A TRIBUTE TO ERIC CLAPTON
A ROCKER RESURRECTED

 

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It's been nearly a decade since the release of a new album of original material by Eric Clapton. And while the extraordinary guitarist, vocalist and songwriter has hardly been resting on his laurels, the arrival of Pilgrim (on Duck/Reprise Records) gives fans cause for real celebration.


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A generous offering of fourteen tracks, twelve of which were written or co-written by Clapton, Pilgrim takes its place among the most moving and memorable recordings in the artist's career. Produced by Eric Clapton and Simon Climie (who also shares writing credit on a number of these selections), Pilgrim includes the debut single "My Father's Eyes," and features performances by top-notch musicians including the aforementioned Climie, Paul Waller, Nathan East, Andy Fairweather Low, Chris Stainton, Paul Carrack, Joe Sample, Paul Brady, Greg Phillinganes (co-writer of the track "Broken Hearted") and others.

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Recorded in London and Los Angeles, Pilgrim contains a rendition of the blues lament "Going Down Slow" by St. Louis Jimmy and "Born In Time" by Bob Dylan.
of the While Pilgrim may well serve to introduce a whole new generation of fans to his extraordinary music, Eric Clapton's place in history has long been assured. One greatest rock guitarists of all time, he's a talent who has had an incredible impact.

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Just last year he won three top Grammy awards, including Record of the Year and Best Male Pop Vocal for "Change The World," which also won Song of the Year. Clapton has continued to enjoy resounding success for his 1994 Duck/Reprise album, From The Cradle, a personal tribute to the blues of Willie Dixon, Muddy Waters, Elmore James and others who influenced Clapton's life and music.

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Today's accolades echo back through the years, celebrating a singular life in music, one that began in a small English hamlet just as the war was ending. Eric Patrick Clapton was born in Ripley, Surrey, on March 30, 1945. His love of the blues and American R&B led him to learn guitar and study the masters. "The merest glimpse of Bo Diddley or Chuck Berry would send me into frenzies of delight," he recalls. "So when I found the stuff that was behind it, Muddy Waters, and beyond that, Robert Johnson, and beyond that, the work song, it did something to me emotionally."

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After pinch-hitting in a number of British blues bands in the early '60s, Clapton rose to prominence in The Yardbirds, with a lineup that would eventually include the three top British guitar heroes of the decade ó Clapton, Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page. He left in 1966 to join John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, and after that he formed Cream with bassist Jack Bruce and drummer Ginger Baker, a band that quickly became the preeminent rock trio of the late '60s.

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What made Clapton unique? Rather than simply replicate the blues riffs he'd heard on record, Clapton incorporated the emotion of the original performances into his own style of playing, thus expanding the vocabulary of blues guitar. Cream's enormous success propelled the guitarist to international stardom. The band's winning combination of neo-psychedelia blended with fiery remakes of such blues standards as "Spoonful," "Crossroads" and "Born Under A Bad Sign" cemented Clapton's reputation.

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Clapton's post-Cream undertakings were equally admired. Along with Steve Winwood, Rick Grech and Ginger Baker, he formed Blind Faith in 1969, a band that enjoyed tremendous popularity with its self-titled No. 1 album. Later that year with Delaney and Bonnie & Friends, Clapton began to test his vocal skills as well.

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He followed with a 1970 debut self-titled solo album, and the magnificent Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs by Derek and the Dominos, another one-time-only collaboration which featured a then-unknown slide guitar genius named Duane Allman.

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By 1971, however, Clapton had hit an emotional low. The disbanding of Derek And The Dominos had a stunning impact on him. Aside from occasional session work, and special occasions like George Harrison's Concert For Bangladesh and the 1973 Rainbow Concert organized in his honor by Pete Townshend, Clapton retreated from public view for nearly three years.


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An even bigger problem at that time was his serious drug addiction. Clapton eventually conquered his dependency and rebounded with "I Shot the Sheriff" from the album 461 Ocean Boulevard, both of which topped the charts in 1974. Albums in the mid-to-late '70s, such as There's One In Every Crowd, E.C. Was Here and No Reason To Cry, were all Top 20 chart hits. Beginning in 1977 with the triple-platinum album Slowhand and its smash hit single "Lay Down Sally," Clapton began an amazing run of gold and platinum successes that continue to this day.

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Subsequent albums include the platinum Backless (1978) and Just One Night (1980), recorded live at Tokyo's Budokan Theater; Another Ticket (1981), which contained the Top 10 hit, "I Can't Stand It"; Money and Cigarettes (1983); Behind the Sun (1985) and August (1986). In 1988, Clapton released the double-platinum Crossroads, which included 73 digitally-remastered tracks covering every phase of the guitarist's career. The next year's Journeyman passed the two-million sales mark, and earned the artist a Grammy for the single "Bad Love." In 1991 came the gold-certified 24 Nights, recorded live at Royal Albert Hall in London, with a four-piece band, a nine-piece band, an ensemble of blues legends and an orchestra. Guest players included Phil Collins, Buddy Guy, Jimmie Vaughan and Robert Cray.


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Clapton reached new heights in 1992 with the release of the soundtrack to the motion picture Rush and its Grammy-winning Top 5 single "Tears in Heaven." That same year, Unplugged, recorded live on the MTV program, hit No.1 for three weeks straight, selling 15 million copies worldwide. Eric earned six Grammy Awards that year, clearly a sign of renewed appreciation for his work. In 1994, he returned once again to the music that gave him his initial passion for playing. The all-blues double-platinum From the Cradle was a hit with both critics and fans around the world. Said Clapton then, "The blues are what I've turned to, what has given me inspiration and relief in all of the trials of my life."

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Throughout the '80s and '90s, Clapton made his presence felt in the realm of film soundtracks as well, with contributions to such movies as Rush, Back to the Future, The Color of Money and Lethal Weapon 3. Yet his greatest soundtrack success came with "Change The World," the endearing smash hit from the John Travolta film Phenomenon.

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A double inductee into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as a member of both The Yardbirds and Cream, Eric Clapton continues to astonish and delight a vast spectrum of music lovers. It's a legacy that continues with the release of Pilgrim, the latest journey in the lifelong musical odyssey of an authentic musical genius.

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