Gregg Allman: The Music of My Soul, the new documentary on the life of the legendary Allman Brothers Band singer/keyboardist, has announced a short theatrical run. The revealing film, which features previously unreleased Gregg Allman interview footage, will make its way to 200 select theaters for one night only, June 17. Directed by James Keach and produced by Allman’s manager Michael Lehman, Keach and Alex Komisaruk, the movie features honest reflections from Devon Allman, Don Was, Galadrielle Allman, Chuck Leavell, Jaimoe, Cher, Jackson Browne and many others.

According to a statement from the film’s team, “The Music of My Soul explores Gregg’s lifelong battle with addiction, his seven marriages (including his high-profile union with Cher) and the late-life sobriety that allowed him to reckon with his past. The film examines not just the artist’s private wounds but the wider American psyche—race, loss, longing and reinvention—during Gregg’s lifetime. Musicians, friends, and family illuminate how an integrated band in the segregated South challenged boundaries while forging a sound that was both raw and redemptive.”

The movie, which also offers new insight into Gregg’s cancer diagnosis, had its official premiere at New York’s Gramercy Theatre last week. Gregg’s son Devon and Dickey Betts’ son Duane, who anchor the Allman Betts Band, performed “Melissa,” “Blue Sky” and “One Way Out” prior to the screening. A complete list of theaters hosting the film can be found here.