THE LEGACY OF BILL GRAHAM
AUTHENTIC POSTERS
INCREDIBLE PHOTOGRAPHY!

J. Geils Band

Sample this concert
  1. 1Bill Graham Introduction00:10
  2. 2Sno-Cone03:21
  3. 3Wait03:19
  4. 4First I Look At The Purse04:51
  5. 5Whammer Jammer03:00
  6. 6Homework03:31
  7. 7Pack Fair And Square02:19
  8. 8Cruisin' For A Love04:03
  9. 9Serves You Right To Suffer12:44
  10. 10Hard Drivin' Man03:51
  11. 11Thank You Staff & Bill Graham01:57
  12. 12People00:44
  13. 13It Ain't What You Do (It's How You Do It)07:51
  14. 14Outro Jam02:28
Liner Notes

Peter Wolf - vocals; Seth Justman - keyboards; Magic Dick - harmonica; J. Geils - guitar; Danny Klein - bass; Stephen Jo Bladd - drums, vocals

Following iconic blues guitarist Albert King and proceeding Edgar Winter's White Trash in their prime was certainly no easy task, but this set finds the J. Geils Band quite capable of rising to the occasion. According to Bill Graham's autobiography, this group was among his favorite bands ever presented at Fillmore East and this set captures them performing at a raging ferocity level few bands could match.

The adrenalin level is obvious from the opening "Sno-Cone" and remains hot and volatile through the entire set. After continuing with the original number "Wait," the band tears up Smokey Robinson's "First I Look At The Purse" and them turns harp player extraordinaire, Magic Dick, loose on "Whammer Jammer."

By this point the band has the audience in the palm of their hand, but they don't let up for a second. The next three numbers, "Homework," "Pack Fair And Square," and Cruisin' For Love," continue kicking up a storm and maintain a furious pace, before they slow it down on a smoldering rendition of John Lee Hooker's "Serves You Right To Suffer." The set closes with another incendiary original, "Hard Driving Man," that leaves the audience breathless and wanting more.

Following a thank you to the Fillmore East staff and Bill Graham, they humor the audience with a purposely lame attempt at "People" (who need people, are the luckiest people…), before bringing it back to the previous frenetic level with Juke Joint Jimmy's, "It Aint What You Do," followed by an all-too-brief outro jam to pound the audience into submission.

This J. Geils Band set is truly extraordinary and those only familiar with the later era of this band will be floored by the intensity level of their final farewell to Fillmore East.