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"...Six In The Morning..."
Jetlagged and bleary after a
10-hour transatlantic flight from Paris the day before (itself a spur of the
moment thing after bad weather in Europe freaked him out) – Producer Tom Dowd
phoned the offices of Atlantic Records in New York the following afternoon to
see what was occurring. A panicked secretary reputedly advised him in no
uncertain terms that he'd better wake up pronto (or partake of some Peruvian
dancing dust) because he was urgently required for a recording gig in less than
24-hours. The Allman Brothers would be headlining at Bill Graham's Fillmore
East – an old vaudevillian New York theatre house on 2nd Avenue where they'd
played four times before but always as a support act to the likes of Blood,
Sweat & Tears. Unfazed – the revered Producer who'd been shaping Atlantic's
distinctive Soul and Rock sounds for over 20 years - witnessed the Southern
Rockers take the stage on the opening Thursday night with a less than well
rehearsed brass section. Dowd was duly appalled.
Legend has it that he bawled
out the band backstage – calling it sloppy and unprofessional – roaring at them
– demanding they drop the peripheral crap and get back to boogie basics – a set
made up of new material and Blues standards from Elmore James, Willie Cobbs,
T-Bone Walker and Blind Willie McTell. Now most hairy-assed slide-guitar
Southern diplomats would have broken a bottle of Jack Daniels over his nancy
New Yorker's head and used words not necessarily in the Webster Dictionary as
they pointed his grizzled rump towards the stage door. But this was TOM DOWD and
they knew of his incredible track record and professional 'ear'. The Allmans
listened – respected – and acted. And across the remaining three shows over two
nights (8:00 pm and 11:30 pm on 12 and 13 March) – Dowd caught lightning in a
bottle – one of the most famous and revered live doubles ever put to tape. The
fourth show had been interrupted by a bomb scare but they played into the early
hours regardless – huge 30-minute jams – a tight rhythm section – Duane's
inspired lead – a band ready to take on the world.
Dowd got 20 reels of tape –
mostly favouring the fourth show where (perhaps because of the scares) he felt
the band was most fluid - 'cooking' even. Seven tracks made the final July 1971
2LP set with "You Don't Love Me" and "Whipping Post" taking
up residency as all of Side 2 and 4 respectively. "Trouble No More"
and the humungous 33-minute "Mountain Jam" were set aside for use on
the "Eat A Peach" double released February 1972 - as was "One
Way Out" taped 27 June 1971 at further Fillmore East gigs. "Don't
Keep Me Wonderin'" turned up on the appeared-too-fast "Duane Allman
Anthology" twofer in November 1972 - released after his passing from a
motorcycle accident October 1971 during the Peach Sessions aged only 24.
Another straggler from the 27 June 1971 shows "Midnight Rider"
eventually showed on "Duane Allman Anthology, Volume 2" in August
1974. Last but by no means least – with dawn's light already broken -
"Drunken Hearted Boy" was an encore that saw Elvin Bishop join the
band on stage at six a.m. on the 13th of March 1971 – itself finally appearing
in the 4CD/6LP Retrospective Box Set "Dreams" in July 1989. It’s also
safe to say that "At Fillmore East" put the Capricorn Records label
and Southern Rock in general on the world map – paving the way for The Marshall
Tucker Band, Elvin Bishop, The Outlaws, Z.Z. Top and of course Lynyrd Skynyrd.
Which brings us to this 23
September 2003 Deluxe Edition reissue that draws all of those disparate sources
together in one ace remastered bundle – here are the six-in-the-morning
details...
UK released 23 September
2003 (24 September 2004 in the USA) – "The Allman Brothers Band At
Fillmore East: Deluxe Edition" by THE ALLMAN BROTHERS BAND on
Universal/Mercury/Chronicles 0044007735329 (Barcode 044007735329) is a 2CD
'Deluxe Edition' Remaster that plays outs as follows (the USA issue is
B0000401-02 - Barcode 044007735329):
Disc 1 (65:12 minutes):
1. Statesboro Blues [4:17
minutes]
2. Trouble No More [3:43
minutes]
3. Don't Keep Me Wonderin'
[3:27 minutes]
4. Done Somebody Wrong [4:33
minutes]
5. Stormy Monday [8:48
minutes]
6. One Way Out [4:56
minutes]
7. In Memory Of Elizabeth
Reed [13:04 minutes]
8. You Don't Love Me [19:16
minutes]
9. Midnight Rider [2:55
minutes]
Disc 2 (68:51 minutes):
1. Hot 'Lanta [5:20 minutes]
2. Whipping Post [22:53
minutes]
3. Mountain Jam [33:39
minutes]
4. Drunken Hearted Boy [6:57
minutes]
Tracks 1, 4, 5, 8 on Disc 1
and Tracks 1 and 2 on Disc 2 make up the original July 1971 2LP set as follows:
Side 1:
1. Statesboro Blues [Blind Willie
McTell cover]
2. Done Somebody Wrong
[Elmore James cover]
3. Stormy Monday [T-Bone
Walker cover]
Side 2:
1. You Don't Love Me [Willie
Cobbs cover]
Side 3:
1. Hot 'Lanta [Allman
Brothers song]
2. In Memory Of Elizabeth
Reed [Dickey Betts of The Allman Brothers song]
Side 4:
1. Whipping Post [Gregg
Allman song]
"The Allman Brothers
Band At Fillmore East" was released July 1971 in the USA on Capricorn
Records SD-2 860 and Capricorn 2659 005 in the UK. Produced by TOM DOWD - it
peaked at No. 13 in the US LP charts (didn't chart UK).
Tracks 2 and 6 on Disc 1
originally appeared February 1972 on the US 2LP set "Eat A Peach" on
Capricorn Records 2CP-0102
Track 3 on Disc 1 originally
appeared November 1972 on the US 2LP set "Duane Allman Anthology" on
Capricorn Records 2CP-0108
Track 9 on Disc 1 originally
appeared August 1974 on the US 2LP set "Duane Allman Anthology, Volume
2" on Capricorn Records CPN-2-0139
Track 4 on Disc 2 originally
appeared July 1989 on the 4CD/6LP/4MC Box Set "Dreams" on Polydor 422
839 417-2
The Band:
DUANE ALLMAN – Lead and
Slide Guitars
GREGG ALLMAN – Organ, Piano
and Vocals
DICKEY BETTS – Lead Guitar
BERRY OAKLEY – Bass
JAIMOE – Drums, Congas and
Timbales
BUTCH TRUCKS – Drums and
Tympani
Guests:
Thom Doucette – Harmonica on
"Don't Keep Me Wonderin'", "Done Somebody Wrong",
"Stormy Monday" and "You Don't Love Me"
Elvin Bishop - Guitar and
Vocals on "Drunken Hearted Boy"
Steve Miller - Piano on
"Drunken Hearted Boy"
Bobby Caldwell - Percussion
on "Drunken Hearted Boy"
The outer plastic 'Deluxe
Edition' slipcase lends these reissues a real touch of substance - while the
28-page features classy black and white photos of the boys making history and
individual plates of each band member. The original album's inner gatefold
photos of the band live now take up either side of the opened digipak. A nice
touch is an alternate outtake of the famous 'five roadies' photo on the back
cover of the original double (still on the back of the digipak). The booklet's
last page uses a moments-earlier outtake photo where there's suddenly six of
them (the iconic shot was actually done at the Capricorn Studios in Macon,
Georgia and not as people presumed against the walls of The Fillmore East in
New York). DAVE THOMPSON stumps up an entertaining and enlightening set of
liner notes - filling in the factual stuff while at the same time wearing his
affection for the album firmly on his sleeve. He also quite rightly points out
that the release practically kick-started the ‘Live Double-Album’ as a vinyl phenomenon
that still exists to this day and dominated the whole of the Seventies.
But the big news is a new
SUHA GUR Remaster. As you can see from the track line-up above – this 2CD DE
lines up the tracks as they were played –giving you a feel for progression.
When he says ‘we got an Elmore James number for you’ at the beginning of
"Done Somebody Wrong" or the intro to "Whipping Post" where
someone from the audience shouts for it – you can feel the intensity of the
band live in your living room. There is also that discernable feeling that
these are recordings unleashed – much like the band as they rip through solo
and solo...
As that slide guitar comes
screaming in on "Statesboro Blues" – they already sound like your
favourite bar band – only writ larger. Introducing the new Elmore James cut
"Done Somebody Wrong" (said with a Southern twang). The audience gets
a real taste of the playing when they launch into a fabulous version of T-Bone
Walker's "Stormy Monday" - those solos and that organ support - all
of it so sweet. The put-your-hands-together Willie Cobbs winner "You Don't
Love Me" lifts the crowd into boogie heaven. To this day when I hear a
bar-band lay into its great chords to get a crowd neck-jerking - I think of
what it must have been like for Allmans fans at that show – all 19-minutes of
it.
"Hot 'Lanta" feels
almost early Little Feat in places or even Santana - the band swinging and
swaying - the whole thing just so beautifully together. The Dickie Betts
instrumental "In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed" changes the tempo into a
sexy almost Latin sway - while at the same time allowing the two lead guitars
to indulge. You get well-rehearsed virtuoso playing - in fact this is one of my
faves on the double precisely because it shows the Allmans could 'groove' with
the best of them (I'd swear Carlos would approve). The 5:22 minutes of "Whipping Post"
from their November 1969 self-titled debut album gets cranked up to eleven on
the 23-minute live version in 1971. And again there's that Santana thing going
on as the band slow it down half way through - all that sweet Bass and crashing
cymbals.
The 1955 Muddy Waters Chess
classic "Trouble No More" gives the boys another chance to shine on
the Boogie front and frankly you can't help think it should have been on the original
double album - but what would you drop (sports fabulous remastered sound here
and feel). Another Elmore James stomper "One Way Out" only adds to
that foot-tapping bank balance. The 33 and a half-minute bruiser that is
"Mountain Jam" takes its central theme from a 1967 Donovan single
"There Is A Mountain" and is surely one of the prizes here. And
there’s Steve Miller and Elvin Bishop helping out on the raucous finisher
"Drunken Hearted Boy" – how cool.
When I think about the
landslide of Southern Rock that followed after this landmark live set - I look
at my battered vinyl copy (its spine split) and smile. I'm fairly certain this
truly excellent 2CD DE version of "At Fillmore East" will elicit the
same response once it's in your latest rig...
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