been no problem with space my only complaint with the set to be honest. Great music throughout
 
What would have made this the ultimate would have been to have the original album quad mix on disc three, there would have been no problem with space my only complaint with the set to be honest. Great music throughout
I absolutely agree with you. They could have put it on disc 3 or like Idelwild South could have been a 4th disc. I assume they are learning and they will nail it with Eat A Peach.
 
I'm not a huge Allman Bros fan, but I do enjoy their music. I purchased this Blu-Ray set and enjoy it immensely. It is "front-centric" as mentioned, but the ambiance is quite well done. Very pleasant live concert recording. Actually, I couldn't believe they could do such a good job from an old 1970's era live recording.

To me, the concert was kinda redundant, having the same tracks from 3 different concerts, but I can also see how this would be a gem to a loyal fan.

And although the HDTracks version may also be recorded very well, it's not multichannel - so no contest for me. I'd probably playback the stereo version through Dolby PLII or DTS NEO to get multichannel from the HDTracks version (specially for a live concert!). :smokin So having the discrete channels and an actual producer/engineer mixing the surround in Blu-Ray is a 1000x better in my opinion.

I would highly recommend this Blu-Ray set. Excellent sound quality and very enjoyable. (y)
 
FYI, the Amazon list price for this new is still around $70, but this can be had used in the Amazon secondary market for half that. For anyone that was holding out due to the price, this could be your chance.
 
I wasn't necessarily looking to buy this set (cause I have heard it and the surround is not impressive, though the fidelity is) but on Discogs.com, Amoeba Records was selling a copy for $25 (plus shipping). It's still factory sealed, but it has a cut through the barcode, so since that was it, I just purchased it.

:)
 
So all that talk about this title on the Beatles thread :D brought to mind a question on the 3 blu ray set. While there's no denying how great the music is on the Fillmore releases, one of the things that always really bugged me was the hatchet job editing. It just doesn't flow like a concert. (I guess we gotta give them a little leeway - when you have 20 minute songs that run together, that would be tough to deal with when editing for vinyl). On the blu ray set, are the individual shows presented as a concert, with crowd noise between songs, or are they heavily edited like their predecessors? Thanks!
 
This one is not a good surround remix.
Still a noodle fest that's hard to latch onto. Don't know if someone just added an audience mic feed to the rears and kept the original stereo mix in front or this is just one of those 5.1 mixes that's just not good and not even really surround.

I was hoping this might be immersive like the Idlewild South remix and reveal what everyone has been going on about over this album over the years. It was not. Either the multitracks were missing and this IS just the original stereo mix + audience or they ran out of budget or couldn't find anyone to do a true surround remix.

I haven't sat down with the original quad on this one. Sounds like maybe I should!
 
I honesty didn't even know until recently that the 5.1 mix on the Blu-Ray is actually different than the one on the old SACD.

The SACD is clear but totally ambient-sounding. As I've said before, DTS-CD (featuring the quad mix with a derived center/sub) has the two electric guitars discrete in opposing rear speakers. It's really well done- one of my absolute favorite live surround mixes.

I can't believe they actually took the time to create another ambient 5.1 mix for this title. Apparently it was done by Kevin Reeves, who did the amazing super-active 5.1's of Idlewild South and the Velvet Underground's Loaded. I guess he has different philosophies about mixing studio vs live material into surround :(

I though Eat A Peach in 5.1 on the SACD was pretty boring as well, especially in comparison to the quad. I hope they dig up some kind of surround mix (unreleased quad or new 5.1) for Brothers & Sisters someday...
 
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