Live at Fillmore West is an album by
King Curtis, released in 1971. The album showcases the concert he played with his band the Kingpins at the
Fillmore West venue in
San Francisco in March 1971 who were supporting and backing
soul singer
Aretha Franklin. A week after its release in August 1971, Curtis was stabbed to death outside his
brownstone apartment in
New York City.[3]
It was reissued on compact disc in the 1990s through
Rhino Records and was released in an expanded edition in 2006. In addition it was released as an expanded edition four-CD box set entitled, Don't Fight the Feeling: The Complete Aretha Franklin & King Curtis Live At Fillmore West by Rhino Handmade in 2005, featuring the complete concert by King Curtis and
Aretha Franklin.[4] This edition was limited to 5,000 numbered copies.[5]
Professionally Curtis was having a prolific and successful time in the summer of 1971. Aretha Franklin's Live at Fillmore West album was a huge hit, he had contributed to two tracks on
John Lennon's album, Imagine, recorded the theme to the television show Soul Train and had made a highly acclaimed performance at the
Montreux Jazz Festival with
Champion Jack Dupree. It was in this climate that the album was released in August 1971. A week after its release, Curtis was stabbed to death outside his
brownstone apartment in
New York City, following an argument with two drug addicts.[3] The day after he died the album peaked at No. 54 on the
Billboard 200 album chart, his greatest success as a solo artist.[9] There is a widely held misconception that Curtis was murdered on the night of this live performance.[10] Ralph Brown, in the audio commentary on the DVD issue of Withnail and I, wrongly states that he was shot in the car park after the concert.