
if , like me, you consider the allman brother band’s ‘at fillmore east’ album to be one of the greatest rock records ever made, then i suggest you check out their newest release, ‘fillmore east, february 1970’. initially released in 1996, this is a technological improvement on the original. a collaboration between the allman brothers and the owsley stanley foundation, we get a new listen to the tapes that owsley ‘bear’ stanley recorded of the band over a year before the more famous shows. this is one of the initial offerings from the stanley foundation that intends to showcase the huge vault of reels that bear recorded over the years. the other one is a box set of doc and merle watson recorded at the boarding house in 1974. bear referred to these recordings as his ‘sonic journals’. in addition to the legendary quality of his recordings, the nearly fifty year old tapes have been restored and mastered by jeffrey norman, which some of you may know as the technician who works on all of the new releases from the grateful dead’s vault. culled from three shows of material, we get seven songs and 72 minutes of material. the band was only eleven months old at the time, and they were the opening act for the dead for these shows. they didn’t have a soundman travelling with them, so bear volunteered since he was doing the second act anyways and already knew about the band.

fans of the dead can reference the ‘bear’s choice’ album and ‘dick’s picks four’ for the dead’s part of the shows, also taken from bear’s reels. it would be the beginning of a musical friendship between the two bands for a long time, culminating in the 1973 watkins glen show with the band in front of 600,000 fans.
compared to the 1971 version, this has a more raw and primal feel to it. witness the two versions of ‘in memory of elizabeth reed’ below. dickey betts had only just recently composed the song weeks before the 1970 shows, and these are the earliest known recordings of the song (all three shows are available for download at the foundation’s website).

as i mentioned in an earlier post, many of the bands on the cutting edge of live jamming in the late sixties were fans of coltrane, miles, and other jazz musicians. that may be no more evident than listening closely to ‘liz reed’. it is a real instrumental masterpiece, and it would become the cornerstone of their live performances for decades. it is certainly one of my favorite songs of theirs. the version 13 months later in 1971 is longer, more polished and precise, but mrs. redeyegin agrees with my take on the one offered here (i think it is from the second night) – i may like it a bit better. 5 of the other seven songs are also included in the 1971 classic, the only difference being ‘outskirts of town’, which somewhat disappeared from the set list later in the year.
the liner notes are superb, with comments by bear himself and his daughter. there is also a section from the foundation’s executive director that comments on all three ‘liz reeds’, how they were different, and comparing the overall composition to three songs from miles davis’ ‘kind of blue’, which dickie had been listening to at the time. enjoy.
hat tip to loyal reader dave c.
Good stuff!!
Sent from my iPhone
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