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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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  • Anonymous | Sunday, January 04, 2009 | 4:47 am

    Great to read the appreciative comments of Clapton's truly magical playing on these tracks. The timing, touch, architecture, melody and emotion leaves me speechless every time. He transcends guitar playing and reaches our most profound inner spaces. I am grateful for the countless joyful moments his artistry has inspired.

  • 1929rats | Monday, December 29, 2008 | 9:51 am

    What a drum solo on let it rain huh? That was a pleasant suprise....a better drum solo then the one featured on the first concert (also on the live a fillmore CD) IMHO....

  • Anonymous | Friday, December 19, 2008 | 4:21 pm

    Wonderful concert - really feel the space with no Duane Allman on slide. Fascinating to hear alternate takes on tunes I (and countless others) have jammed to for the last 35 years...

  • Anonymous | Wednesday, December 10, 2008 | 3:54 pm

    mind blowing

  • jjtetu | Wednesday, December 03, 2008 | 10:28 am

    Ahhhhhhhhhh... I've been a real lover of Clapton's guitar work for a long time, but I've never heard him play like this. Before, I was just like "yeah, he's great, very cool" and have seen him do very competent guitar work live. But I always felt like he was holding back, like he had a mask on for the audience. Now I heard "Have You Ever Loved A Woman" and I get it. I get why he's God.

  • Ceaser's Ghost | Tuesday, November 25, 2008 | 8:58 am

    I'm confused, Big Country, maybe you misread the interview with Clapton regarding the info about not playing Layla into later in his career. The re-issue of the "Rainbow Concert" released in '73 contains the bonus track of Layla. I don't own the CD, maybe someone else is singing the lead vocals - I don't know. Someone educate me further - thanks.

  • 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!!

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