The two most memorable live albums of the early seventies were the ‘Live/Dead’ album of the Grateful Dead and ‘At Fillmore East’ of the Allman Brothers Band. Two bands who love to jam and are still playing today, despite the fact that the legendary foremen Jerry Garcia and Duane Allman are no longer with us. It’s amazing that Rolling Stone often had bad critics of both the Grateful Dead albums as of this song: “The original Rolling Stone review of Idlewild South said the song “just goes and goes for a stupendous, and unnoticed, seven minutes.” The song is named after a headstone Betts saw at the Rose Hill Cemetory in Macon, Georgia, a place frequented by band members in their early days for relaxing and writing songs.In memory of Eilisabeth Reed keeps popping up on my record player. This version is of the mid-ninetees with composer Dickey Betts together with Govn’t Mule frontman Warren Haynes.

<!– WriteFlash(' ‘); //–>