Tedeschi Trucks Band Announce New Live Album, 'Layla Revisited (Live At LOCKN')'
With the help of Trey Anastasio, the band performed the entirety of 'Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs' at the LOCKN' Festival on August 24, 2019.
Tedeschi Trucks Band have announced Layla Revisited (Live At LOCKN'), a recording of the band's one-off live performance of Derek & The Dominos' Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs in its entirety.
With the help of Phish's Trey Anastasio and Doyle Bramhall II, the band tackled the classic blues-rock opus at the LOCKN' Festival in Arrington, Virginia on August 24, 2019.
You can check out an excerpt from the performance, “Why Does Love Got To Be So Sad,” below.
Though the live performance closed with "Layla," Layla Revisited ends with Tedeschi and Trucks' unaccompanied studio version of “Thorn Tree In The Garden.”
“By the time that I started playing guitar, the sound of Duane Allman’s slide was almost an obsession,” Trucks said of Layla. “His playing on Layla is still one of the high-water marks for me.
"The spirit, the joy, the recklessness, and the inevitability of it. My dad would play that record for me and my brother to fall asleep to and further sear it into my DNA.”
You can check out the cover art and track list of Layla Revisited (Live At LOCKN') below.
Get The Pick Newsletter
All the latest guitar news, interviews, lessons, reviews, deals and more, direct to your inbox!
Tedeschi Trucks Band – Layla Revisited (Live At LOCKN'):
1. I Looked Away
2. Bell Bottom Blues
3. Keep On Growing
4. Nobody Knows You When You’re Down and Out
5. I Am Yours
6. Anyday
7. Key To The Highway
8. Tell The Truth
9. Why Does Love Got To Be So Sad?
10. Have You Ever Loved A Woman?
11. Little Wing
12. It’s Too Late
13. Layla
14. Thorn Tree In The Garden (studio)
Jackson is an Associate Editor at GuitarWorld.com and GuitarPlayer.com. He’s been writing and editing stories about new gear, technique and guitar-driven music both old and new since 2014, and has also written extensively on the same topics for Guitar Player. Elsewhere, his album reviews and essays have appeared in Louder and Unrecorded. Though open to music of all kinds, his greatest love has always been indie, and everything that falls under its massive umbrella. To that end, you can find him on Twitter crowing about whatever great new guitar band you need to drop everything to hear right now.
“There were a few guitars kicking around. But it just didn't fit in this electronic-based track.” The world’s most famous charity rock song lost its guitar parts in 1984. They’re finally back for 2024
“They were yelling, 'You’ve gotta turn your guitar down, Mick! It’s leaking into our vocals.’ ” Mick Mars on how his Mötley Crüe ‘Dr. Feelgood’ tracks ended up on another great album from the 1980s