Get ready for a great big family reunion.

"The Brothers: Celebrating 50 Years of the Music of the Allman Brothers Band" happens Tuesday, March 10, at Madison Square Garden in Manhattan.

The roster for the one-night-only gathering will feature Allman Brothers Band alumni Jaimoe, Warren Haynes, Derek Trucks, Oteil Burbridge, Marc Quinones and Chuck Leavell. Those players will be bolstered by Duane Trucks of Widespread Panic and Reese Wynans of Second Coming.

Ticket pre-sales begin 10 a.m. Tuesday, Jan. 7 for American Express card holders, official platinum tickets and VIP packages, with Live Nation, Chase card holders and local pre-sales 10 a.m. Thursday, Jan. 9. Public on-sale, including VIP packages, starts Friday, Jan. 10, through Ticketmaster for the Live Nation-produced event.

For more information on ticket availability, visit Ticketmaster.com.

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Many former Allman Brothers Band members have stayed prolific in recent years: Haynes has Gov't Mule, Trucks co-leads the Tedeschi Trucks Band, Burbridge is part of Grateful Dead legacy act Dead and Company and Leavell has played with the Rolling Stones since the early-1980s.

The Allman Brothers Band, which formed in Georgia in 1969, has a storied history on New York City stages, from 1971's "At Fillmore East" stand to their storied Beacon Theatre engagements from 1989 to 2014.

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"The Brothers" marks the first time the band's surviving members have convened to perform together since the 2017 deaths of both Gregg Allman and Butch Trucks.

"From the Fillmore East to the Beacon, NYC has always been a spiritual home for the Allman Brothers," guitarist Derek Trucks said in a statement. "So it only feels natural to honor Uncle Butch, Gregg, Berry, Duane and all the other brothers and sisters we have lost along the way here at MSG. I'm excited to get to play these songs with Jaimoe and the Brothers one last time to celebrate 50 years of this music."

"Hard to believe it's been five years since our final show at the Beacon," added Haynes in a statement. "We had all talked about doing a final show at Madison Square Garden which never came to fruition. What a great way to honor 50 years of music and fulfill that wish at the same time."

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A portion of the proceeds from "The Brothers" will support The Big House, the band's home in Macon, Georgia, from 1970 to 1973 that now functions as the official Allman Brothers Band museum.