Eric Patrick Clapton, CBE,
(born 30 March 1945) is an English guitarist and
singer-songwriter. He is the only three-time inductee to the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame: once as a solo artist, and separately as a member of The Yardbirds and
Cream. Clapton has been referred to as one of the most important and
influential guitarists of all time. Clapton ranked second in Rolling Stone magazine's list of the "100
Greatest Guitarists of All Time" and fourth in Gibson's Top 50 Guitarists of All Time.
In the mid-1960s, Clapton
departed from the Yardbirds to play blues with John Mayall & the
Bluesbreakers. In his one-year stay with Mayall, Clapton gained the nickname
"Slowhand". Immediately after leaving Mayall, Clapton joined Cream, a
power trio with drummer Ginger Baker and bassist Jack Bruce in which Clapton
played sustained blues improvisations and "arty, blues-based psychedelic
pop." For most of the 1970s, Clapton's output bore the influence of the
mellow style of J.J. Cale and the reggae of Bob Marley. His version of Marley's
"I Shot the Sheriff" helped reggae reach a mass market. Two of his
most popular recordings were "Layla", recorded by Derek and the
Dominos, another band he formed, and Robert Johnson's "Crossroads", recorded
by Cream. Following the death of his son Conor in 1991, Clapton's grief was
expressed in the song "Tears in Heaven", which featured in his Unplugged album.
A recipient of seventeen Grammy
Awards, and the Brit Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music, in 2004
Clapton was awarded a CBE at Buckingham Palace for services to music. In 1998,
Clapton, a recovering alcoholic and drug addict, founded the Crossroads Centre
on Antigua, a medical facility for recovering substance abusers.
Early life
Eric Patrick Clapton was born in
Ripley, Surrey, England, the son of 16-year-old Patricia Molly Clapton (b. 7 January 1929 d. March 1999) and Edward Walter
Fryer (21 March 1920
– 15 May 1985), a 25-year-old soldier from
Montreal, Quebec. Fryer shipped off to war prior to Clapton's birth and then
returned to Canada. Clapton grew up with his grandmother, Rose, and her second
husband, Jack Clapp, who was stepfather to Patricia Clapton and her brother
Adrian, believing they were his parents and that his mother was actually his
older sister. The similarity in surnames gave rise to the erroneous belief that
Clapton's real surname is Clapp (Reginald Cecil Clapton was the name of Rose's
first husband, Eric Clapton's maternal grandfather). Years later, his mother
married another Canadian soldier and moved to Germany, leaving young Eric with his
grandparents in Surrey.
Clapton received an acoustic
Hoyer guitar, made in Germany, for his thirteenth birthday, but the inexpensive
steel-stringed instrument was difficult to play and he briefly lost interest.
Two years later Clapton picked it up again and started playing
consistently. Clapton was influenced by the blues from an early age, and
practised long hours to learn the chords of blues music by playing along to the
records. He preserved his practice sessions using his portable Grundig
reel-to-reel tape recorder, listening to them over and over until he felt he'd
got it right.
After leaving Hollyfield School,
in Surbiton, in 1961, Clapton studied at the Kingston College of Art but was
dismissed at the end of the academic year because his focus remained on music
rather than art. His guitar playing was so advanced that by the age of 16 he
was getting noticed. Around this time Clapton began busking around Kingston,
Richmond, and the West End. In 1962, Clapton started performing as a duo with
fellow blues enthusiast David Brock in pubs around Surrey. When he was
seventeen years old Clapton joined his first band, an early British R&B
group, "The Roosters", whose other guitarist was Tom McGuinness. He
stayed with this band from January through August 1963. In October of that
year, Clapton did a seven-gig stint with Casey Jones & The Engineers.
Early career: 1960s
1963-66: The Yarbirds and the
Bluesbreakers
In
October 1963 Clapton joined The Yardbirds, a blues-influenced rock and roll band, and
stayed with them until March 1965. Synthesising influences from Chicago blues and leading
blues guitarists such as Buddy
Guy, Freddie King, and B. B.
King, Clapton forged a distinctive style and rapidly became one of the most talked-about
guitarists in the British music scene. The band initially played Chess/Checker/Vee-Jay blues numbers and began to attract a
large cult following when they took over the Rolling
Stones' residency at the Crawdaddy
Club in Richmond. They toured England with
American bluesman Sonny Boy
Williamson II; a joint LP album, recorded in December 1963, was issued in 1965.
It
was during this time period that Clapton's Yardbirds rhythm guitarist, Chris Dreja, recalled that whenever
Clapton broke a guitar string during a concert, he would stay on stage and
replace it. The English audiences would wait out the delay by doing what is called
a "slow handclap". Clapton told his official biographer, Ray Coleman,
that, "My nickname of 'Slowhand' came from Giorgio Gomelsky. He coined it as a
good pun. He kept saying I was a fast player, so he put together the slow
handclap phrase into Slowhand as a play on words". In December 1964,
Clapton made his first appearance at the Royal
Albert Hall, London with The Yardbirds. Since then, Clapton has performed at
the Hall almost 200 times, and has stated that performing at the venue is like
"playing in my front room".
In
March 1965 the Yardbirds had their first major hit, "For Your Love",
on which Clapton played guitar. The Yardbirds elected to move toward a
pop-oriented sound, in part because of the success of "For Your
Love", written by pop songwriter-for-hire Graham Gouldman, who had also written
hit songs for Herman's Hermits and The
Hollies. Still musically devoted to the blues, Clapton was opposed to the move,
and left the band. He recommended fellow guitarist Jimmy Page as his replacement, but Page was at
that time unwilling to relinquish his lucrative career as a freelance studio musician, so Page in turn
recommended Clapton's successor, Jeff
Beck. While Beck and Page played together in the Yardbirds, the trio of Beck,
Page, and Clapton were never in the group together. However, the trio did
appear on the 12-date benefit tour for Action
for Research into Multiple Sclerosis in
1983, as well as on the album Guitar
Boogie.
Clapton
joined John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers in April
1965, only to quit a few months later. In the summer of 1965 he left for Greece
with a band called The Glands, which included his old friend Ben Palmer on
piano. In November 1965 he rejoined John Mayall. During his second
Bluesbreakers stint, Clapton gained a reputation as the best blues guitarist on
the club circuit. Although Clapton gained world fame for his playing on the
influential album, Blues
Breakers – John Mayall – With Eric Clapton, this
album was not released until Clapton had left the Bluesbreakers for the last
time. Having swapped his Fender
Telecaster and Vox AC30 amplifier for a 1960 Gibson Les Paul Standard guitar and Marshall amplifier, Clapton's sound
and playing inspired a well-publicised graffiti that deified
him with the famous slogan "Clapton is God". The phrase
was spray-painted by an admirer on a wall in an Islington Underground station in the autumn of 1967. The
graffiti was captured in a now-famous photograph, in which a dog is urinating on the wall. Clapton is
reported to have been embarrassed by the slogan, saying in his The South Bank Show profile in 1987, "I never
accepted that I was the greatest guitar player in the world. I always wanted to be the greatest guitar player in
the world, but that's an ideal, and I accept it as an ideal". The phrase
began to appear in other areas of Islington throughout the mid-1960s.
1966-69: Cream
Clapton
left the Bluesbreakers in July 1966 (to be replaced by Peter Green) and was invited by
drummer Ginger Baker to play in his newly formed band
Cream, one of the earliest supergroups,
with Jack Bruce on bass (also of Manfred Mann, the Bluesbreakers, and
the Graham Bond Organisation).
Before the formation of Cream, Clapton was not well known in the United States;
he left the Yardbirds before "For Your Love" hit the American Top Ten, and had yet to
perform there. During his time with Cream, Clapton began to develop as a
singer, songwriter, and guitarist, though Bruce took most of the lead vocals
and wrote the majority of the material with lyricist Pete Brown. Cream's first gig
was an unofficial performance at the Twisted
Wheel Club in Manchester on 29
July 1966 before their full debut two nights later at the National Jazz and Blues Festival in Windsor.
Cream established its enduring legend with the high-volume blues jamming and
extended solos of their live shows.
By
early 1967, as fans of the emerging blues-rock sound in Britain had begun to
portray Clapton as Britain's top guitarist, however he found himself rivalled
by the emergence of Jimi Hendrix,
an acid rock-infused guitarist
who used wailing feedback and effects
pedals to create new sounds for
the instrument. Hendrix attended a performance of the newly-formed Cream at the Central London Polytechnic on 1 October 1966, during which
Hendrix sat in on a double-timed version of "Killing Floor". Top UK
stars including Clapton, Pete
Townshend, and members of The
Rolling Stones and The Beatles avidly attended Hendrix's early club
performances. Hendrix's arrival had an immediate and major effect on the next
phase of Clapton's career, although Clapton continued to be recognised in UK
music polls as the premier guitarist.
Clapton
first visited the United States while touring with Cream. In March 1967, Cream
performed a nine-show stand at the RKO Theater in New York. They recorded Disraeli Gears in New York from 11–15 May 1967.
Cream's repertoire varied from hard rock ("I Feel Free") to lengthy
blues-based instrumental jams ("Spoonful"). Disraeli Gears featured Clapton's searing guitar
lines, Bruce's soaring vocals and prominent, fluid bass playing, and Baker's
powerful, polyrhythmic jazz-influenced drumming. Together, Cream's talents
secured them as an influential power
trio.
Clapton's The Fool guitar (replica shown), with its
bright artwork and
famous "woman tone", was symbolic of the 1960s
psychedelic rock era.
In
28 months, Cream had become a commercial success, selling millions of records
and playing throughout the U.S. and Europe. They redefined the
instrumentalist's role in rock and were one of the first blues-rock bands to
emphasise musical virtuosity and lengthy jazz-style improvisation sessions.
Their U.S. hit singles include "Sunshine of Your Love" (#5, 1968),
"White Room" (#6, 1968) and "Crossroads" (#28, 1969) – a
live version of Robert Johnson's
"Cross Road Blues". Though Cream was hailed as one of the greatest
groups of its day, and the adulation of Clapton as a guitar hero reached new
heights, the supergroup was short-lived. Drug and alcohol use
escalated tension between the three members, and conflicts between Bruce and
Baker eventually led to Cream's demise. A strongly critical Rolling Stone review of a concert of the group's
second headlining U.S. tour was another significant factor in the trio's
demise, and it affected Clapton profoundly.
Cream's
farewell album, Goodbye,
featuring live performances recorded at The
Forum, Los Angeles, 19 October 1968, was released shortly after Cream
disbanded; it also featured the studio single "Badge", co-written by
Clapton and George Harrison.
Clapton met Harrison and became friends with him after the Beatles shared a
bill with the Clapton-era Yardbirds at the London
Palladium. The close friendship between Clapton and Harrison resulted in
Clapton playing on Harrison's "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" from the
Beatles' White Album (1968). Harrison also released his
solo debut album, Wonderwall
Music, in 1968. It became the first of many Harrison solo records to
feature Clapton on guitar. Clapton would go largely uncredited for his
contributions to Harrison's albums due to contractual restraints. The pair
would often play live together as each other's guest. A year after Harrison's
death in 2001, Clapton helped organise a tribute
concert, for which he was musical
director. In 1969, when The Beatles were recording/filming what became Let It Be, tensions became so acute
that Harrison quit the group for several days, prompting the others to consider
replacing him with Clapton, an idea that particularly appealed to John Lennon, who was captured on tape
saying that if: "George doesn’t come back by Monday or Tuesday, we ask
Eric Clapton to play”, and that this would be congenial to Clapton in that The
Beatles, unlike Cream, “would give him full scope to play his guitar.” Years
later, Clapton commented on the absurdity of this idea: “There may have been [a
suggestion that I would be asked to join The Beatles in January 1969]. The
problem with that was I had bonded or was developing a relationship with
George, exclusive of them. I think it fitted a need of his and mine, that he
could elevate himself by having this guy that could be like a gunslinger to
them. Lennon would use my name every now and then for clout, as if I was the
fastest gun. So, I don’t think I could have been brought into the whole thing
because I was too much a mate of George’s.”
Cream
briefly reunited in 1993 to perform at the ceremony inducting them into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame; a full
reunion took place in May 2005, with Clapton, Bruce, and Baker playing four
sold-out concerts at London's Royal
Albert Hall, and three shows at New York's Madison
Square Garden that October.
Recordings from the London shows, Royal
Albert Hall London May 2-3-5-6, 2005, were released on CD, LP, and DVD in
September/December 2005.
1969-70: Blind Faith, and Delaney and Bonnie and
Friends
Clapton's next group, Blind Faith (1969), was composed of Cream drummer Ginger Baker, Steve Winwood of Traffic,
and Ric Grech of Family,
and yielded one LP and one arena-circuit tour. The supergroup debuted before
100,000 fans in London's Hyde
Park on 7 June 1969. They performed several dates in
Scandinavia and began a sold-out American tour in July before their only album
was released. The LP Blind
Faith consisted of just six
songs, one of them a 15-minute jam entitled "Do What You Like". The
album's jacket image of a topless pubescent girl was deemed controversial in
the United States and was replaced by a photograph of the band. Blind Faith
dissolved after less than seven months.
Clapton subsequently toured as a
sideman for an act that had opened for Blind Faith, Delaney and Bonnie and Friends. He
also played two dates as a member of The
Plastic Ono Band that autumn,
including a recorded performance at the Toronto
Rock and Roll Revival in
September 1969 released as the album Live
Peace in Toronto 1969. On 15 December 1969 Clapton performed with John Lennon, George Harrison, and
others as the Plastic Ono Band at a fundraiser for UNICEF in London.
Delaney Bramlett encouraged Clapton in his singing and
writing. During the summer of 1969, Clapton and Bramlett contributed to the Music From Free Creek "supersession" project.
Clapton, appearing as "King Cool" for contractual reasons, played
with Dr. John on three songs, joined by Bramlett on
two tracks.
Using the Bramletts' backing
group and an all-star cast of session players (including Leon Russell and Stephen
Stills), Clapton recorded his first solo album during two brief tour hiatuses,
fittingly named Eric Clapton.
Delaney Bramlett co-wrote six of the songs with Clapton, and Bonnie Bramlett co-wrote "Let It Rain". The
album yielded the unexpected U.S. No. 18 hit, J. J. Cale's "After
Midnight". Clapton went with Delaney and Bonnie from the stage to the
studio with the Dominos to record George Harrison's All Things Must Pass in spring 1970. During this busy
period, Clapton also recorded with other artists including Dr. John, Leon Russell, Plastic Ono Band, Billy Preston, and Ringo Starr.
Layla and solo career: 1970s
1970-71: Derek and the Dominos
With
the intention to counteract the "star" cult faction that had begun to
form around him, Clapton assembled a new band composed of Delaney and Bonnie's
former rhythm section, Bobby Whitlock as keyboardist and vocalist, Carl Radle as the bassist, and drummer Jim Gordon, with Clapton playing
guitar. It was his intention to show that he need not fill a starring role, and
functioned well as a member of an ensemble. During this period, Clapton was
increasingly influenced by The
Band and their album Music from Big Pink, saying,
"What I appreciated about The Band was that they were more concerned with
songs and singing. They would have three- and four-part harmonies, and the
guitar was put back into perspective as being accompaniment. That suited me
well, because I had gotten so tired of the virtuosity—or pseudo-virtuosity—thing of long,
boring guitar solos just because they were expected. The Band brought things
back into perspective. The priority was the song." Firstly naming the
band, "Eric Clapton and Friends", the name "Derek and the
Dominos" was a fluke. It occurred when the band's provisional name of
"Del and the Dynamos" was misread as Derek and the Dominos. Clapton's
biography states that Tony Ashton of Ashton,
Gardner and Dyke told Clapton to
call the band "Del and the Dominos", since "Del" was his
nickname for Eric Clapton. Del and Eric were combined and the final name became
"Derek and the Dominos".
Clapton's
close friendship with George Harrison brought him into contact with Harrison's
wife, Pattie Boyd, with whom he
became deeply infatuated. When she spurned his advances, Clapton's unrequited
affections prompted most of the material for the Dominos' album, Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs (1970). Heavily blues-influenced, the
album features the twin lead guitars of Duane Allman and Clapton, with Allman's slide guitar as a key ingredient of the sound.
Working at Criteria Studios in Miami with Atlantic Records producer Tom Dowd, who had worked with Clapton
on Cream's Disraeli Gears,
the band recorded a double album.
The
album features the hit love song "Layla", inspired by the classical
poet of Persian literature, Nizami Ganjavi's The Story of Layla and Majnun,
a copy of which Ian Dallas had given to Clapton. The book moved
Clapton profoundly, as it was the tale of a young man who fell hopelessly in
love with a beautiful, unavailable woman and who went crazy because he could
not marry her. The two parts of "Layla" were recorded in separate
sessions: the opening guitar section was recorded first, and for the second
section, laid down several months later, drummer Jim Gordon composed and played
the piano part.
The Layla LP was actually recorded by a
five-piece version of the group, thanks to the unforeseen inclusion of
guitarist Duane Allman of The
Allman Brothers Band. A few days into the Layla sessions, Dowd—who was also producing
the Allmans—invited Clapton to an Allman Brothers outdoor concert in Miami. The
two guitarists met first on stage, then played all night in the studio, and
became friends. Duane first added his slide
guitar to "Tell the
Truth" and "Nobody Knows You When You're Down and Out". In four
days, the five-piece Dominos recorded "Key to the Highway",
"Have You Ever Loved a Woman" (a blues
standard popularised by Freddie King and others), and "Why Does Love
Got to be So Sad". In September, Duane briefly left the sessions for gigs
with his own band, and the four-piece Dominos recorded "I Looked
Away", "Bell Bottom Blues", and "Keep on Growing".
Duane returned to record "I am Yours", "Anyday", and
"It's Too Late". On 9 September, they recorded Hendrix's "Little
Wing" and the title track. The following day, the final track, "It's
Too Late", was recorded.
Eric
Clapton in Barcelona, 1974
Tragedy
dogged the group throughout its brief career. During the sessions, Clapton was
devastated by news of the death of Jimi Hendrix; eight days previously the band
had cut a cover of "Little Wing" as a tribute to Hendrix. On 17
September 1970, one day before Hendrix's death, Clapton had purchased a left-handed Fender Stratocaster that he had planned to give to Hendrix
as a birthday gift. Adding to Clapton's woes, the Layla album received only lukewarm reviews
upon release. The shaken group undertook a U.S. tour without Allman, who had
returned to the Allman Brothers Band. Despite Clapton's later admission that
the tour took place amidst a veritable blizzard of drugs and alcohol, it
resulted in the live double album In
Concert. The band had recorded several tracks for a second album in London
during the spring of 1971 (five of which were released on the Eric Clapton
box-set Crossroads), but
the results were mediocre.
A
second record was in the works when a clashing of egos took place and Clapton
walked, thus disbanding the group. Allman was killed in a motorcycle accident
on 29 October 1971. Clapton wrote later in his autobiography that he and Allman
were inseparable during the sessions in Florida; he talked about Allman as the
"musical brother I'd never had but wished I did." Although Radle
would remain Clapton's bass player until the summer of 1979 (Radle died in May
1980 from the effects of alcohol and narcotics), it would be 2003 before
Clapton and Whitlock appeared together again (Clapton guested on Whitlock's
appearance on the Later with
Jools Holland show). Another
tragic footnote to the Dominos story was the fate of drummer Jim Gordon, who was an undiagnosed schizophrenic and years later murdered his mother
during a psychotic episode.
Gordon was confined to 16-years-to-life imprisonment, later being moved to a
mental institution, where he remains today.
1971-76: Personal challenges
Clapton's career successes in the
1970s were in stark contrast with his personal life, which was troubled by
romantic longings and drug and alcohol addiction. While suffering his
(temporarily) unrequited and intense attraction to Pattie Boyd, he withdrew
from recording and touring to isolation in his Surrey, England, residence.
There he nursed his heroin
addiction, which resulted in a career hiatus interrupted only by the Concert for Bangladesh in August 1971 (where he passed out on
stage, was revived, and continued his performance). In January 1973, The Who's Pete Townshend organised a comeback concert for
Clapton at London's Rainbow
Theatre, aptly titled the "Rainbow Concert", to help Clapton kick his
addiction. Clapton would return the favour by playing 'The Preacher' in Ken Russell's film version of The Who's Tommy in 1975; his appearance in the film
(performing "Eyesight to the Blind") is notable as he is clearly
wearing a fake beard in some shots, the result of deciding to shave off his real
beard after the initial takes in an attempt to force the director to remove his
earlier scene from the movie and leave the set.
Yvonne
Elliman with Clapton promoting 461 Ocean Boulevard in 1975
In 1974, Clapton was partnered
with Pattie Boyd (they would not actually marry until 1979) and no longer using
heroin (although starting to drink heavily). He assembled a low-key touring
band that included Radle, Miami guitarist George
Terry, keyboardist Dick Sims (who died in 2011), drummer Jamie Oldaker, and vocalists Yvonne Elliman and Marcy
Levy (also known as Marcella
Detroit). With this band Clapton recorded 461
Ocean Boulevard (1974), an
album with an emphasis on more compact songs and fewer guitar solos; the cover
version of "I Shot The Sheriff" was Clapton's first No. 1 hit
and was important in bringing reggae and the music of Bob Marley to a wider audience. The 1975 album There's One in Every Crowd continued this trend. The album's
original title, The World's
Greatest Guitar Player (There's One In Every Crowd), was changed before
pressing, as it was felt its ironic intention would be misunderstood. The band
toured the world and subsequently released the 1975 live LP, E.C. Was Here. Clapton
continued to release albums and toured regularly. Highlights of the period
include No Reason to Cry (a collaboration with Bob Dylan and The
Band); Slowhand, which
featured "Wonderful Tonight" (another song inspired by Boyd); and a
second J.J. Cale cover, "Cocaine". In 1976 he performed, alongside a
string of notable guests, to pay tribute to the farewell performance of The
Band, filmed in a Martin Scorsese documentary called The Last Waltz.
1980s: Continued success
In 1981 Clapton was invited by
producer Martin Lewis to appear at the Amnesty International benefit The Secret Policeman's Other Ball.
Clapton accepted the invitation and teamed up with Jeff Beck to perform a
series of duets—reportedly their first-ever billed stage collaboration. Three
of the performances were released on the album of the show, and one of the
songs was featured in the film. The performances heralded a return to form and
prominence for Clapton in the new decade. Many factors had influenced Clapton's
comeback, including his "deepening commitment to Christianity", to
which he had converted prior to his heroin addiction.
After an embarrassing fishing
incident, Clapton finally called his manager and admitted he was an alcoholic.
In January 1982 Roger and Clapton flew to Minneapolis
– St. Paul; Clapton would be checked in at Hazelden
Treatment Center, located in Center
City, Minnesota. On the flight over, Clapton indulged in a large number of
drinks, for fear he would never be able to drink again. Clapton is quoted as
saying from his autobiography, "In the lowest moments of my life, the only
reason I didn't commit suicide was that I knew I wouldn't be able to drink any
more if I was dead. It was the only thing I thought was worth living for, and
the idea that people were about to try and remove me from alcohol was so
terrible that I drank and drank and drank, and they had to practically carry me
into the clinic."
After being discharged, it was
recommended by doctors of Hazelden that Clapton not partake in any activities
that would act as triggers for his alcoholism or stress, until he was fully situated
back at Hurtwood. A few months after his discharge, Clapton began working on
his next album, against the Hazelden doctors' orders. Working with Tom Dowd,
Clapton produced what he thought as his "most forced" album to date, Money and Cigarettes.
In 1984 he performed on Pink Floyd member Roger Waters' solo album, The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking,
and went on tour with Waters following the release of the album. Since then
Waters and Clapton have had a close relationship. In 2005 they performed together
for the Tsunami Relief Fund. In 2006 they performed at the Highclere Castle, in
aid of the Countryside Alliance, playing two set pieces of "Wish You Were
Here" and "Comfortably Numb". Clapton, now a seasoned charity
performer, played at the Live Aid concert on 13 July 1985. When offered a slot close to peak
viewing hours, he was apparently flattered. As Clapton recovered from his
addictions, his album output continued in the 1980s, including two produced
with Phil Collins, 1985's Behind the Sun, which produced
the hits "Forever Man" and "She's Waiting", and 1986's August.
Tina
Turner and Eric Clapton at Wembley Arena, 18 June 1987
August was suffused with Collins's trademark drum
and horn sound, and became Clapton's biggest seller in the UK to date, matching
his highest chart position, number 3. The album's first track, the hit
"It's In The Way That You Use It", was featured in the Tom Cruise – Paul
Newman movie The Color of Money. The horn-peppered "Run"
echoed Collins' "Sussudio" and rest of the producer's Genesis/solo
output, while "Tearing Us Apart" (with Tina Turner) and the unimpressed
"Miss You" echoed Clapton's angry sound. This rebound kicked off
Clapton's two-year period of touring with Collins and their August collaborates, bassist Nathan East and keyboard player/songwriter Greg
Phillinganes. While on tour for August,
two concert videos were recorded of the four-man band, Eric Clapton Live from Montreux and Eric
Clapton and Friends. Clapton later remade "After Midnight" as a
single and a promotional track for the Michelob beer brand, which had also marketed
earlier songs by Collins and Steve
Winwood. Clapton won a British
Academy Television Award for his
collaboration with Michael Kamen on the score for the 1985 BBC Television thriller serial Edge of Darkness. In 1989,
Clapton released Journeyman,
an album which covered a wide range of styles including blues, jazz, soul and
pop. Collaborators included George Harrison, Phil Collins, Daryl Hall, Chaka Khan, Mick Jones, David Sanborn and Robert
Cray.
George
Harrison and Clapton at the Prince's Trust Concert, Wembley Arena, 1987
In 1984, while still married to
Pattie Boyd, Clapton began a year-long relationship with Yvonne Kelly. The two
had a daughter, Ruth, who was born in January 1985, but her existence was kept
a secret by her parents. She was not publicly revealed as his child until 1991.
Boyd criticised Clapton because he had not revealed the child's existence.
At the 1987 Brit
Awards in London, Clapton picked
up the prize for Outstanding Contribution to Music. Hurricane Hugo hit Montserrat in 1989, and this resulted in the
closure of Sir George Martin and John Burgess's recording studio
AIR Montserrat, where Kelly was Managing Director. Kelly and Ruth moved back to
England, and stories about Eric's secret daughter began as a result of
newspaper articles published at the time. Clapton and Boyd divorced in
1988 following his affair with Italian model Lory
Del Santo, who gave birth to their son, Conor, on 21 August 1986. Boyd was never able to conceive
children, despite attempts at in
vitro fertilisation. Their divorce was granted on grounds of "infidelity
and unreasonable behaviour."
Clapton was known to date a host
of beautiful women, including Krissy Wood (ex-wife of Ron Wood), actress Charlotte Martin, socialite Alice Ormsby-Gore, Paula Boyd (the
younger sister of his future wife Pattie), singer Janis Joplin, singer Marianne Faithfull, Catherine James,
Cyrinda Fox, and Geraldine Edwards, the inspiration for Penny Lane in Almost Famous, singer Rosanne Cash, the former First Lady of
France and former model Carla
Bruni, and actresses Patsy
Kensit, Sharon Stone, and Alicia Witt.
1990s: Resurgence
The 1990s brought a series of 32
concerts to the Royal Albert Hall, such as the 24 Nights series of concerts that took place
around January through February 1990, and February through March 1991. On 27 August 1990, fellow blues guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan, who was touring
with Clapton, and three members of their road crew were killed in a helicopter
crash between concerts. Then, on 20 March 1991,
Clapton's four-year-old son, Conor, died after falling from the 53rd-floor
window of his mother's friend's New York City apartment at 117 East 57th
Street. Conor's funeral took place on 28 March at St Mary Magdelene's Church in
Clapton's home village in Ripley,
Surrey. Clapton's grief was expressed in the song "Tears in Heaven",
which was co-written by Will
Jennings. At the 35th Grammy
Awards, Clapton received six Grammy
Awards for the single "Tears
in Heaven" and his Unplugged album. The album reached number one on
the Billboard 200, and has since been certified Diamond by the RIAA for
selling over 10 million copies in the United States. On 9 September 1992,
Clapton performed "Tears in Heaven" at the 1992 MTV Video Music Awards in Los Angeles, and won the award for
Best Male Video.
In October 1992 Clapton was among
the dozens of artists performing at Bob
Dylan's 30th Anniversary Concert
Celebration. Recorded at Madison
Square Garden in New York City, the
live two-disk CD/DVD captured a show full of celebrities performing classic
Dylan songs, before ending with a few performances from Dylan himself. Despite
the presence of 10 other guitarists on stage, including George Harrison, Neil Young, Roger McGuinn, Steve Cropper, Tom Petty, and Dylan, Clapton played
the lead on a nearly 7-minute version of Dylan's "Knockin' on Heaven's
Door" as part of the finale.
While Unplugged featured Clapton playing acoustic guitar, his 1994 album From the Cradle contained new versions of old blues standards, highlighted by his
electric guitar playing. Clapton's 1996 recording of the Wayne Kirkpatrick/Gordon Kennedy/Tommy
Sims tune "Change the
World" (featured in the soundtrack of the movie Phenomenon) won the Grammy Award for Song of the Year in 1997, the same year he recorded Retail Therapy (an album of electronic music with Simon
Climie under the pseudonym TDF). The following year, Clapton
released the album Pilgrim,
the first record featuring new material for almost a decade. Clapton finished
the twentieth century with collaborations with Carlos Santana and B.
B. King.
In 1996 Clapton had a
relationship with singer/songwriter Sheryl
Crow. They remain friends, and Clapton appeared as a guest on Crow's Central
Park Concert. The duo performed a Cream hit single, "White Room".
Later, Clapton and Crow performed an alternate version of "Tulsa
Time" with other guitar legends at the Crossroads
Guitar Festival in June 2007.
In 1998 Clapton, then 53, met
22-year-old administrative assistant Melia McEnery in Columbus, Ohio, at a party given for
him after a performance. He quietly dated her for a year, and went public with
the relationship in 1999. They married on 1 January 2002
at St Mary Magdalene church in Clapton's birthplace, Ripley. As of 2005 they have three
daughters, Julie Rose (13 June 2001), Ella May (14
January 2003), and Sophie
Belle (1 February 2005).
At the 41st Grammy Awards on 24 February 1999, Clapton received
his third Grammy Award for Best
Male Pop Vocal Performance, for his song "My Father's Eyes". In
October 1999, the compilation album, Clapton
Chronicles: The Best of Eric Clapton, was released, which contained a new
song, "Blue Eyes Blue", that also appears in soundtrack for the film, Runaway Bride.
2000s: Collaborations
Performance
for Tsunami Relief Cardiff in 2005
Following the release of the 2001
record Reptile, in June
2002, Clapton performed "Layla" and "While My Guitar Gently
Weeps" at the Party at the
Palace concert in the grounds of Buckingham Palace. On 29 November
2002, the Concert for George was held at the Royal Albert Hall, a tribute to George
Harrison, who had died a year earlier of cancer. Clapton was a performer and
the musical director. The concert featured Paul
McCartney, Ringo Starr, Jeff
Lynne, Tom Petty and the
Heartbreakers, Ravi Shankar, Gary Brooker, Billy Preston, Joe Brown and Dhani
Harrison. In 2004, Clapton released two albums of covers of songs by bluesman Robert Johnson, Me and Mr. Johnson and Sessions
for Robert J. In 2004, Rolling
Stone ranked Clapton
No. 53 on their list of the "100 Greatest Artists of All Time".
On 22 January 2005, Clapton
performed in the Tsunami Relief
Concert held at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff,
in aid of the victims of the 2004
Indian Ocean earthquake. In May 2005 Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce, and Ginger Baker
reunited as Cream for a series of concerts at the Royal Albert Hall in London.
Concert recordings were released on CD and DVD. Later, Cream performed in New
York at Madison Square Garden. Back Home, Clapton's first
album of new original material in nearly five years, was released on Reprise Records on 30 August. In 2006 he invited Derek Trucks and Doyle
Bramhall II to join his band for
his 2006–2007 world tour. Trucks is the third member of the Allman Brothers
Band to tour supporting Clapton, the second being pianist/keyboardist Chuck Leavell, who appeared on the MTV Unplugged album and the 24 Nights performances at the Royal Albert Hall
theatre of London in 1990 and 1991, as well as Clapton's 1992 U.S. tour.
On 20 May 2006, Clapton performed
with Queen drummer Roger Taylor and former Pink Floyd bassist/songwriter Roger Waters at the Highclere Castle, Hampshire, in
support of the Countryside Alliance. On 13 August 2006,
Clapton made a guest appearance at the Bob Dylan concert in Columbus, Ohio, playing guitar on
three songs in Jimmie Vaughan's
opening act. A collaboration with guitarist J. J. Cale, titled The Road to Escondido, was
released on 7
November 2006, featuring
Derek Trucks and Billy Preston. The 14-track CD was produced and recorded by
the duo in August 2005 in California. The chemistry between Trucks and Clapton
convinced him to invite The Derek
Trucks Band to open for Clapton's
set at his 2007 Crossroads Guitar
Festival. Trucks remained on set afterward, performed with Clapton's band
throughout his performances, and later embarked on a world tour with him.
The rights to Clapton's official
memoirs, written by Christopher Simon Sykes and ublished in 2007, were sold at
the 2005 Frankfurt Book Fair for US$4 million.
On 26 February 2008, it was
reported that North Korean officials had invited Clapton to play
a concert in the communist state.
Clapton's management received the invitation and passed it on to the singer,
who agreed in principle and suggested it take place sometime in 2009. Kristen
Foster, a spokesperson, said, "Eric Clapton receives numerous offers to
play in countries around the world," and "[t]here is no agreement
whatsoever for him to play in North Korea."
In 2007 Clapton learned more
about his father, a Canadian soldier who left the UK after the war. Although
Clapton's grandparents eventually told him the truth about his parentage, he
only knew that his father's name was Edward Fryer. This was a source of
disquiet for Clapton, as witnessed by his 1998 song "My Father's
Eyes". A Montreal journalist named Michael Woloschuk
researched Canadian Armed Forces service records and tracked down members of
Fryer's family, and finally pieced together the story. He learned that
Clapton's father was Edward Walter Fryer, born 21 March 1920, in Montreal and died 15 May 1985 in Newmarket,
Ontario. Fryer was a musician (piano and saxophone) and a lifelong drifter who
was married several times, had several children, and apparently never knew that
he was the father of Eric Clapton. Clapton thanked Woloschuk in an encounter at
Macdonald Cartier Airport, in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
In February 2008 Clapton
performed with his long-time friend Steve
Winwood at Madison Square Garden
and guested on his recorded single, "Dirty City", on Winwood's album Nine Lives. The two former
Blind Faith bandmates met again for a series of 14 concerts throughout the
United States in June 2009.
Clapton's 2008 Summer Tour began
on 3 May at the Ford Amphitheatre, Tampa Bay, Florida, and then moved to
Canada, Ireland, England, Norway, Iceland, Denmark, Poland, Germany, and
Monaco. On 28
June 2008, he headlined
Saturday night for Hard Rock
Calling 2008 in London's Hyde
Park (previously Hyde Park Calling) with support from Sheryl Crow and John
Mayer. In September 2008 Clapton performed at a private charity fundraiser for
The Countryside Alliance at Floridita in Soho,
London, that included such guests as the London Mayor Boris Johnson.
Clapton
performing with The Allman
Brothers Band
at the Beacon Theatre, New York City
In March 2009, the Allman
Brothers Band (amongst many notable guests) celebrated their 40th year,
dedicating their string of concerts to the late Duane Allman on their annual
run at the Beacon Theatre. Eric
Clapton was one of the performers, with drummer Butch Trucks remarking that the performance was not
the typical Allman Brothers experience, given the number and musical styles of
the guests who were invited to perform. Songs like "In Memory of Elizabeth
Reed" were punctuated with others, including "The Weight", with Levon Helm; Johnny Winter sitting in on Hendrix's "Red
House"; and "Layla". On 4 May 2009
Clapton appeared as a featured guest at the Royal Albert Hall, playing
"Further on Up the Road" with Joe
Bonamassa.
Clapton was scheduled to be one
of the performers at the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame's 25th anniversary concert in Madison Square Garden on 30 October 2009, but cancelled due to gallstone surgery. Van Morrison (who also cancelled) said in an
interview that he and Clapton were to do a "couple of songs", but
that they would do something else together at "some other stage of the
game".
2010s: Clapton
Clapton performed a two-night
show with Jeff Beck at London's
O2 Arena on 13–14 February 2010. The two former Yardbirds
extended their 2010 tour with stops at Madison Square Garden, the Air Canada Centre in Toronto, and the Bell Centre in Montreal. Clapton performed a
series of concerts in 11 cities throughout the United States from 25 February to 13 March 2010,
including Roger Daltrey as opening act. His third European
tour with Steve Winwood began on 18 May and
ended 13 June,
including Tom Norris as opening act. He then began a short
North American tour lasting from 26 June to 3 July,
starting with his third Crossroads Guitar Festival on 26 June at Toyota
Park in Bridgeview, Illinois. Clapton released
a new studio album, Clapton,
on 27
September 2010 in the
United Kingdom and 28 September 2010 in the United States. On 17 November 2010, Clapton performed as guest on
the Prince's Trust rock gala held at the Royal Albert
Hall, supported by the house band for the evening, which included Jools Holland, Midge Ure and Mark
King.
On 24 June 2011 Clapton was in
concert with Pino Daniele in Cava
de' Tirreni stadium, Italy, with
an audience of 15,000 people before performing a series of concerts in South
America from 6 to 16 October 2011. He spent the November and December 2011
touring Japan with Steve Winwood,
playing 13 shows in various cities throughout the country. On 24 February 2012
Clapton, Keith Richards, Gary Clark Jr., Derek Trucks, Doyle Bramhall II, Kim Wilson and other artists performed together
in the Howlin' For Hubert Tribute concert held at the Apollo Theater of NYC honoring blues guitarist Hubert Sumlin who died at age 80 in 4 December 2011.
On 29 November 2012, Clapton joined the Rolling
Stones at London's O2 Arena
during the band's second of five arena dates celebrating their 50th
anniversary. He played guitar on Muddy
Waters' Champagne and Reefer.
On 12 December 2012, Clapton performed The
Concert for Sandy Relief at
Madison Square Garden, broadcast live via television, radio, movie theaters and
the Internet across six continents.
In January 2013, Surfdog Records
announced a signed deal with Eric for the release of his forthcoming album Old Sock on 12 March. Clapton is currently
touring the United States and Europe from 14 March to 19 June 2013 to celebrate
his 50 years as a professional musician.
Influences
Clapton cites Freddie King, B.B. King, Albert King, Buddy Guy, and Hubert Sumlin as guitar playing influences. Clapton
stated blues musician Robert
Johnson to be his single most
important influence. In 2004 Clapton released CDs and DVDs entitled Sessions for Robert Johnson,
featuring Clapton covering Robert Johnson songs using electric and acoustic
guitars.
Clapton co-authored with others
the book Discovering Robert
Johnson, in which Clapton said Johnson was:
"...the most important blues
musician who ever lived. He was true, absolutely, to his own vision, and as
deep as I have gotten into the music over the last 30 years, I have never found
anything more deeply soulful than Robert Johnson. His music remains the most
powerful cry that I think you can find in the human voice, really. ... it
seemed to echo something I had always felt."
Legacy
Clapton has been referred to as
one of the most important and influential guitarists of all time. Clapton is
the only three-time inductee to the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame: once as a solo artist, and separately as a member of The Yardbirds and Cream.
He ranked second in Rolling
Stone magazine's list of the
"100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time" and fourth in Gibson's Top 50 Guitarists of All Time.
Guitarists influenced by Clapton
include Slash, Allen Collins, Richie Sambora, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Gary Moore, Duane Allman, Derek Trucks, Eddie Van Halen, Brian May, Tony Iommi, Lenny Kravitz, Ted Nugent, Orianthi, Vince Gill, Brad Paisley, Jonny Buckland, Joe Don Rooney, Alex Lifeson, Jonny Lang, John Mayer, Joe Satriani, Joe Bonamassa, Davy Knowles, Lindsay Ell, Neal Schon, and Mark Knopfler.
Guitar
Clapton's choice of electric
guitars has been as notable as the man himself; alongside Hank Marvin, The Beatles and Jimi Hendrix, Clapton exerted a
crucial and widespread influence in popularising particular models of electric
guitar. With the Yardbirds, Clapton played a Fender
Telecaster, a Fender Jazzmaster,
a double-cutaway Gretsch 6120,
and a 1964 Cherry-Red Gibson ES-335. He became exclusively a Gibson
player for a period beginning in mid-1965, when he purchased a used sunburst Gibson Les Paul guitar from a guitar store in London.
Clapton commented on the slim profile of the neck, which would indicate it was
a 1960 model.
Early during his stint in Cream,
Clapton's first Les Paul Standard was stolen. He continued to play Les Pauls
exclusively with Cream (one bought from Andy
Summers was almost identical to
the stolen guitar) until 1967, when he acquired his most famous guitar in this
period, a 1964 Gibson SG. Just
before Cream's first U.S. appearance in 1967, Clapton's
SG, Bruce's Fender VI, and
Baker's drum head were all repainted in psychedelic designs created by the
visual art collective known as The
Fool. In 1968 Clapton bought a Gibson
Firebird and started using the
1964 Cherry-Red Gibson ES-335 again. The aforementioned 1964 ES-335 had a
storied career. Clapton used it at the last Cream show in November 1968 as well
as with Blind Faith, played it sparingly for slide pieces in the 1970s, used it
on "Hard Times" from Journeyman,
the Hyde Park live concert of 1996, and the From the Cradle sessions and tour of 1994–95. It was
sold for US$847,500 at a 2004 auction. Gibson produced a limited run of 250
"Crossroads 335" replicas. The 335 was only the second electric
guitar Clapton bought.
In July 1968 Clapton gave George
Harrison a 1957 'goldtop' Gibson Les Paul that been refinished with a red
colour. The following September, Clapton played the guitar on the Beatles'
studio recording of "While My Guitar Gently Weeps". His SG found its
way into the hands of George Harrison's friend Jackie Lomax, who subsequently sold it
to musician Todd Rundgren for US$500 in 1972. Rundgren restored
the guitar and nicknamed it "Sunny", after "Sunshine of Your Love".
He retained it until 2000, when he sold it at an auction for US$150,000. At the
1969 Blind Faith concert in Hyde
Park, London Clapton played a Fender Custom Telecaster, which was fitted with
"Brownie"'s neck.
In late 1969 Clapton made the
switch to the Fender
Stratocaster. "I had a lot of influences when I took up the Strat. First
there was Buddy Holly, and Buddy Guy. Hank Marvin was the first
well known person over here in England who was using one, but that wasn't
really my kind of music. Steve Winwood had so much credibility, and when he
started playing one, I thought, oh, if he can do it, I can do it." The
first—used during the recording of Eric
Clapton—was "Brownie", which in 1974 became the backup to the
most famous of all Clapton's guitars, "Blackie". In November 1970
Eric bought six Fender Stratocasters from the Sho-bud guitar shop in Nashville, Tennessee while on tour with the Dominos. He
gave one each to George Harrison, Steve Winwood, and Pete Townshend.
Clapton
with Blackie, while on tour in the Netherlands, 1978
Clapton assembled the best
components of the remaining three to create "Blackie", which was his
favourite stage guitar until its retirement in 1985. It was first played live 13 January 1973 at the Rainbow Concert. Clapton called the
1956/57 Strat a "mongrel". On 24 June 2004,
Clapton sold "Blackie" at Christie's Auction House, New York, for
US$959,500 to raise funds for his Crossroads
Centre for drug and alcohol
addictions. "Brownie" is now on display at the Experience Music Project. The Fender Custom Shop has since produced a limited run of
275 'Blackie' replicas, correct in every detail right down to the 'Duck
Brothers' flight case, and artificially aged using Fender's 'Relic' process to
simulate years of hard wear. One was presented to Eric upon the model's release
and was used for three numbers during a concert at the Royal Albert Hall on 17 May 2006.
In 1981 Clapton gave his signed
Fender Lead II guitar to the Hard
Rock Cafe to designate his
favourite bar stool. Pete Townshend also donated his own Gibson Les Paul
guitar, with a note attached: "Mine's as good as his! Love, Pete."
In 1988 Fender honoured Clapton
with the introduction of his signature Eric
Clapton Stratocaster. This, and the Yngwie Malmsteen Stratocaster, were the
first two artist models in the Stratocaster range. Since then, the artist
series has grown to include models inspired by Clapton's contemporaries such as Rory Gallagher, Mark Knopfler, Jeff Beck, and Stevie
Ray Vaughan, and by those who have influenced him, such as Buddy Guy. Clapton uses Ernie Ball Slinky and Super Slinky strings, gauge
.10 to.46. Clapton has been honoured with several signature-model
000-sized acoustic guitars made by the American firm of C.F. Martin & Company. The first,
of these, introduced in 1995, was a limited edition 000-42EC Eric Clapton
signature model with a production run of 461. As of December 2007, Martin had
produced seven EC signature models. His 1939 000-42 Martin that he played on
the Unplugged album sold for US$791,500 at auction.
Clapton plays a custom 000-ECHF Martin these days.
In 1999, Clapton auctioned off
some of his guitar collection to raise more than US$5 million for continuing
support of the Crossroads Centre in Antigua, which he founded in 1997. The
Crossroads Centre is a treatment base for addictive disorders such as drugs and
alcohol. In 2004 Clapton organised and participated in the Crossroads Guitar
Festival to benefit the Centre. A second guitar auction, including the
"Cream" of Clapton's collection – as well as guitars donated by
famous friends – was held on 24 June 2004.
His Lowden acoustic guitar sold for US$41,825.
The revenue garnered by this auction at Christie's was US$7,438,624.
In 2010 Eric Clapton announced
that he would be auctioning off over 150 items at a New York auction in 2011.
Proceeds will benefit his Crossroads Centre in Antigua. Items include Clapton's
guitar from the Cream reunion tour in 2005, speaker cabinets used in the early
1970s from his days with Derek and the Dominoes, and some guitars from Jeff
Beck, J.J. Cale, and Joe Bonamassa. In March 2011 Clapton raised more than
US$2.15 million when he auctioned off key items, including a 1984 Gibson hollow body guitar, a Gianni Versace suit from his 1990 concert at the
Royal Albert Hall, and a replica of the famous Fender Stratocaster known as
"Blackie", which fetched more than $30,000. All proceeds from the
auction were donated to Clapton's Crossroads drug and rehabilitation centre in
Antigua.
Women tone
The "woman tone" is the
informal term used by Clapton to refer to his distinctive mid- to late-1960s
electric guitar sound, created using his Gibson
SG solid body guitar (with Humbucker pick-ups) and a Marshall tube amplifier.
It is an overdriven sound that is articulate yet thick. It is characterised by
being quite distorted (or even achieved with a fuzz) but muted, in contrast to
the bright and twangy distortion that most guitarists were using at the time.
Many players have tried to duplicate it, usually without success, in part
because Clapton's playing technique had a lot to do with the tone.
Among the techniques used to
replicate Clapton's sound is a technique by which the amplifier's volume is
turned up to full, while the guitar's tone knob is turned down to zero or one.
Perhaps the best example of the
"woman tone" is Clapton's famous riff and solo from Cream's 1967 hit
"Sunshine of Your Love". Clapton has explained that he obtained the
tone with his Gibson's tone control rolled all the way down, switching to the
neck pick-up (closest to the fretboard) and the volume all the way up, with his
distortion turned all the way up. The treble, mids and bass controls on the
amplifier were also maxed out. Some versions of the "woman tone" may
also have involved strategic positioning of Clapton's wah-wah pedal.
Other media appearances
Clapton frequently appears as a
guest on the albums of other musicians. For example, he is credited on Dire Straits's Brothers in Arms album, as he lent Mark Knopfler one of his guitars. He played lead
guitar and synthesiser on The
Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking, Roger
Waters' debut solo album. Other media appearances include the Toots & the Maytals album True Love, where he played
guitar on the track "Pressure Drop". He played on Paul Brady's 1985 album Back to the Centre on the track "Deep in your
Heart".He can also be heard at the beginning of Frank Zappa's album, We're Only in It for the Money,
repeating the phrase, "Are you hung up?" over and over again. In
1985, Clapton appeared on the charity concert Live
Aid in Philadelphia with Phil
Collins, Tim Renwick, Chris Stainton, Jamie Oldaker, Marcy Levy, Shaun Murphy, and Donald 'Duck' Dunn. In 1988 he played
with Dire Straits and Elton
John at the Nelson Mandela 70th Birthday Tribute at Wembley
Stadium and the Prince's Trust rock gala at the Royal Albert Hall. On 30 June 1990, Dire Straits, Clapton and Elton John made a guest appearance in the Nordoff-Robbins charity show held at Knebworth. In 1991 Clapton was
featured on Richie Sambora's
album, Stranger In This Town,
in a song dedicated to him, called "Mr. Bluesman". He contributed
guitar and vocals to "Runaway Train", a duet with Elton John on the
latter's The One album the following year.
On 12 September 1996 Clapton
played a party for Armani at New
York City's Lexington Armory with Greg
Phillinganes, Nathan East and Steve
Gadd. Sheryl Crow appeared on one number, performing
"Tearing Us Apart", a track from August,
which was first performed by Tina
Turner during the Prince's Trust
All-Star Rock show in 1986. It was Clapton's sole US appearance that year,
following the open-air concert held at Hyde Park. The concert was taped and
the footage was released both on VHS video cassette and later, on DVD.
Clapton was featured in the movie
version of Tommy, the
first full length rock opera,
written by The Who. The movie
version gave Clapton a cameo
appearance as The Preacher,
performing Sonny Boy Williamson's
song, "Eyesight to the Blind". He appeared in Blues Brothers 2000 as one of the Louisiana Gator Boys. In
addition to being in the band, he had a small speaking role. Clapton has
appeared in an advertisement for the Mercedes-Benz
G-Wagen. In March 2007 Clapton appeared in an advertisement for RealNetwork's Rhapsody online music service. In 2010
Clapton started appearing as a spokesman for T-Mobile,
advertising their MyTouch Fender cell phone.
Eric Clapton was compared to
God's image in the episode "Holy Crap!" of season two of That '70s Show when characters Eric Forman and Steven
Hyde are asked by their minister
to draw a picture of God.
Eric Clapton appeared on Top Gear
during Series 19 Episode 4 and was involved to test the new Kia Cee'd.
Political views and advocacy
Clapton is a supporter of the Countryside Alliance, he has played in
concerts to raise funds for the organisation and he publicly opposed the Labour Party’s ban on fox hunting with the 2004 Hunting Act. A spokesperson for
Clapton said, "Eric supports the Countryside Alliance. He doesn't hunt
himself, but does enjoy rural pursuits such as fishing and shooting. He
supports the Alliance's pursuit to scrap the ban on the basis that he doesn't
agree with the state's interference with people's private pursuits."
In 2008, he donated a song to Aid Still Required's CD to assist with
the restoration of the devastation done to Southeast Asia from the 2004
Tsunami.
Controversy over remarks on
immigration
On 5 August 1976 Clapton provoked
an uproar and lingering controversy when he spoke out against increasing immigration during a concert in Birmingham. Visibly intoxicated,
Clapton voiced his support of controversial political candidate Enoch Powell, and announced on stage
that Britain was in danger of becoming a "black colony". Clapton was
quoted as saying, "I think Enoch's right ... we should send them all back.
Throw the wogs out! Keep Britain white!" The
latter phrase was at the time a British
National Front slogan. Clapton
continued:
"I used to be into dope, now
I’m into racism. It’s much heavier, man. Fucking wogs, man. Fucking Saudis taking over London. Bastard wogs.
Britain is becoming overcrowded and Enoch will stop it and send them all back.
The black wogs and coons and Arabs and fucking Jamaicans and fucking [indecipherable] don’t
belong here, we don’t want them here. This is England, this is a white country,
we don’t want any black wogs and coons living here. We need to make clear to
them they are not welcome. England is for white people, man. We are a white
country. I don’t want fucking wogs living next to me with their standards. This
is Great Britain, a white country, what is happening to us, for fuck's sake? We
need to vote for Enoch Powell, he’s a great man, speaking truth. Vote for
Enoch, he’s our man, he’s on our side, he’ll look after us. I want all of you
here to vote for Enoch, support him, he’s on our side. Enoch for Prime
Minister! Throw the wogs out! Keep Britain white!"
This incident, along with some
controversial remarks made around the same time by David Bowie, as well as uses of Nazi-related imagery by Sid Vicious and Siouxsie
Sioux, were the main catalysts for the creation of Rock Against Racism, which occurred on 30 April 1978.
In response to the comments, rock
photographer Red Saunders and others published an open letter in NME, Melody Maker, Sounds, and the Socialist Worker. It read
"Come on Eric... Own up. Half your music is black. You're rock music's
biggest colonist". It concluded, "P.S. Who shot the Sheriff, Eric? It
sure as hell wasn't you!"
In an interview from October 1976
with Sounds magazine, Clapton remarked, "I
thought it was quite funny actually. I don't know much about politics. I don't
even know if it would be good or bad for him to get in. I don't even know who
the Prime Minister is now. I just don't know what came over me that night. It
must have been something that happened in the day but it came out in this
garbled thing... I thought the whole thing was like Monty Python. There's this
rock group playing on-stage and the singer starts talking about politics. It's
so stupid. Those people who paid their money sittin' listening to this madman
dribbling on and the band meanwhile getting fidgety thinking 'oh dear'."
In a 2004 interview with Uncut, Clapton referred to
Powell as "outrageously brave", and stated that his "feeling
about this has not changed", because the UK is still "... inviting
people in as cheap labour and then putting them in ghettos." In 2004
Clapton told an interviewer for Scotland
on Sunday, "There's no way I could be a racist. It would make no sense".
In his 2007 autobiography, Clapton called himself "deliberately oblivious
to it all" and wrote, "I had never really understood or been directly
affected by racial conflict ... when I listened to music, I was disinterested
in where the players came from or what colour their skin was. Interesting,
then, that 10 years later, I would be labelled a racist ... Since then, I have
learnt to keep my opinions to myself. Of course, it might also have had
something to do with the fact that Pattie had just been leered at by a member
of the Saudi royal family." In a December 2007 interview with Melvyn Bragg on The
South Bank Show, Clapton reiterated his support for Enoch Powell and again
denied that Powell's views were "racist".
Wealth and assets
In 2009 Surrey Life Magazine ranked Eric Clapton as number 17 in
their list of richest Surrey residents, estimating Clapton's
fortune at £120 million in assets. This was a compilation of property and
income which include a £9 million yacht,
"Va Bene" (previously owned by Bernie
Ecclestone), his back music
catalogue, his touring income, and his Marshbrook holding company, which had earned him
£110 million since 1989. In 2003, he purchased a 50 percent share of
gentleman's outfitters Cordings Piccadilly. At the time, owner Noll Uloth was
trying to save the shop from closure and thought 'I will go and talk to my best
client". He is reported to have contacted Clapton and within five minutes
he had a reply saying 'I can't let this happen." In 2012, Clapton
purchased the custom made Ferrari SP12 EC. It is a car based on the Ferrari 458
Italia with the styling of a Ferrari BB (Clapton's favorite car). It also has
the headlights of the legendary Ferrari Enzo.
ldcuongvs - famous rockers blog
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