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Derek and the Dominos Concert

Fillmore East (New York, NY)

Derek and the Dominos

10.24.1970
Tracks: 12 / Total Time: 1:48:27
Catalog: Bill Graham

Avg Rating:

Concert Summary

The Derek and the Dominos In Concert LPs and CDs are excerpted from these Fillmore East concerts, when the group headlined a bill that included Ballin’ Jack and Humble Pie.

After spending months touring with Delaney and Bonnie and collaborating with them on his first solo album, Clapton took the nucleus of that band (Whitlock, Radle, and Gordon) and formed…entire summary

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  • Rich From Brooklyn | Thursday, November 06, 2008 | 5:33 pm

    I feel priviliged to say I was there for the Friday night late show and still have the playbill from that evening. It was at that time, and remains, the best concert I've ever seen. I'm wondering if this recording is from the early show because I seem to recall (although I was not entirely within my full senses) that they did, in fact, play Layla. I also saw Derrick and the Dominos at the end of the tour when they returned to the east coast and other than the last couple of songs they were pretty terrible. It seems like exhaustion and additions had caught up to them.

  • monk | Wednesday, November 05, 2008 | 1:11 pm

    Does anyone know if this set is early or late show on 24th?

  • Reverend C.E. | Saturday, November 01, 2008 | 10:57 pm

    One of those cases of "what if?????" the entire Delaney & Bonnie setup could have been carried over into the sessions at Criteria Studios with Duane Allman and then gone on to a stage show.... Would have been a paint-peeling, plaster-cracking, coyotes crying for mercy bender. The recording quality of the Delaney & Bonnie & Friends live album preceding only makes these shows that much better. Having these shows to listen to is a blessing and I will always thank Wolfgang's Vault for the kindness of allowing the rest of us mortals to annoy our neighbors with high-volume tunes!

  • t.r. | Friday, October 24, 2008 | 11:39 am

    An absolutely fabulous show - one I wish I had witnessed firsthand, but I'll take it! This is the kind of impassioned playing that inspired me and countless other young musicians to reach for greater heights in the still evolving blues/rock genre. Speaking for myself, I'm still falling short of that goal (as are most) but it helps clarify who are the real standard bearers for guitar artistry. With achingly beautiful human imperfection, pathos, interaction and emotion it declares "Clapton is not God" but he is most definitely In The Presence of The Lord. Simply stunning. Clapton fuckin' ROCKS!!

  • BigCountry | Friday, October 17, 2008 | 8:31 am

    It looks as though someone has queried the absence of Layla from this and other live shows of the time. I have read a recent interview with Clapton where he specifically states that he couldn't play this number and sing at the same time until fairly recently - complex guitar parts etc. Indeed he was featured playing it in a live broadcast here in the UK some 3 to 4 years ago and whilst he got thru' it, he didn't look completely relaxed in doing so!!!

  • PappyB | Wednesday, October 08, 2008 | 12:31 pm

    "Why Does Love Have To Be So Sad," Best EC solo ever recorded, Period. I love the way he starts the second, ending solo... listen to the interaction between him and Jim Gordon. Beautiful

  • sofingraw | Tuesday, September 02, 2008 | 2:38 am

    Have You Ever Loved A Woman?... yes, and I can tell you have as well Mr Clapton. Have I ever heard a more moving and passionately played song?... I don't think so, no. Great song, great show, great band.

  • Anonymous | Wednesday, August 27, 2008 | 3:13 am

    Duane Allman was not a "late drop-in" as decribed below, he played on the whole album, except for the first three songs.("I Looked Away", "Bell Bottom Blues", "Keep On Growing".) Those songs were recorded after the initial meeting and visit to Criteria Studios' jam session w/the Dominos. Before Duane got there, the Dominos were just recording some standard blues numbers, etc. and didn't really a real "direction" as to where they were going with the concept of the album. Tom Dowd(executive producer) introduced Duane & Eric because he happened to be recording both bands in his work. Duane was the catalyst who created that spark to spur Eric and the others to unheard of heights. In my opinion it's the greatest twin guitar album in Rock history. It still stands the test of time today and was a once in a lifetime recording session. God bless the late, great Tom Dowd. He was a genius behind the board and a true gentleman. He was respected, admired and loved by everyone who ever worked with him. I miss him greatly and loved him too.(he was a friend and father figure to me)

  • mrbreeze | Friday, August 22, 2008 | 2:49 pm

    I love the EC 70's concerts here at Concert Vault...but tonite is first time I went back to listen the Dominoes days. WOW,Im blown away by this show! Listening to "Have you ever loved a woman" right now...and just smokin. Probably best EC version ive ever heard of this tune.

  • knutsaac | Sunday, July 20, 2008 | 1:45 pm

    Really an awesome show. Masterpiece is the right word. Though I liked the live album, listening to the two concerts makes me feel that they chose the wrong tracks for most of the album. Maybe they chose the ones that edited the best, but even then the editing on the album wasn't that great. This show is clearly the best of the two. It not only shows Clapton in the best form of his life, don't forget Bobby Whitlock. Hammond B-3 doesn't get any better than this. I just wonder about the crowd...they were expecting the Clapton of Cream...and they got this, far, far from the Slowhand they knew and loved. To radiolux...besides the fact that Layla wasn't an instant hit, I'm sure that they hadn't figured out how to do it live yet. There were so many layered guitar tracks in the studio, no way to reproduce it with only one guitarist. But yes, it's a shame it's not here. One really cool thing about this show...it reminds me that Clapton not only influenced so many guitarists, he was influenced by so many others that he played with. Note the Duane Allman influence towards the end of "Why Does Love Got to be So Sad?". So cool. Rick, seeing you saw the Tampa show, do you agree with many others that the Allmans were really off during the Fillmore Concerts? Just wondering.

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