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The Allman Brothers Band with Duane - Don't Keep Me Wonderin' - Fillmore East - 09/23/1970

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Uploaded by on Jul 23, 2008

The Allman Brothers Band live at Fillmore East 09/23/1970
Unaired set from a PBS-TV special
First song, Don't Keep Me Wonderin'
With Gregg Allman, Duane Allman, Dickey Betts, Berry Oakley, Thom "The Ace" Doucette, Butch Trucks, and Jai Johanny "Jaimoe" Johanson

This video is sourced from a VCD made from an unknown generation VHS. I did my best to get rid of some of the compression artifacts, and fix the color.
Please let me know if anybody else has a better sourced video.

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  • Duane is awesome, but there should never be a list of the greatest guitar players. That is strictly opinion, and Rolling stone's opinion don't mean shit.

  • duane could play the hell out of that slide!

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All Comments (129)

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  • In my opinion... Duane allman was much better than Jimi Hendrix.

  • Rolling Stone just sealed their fate as a pop music industry ho. The new top ten list is a cryin shame, and the judges are beyond the pale, but for a few bright stars like Warren Hayes - who belongs way above Jack WHITE and some of the other wankers on the 'players' list! Skydog earned his place and certainly hasn't been eclipsed by any of those guys.

  • ABOUT 13 MONTHS AFTER THIS HE WAS GONE...THE BEST EVER....

  • agreed!!!!! He was amazing, however!

  • @craigplaysbass  That would be Thom Doucette.

  • no kidding they left alex lifeson off the list of the 100 most influential guitarists and placed jack white above eddie van halen.fucking clueless i buy relix now.

  • Lowell George, Duane, Brian Jones, Janis, Hendrix, Morrison - How would the music world be different had they lived? 

  • @mamadeb1123 There needs to be a "Fillmore East Reunion" of those still alive and kickin' who made it to the Fillmore for so many of those weekends.

  • @1blastman: The same thing happened in San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury district: the hippie utopian dreams disolved in the early '70s as hard drugs and the crime associated with them ran rampant through that commmunity. It's a shame that Graham or the two theater owners who followed him couldn't keep it open. If they had it would today be a beloved historic theater like the Beacon.

  • @aarfeld When it first opened, It used to be $3.00 for balcony, $4.00 for Mezz and rear orch and $5.00 for front. Usually, they would do two shows on Friday and two on Saturday. I saw Traffic for the first time there and ended going to at least 70 plus shows - got the programs to prove it. It was sad at the end because the East Village had become more hard drug and crime ridden. The "hippies" became free loaders who wanted Graham to put on freeshows every weekend. I miss the good early days

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