And we are back with the guitarist known to some simply as “God” - Eric Clapton! This is actually the third instalment covering EC's playing – the first covered hisdays as a Bluesbreaker and the legendary “Beano” album, in the second we took a look at his seminal work with supergroup Cream, and so in this one we'll be taking a look at What Eric Did Next. Now, there's actually a fair bit so we'll be skipping quite a lot of detail and just picking out a few salient points on his journey to become the vastly successful solo artist he is today.
In the immediate aftermath of Cream's demise, one of his first appearances was THAT solo on The Beatles' “While My Guitar Gently Weeps”, brought in as a guest soloist as George Harrison was struggling to get the “crying” sound from his guitar that he wanted, and certainly working through Clapton's solo is heavy on the wide string bends. But the next band was Blind Faith, formed in 1969 and featuring Cream drummer Ginger Baker, Steve Winwood and Ric Grech of Family. Billed as rock's first “supergroup”, the band managed one six-song album (albeit featuring a hit single, “Can't Find My Way Home”) and a US tour before disbanding – however, Clapton had become good friends with the support act Delaney & Bonnie, and this group would evolve into the next group, Derek & The Dominoes. This is the group with which EC wrote and recorded the song he is most closely associated with, “Layla”, famously written about his infatuation with the wife of his friend George Harrison (I'm going to spoiler the lick part of this post – there isn't anything from Layla as the focal point of the guitar playing is the riff, which I assume everyone reading this can already play..).
Iconic as the title song undoubtedly is, the album itself sold poorly, and Derek & The Dominoes went the same way as Blind Faith, and this was instrumental in Clapton falling into heroin use.
Surprisingly, this failed to solve anything. However, it fortunately proved not to be terminal, and after various interventions from friends including Pete Townshend, Clapton was able to kick the habit and get back to music, assembling a touring band with which he recorded his first solo album, “461 Ocean Boulevard” which included the hit Bob Marley cover “I Shot The Sheriff”. This was the genesis of Clapton's solo career and set him on the path he still walks now.
However, it would be wrong to include
any history of Clapton that didn't mention the tragic death of his 4
year old son Conor in 1991 after accidentally falling from a 53rd
floor window of a family friend's apartment in New York, inspiring
the acoustic ballad “Tears In Heaven” which he performed on the
“Unplugged” album in 1992, one of the first of the MTV
“Unplugged” series. As well as managing to kick heroin, Clapton
also struggled with alcohol abuse but impressively managed not to
relapse despite this tragedy, and he runs a rehab centre in Antigua
to this day.
So that's history dealt with – let's take a
long at some of EC's playing through this period.
This first
lick is taken from “Let It Rain”, from Clapton's self-titles solo
album released in 1972. Interestingly, the song is in D major but it
revolves heavily around the A chord making it more accurate to view
it as being A Mixolydian (R 2 3 4 5 6 b7 – A B C# D E F# G) and in
this lick Clapton is blasting A major pentatonic (R 2 3 5 6 – A B
C# E F#) over the top, and you can see him utilising the “3 frets
back rule” - taking the F# minor pentatonic shape (R b3 4 5 b7 –
F# A B C# E) as the basis for this lick, starting in 2nd
position and moving back to first. Notice the 3 against 4 idea –
technically known as a “hemiola”, this places a three note
melodic phrase in a four note rhythmic grouping so that each time the
notes fall onto the beat in a different way, often creating the
illusion of something being much more complex! Another great example
of this are the fast parts of the “Alright Now” solo, or
basically anything John Squire and Noel Gallagher played in the
90s..
I did say I wasn't going to put anything from “Layla”
up, but on the same album is the track “Bell Bottom Blues” with
some terrific and emotive playing from Clapton. This lick is tucked
away right before the fadeout and features EC milking string bends
from the A minor pentatonic (A C D E G) scale at the 17th
fret – notice the C bent first up to D (3rd to 4th)
and then just a quarter tone to in between C & C#, so in between
minor and major. In the second bar Clapton performs a series of
string bends on the same note, bending it up a tone, then alternating
between bent and straihht, before finishing with a downward bend and
a couple f howling G notes bent up to As to finsh the track off with
a resolution to the root note.
In this third example we leap
forward to the 80s – VERY 80s – with 1989's “Bad Love” and in
the age of shred Clapton's solo is a welcome dose of good taste
classic rock. This particular lick uses D minor petatonic and is
based primarily around positions 3 and 4 of the minor pentatonic, and
notice the “3 Magic Notes” motif – pick/ hammer/ pull, down to
the next string and back up – he translates across the strings.
It's a subtle thing, but these elements can help tie a solo together
and provide a sense of narrative. The howling harmony bend that
finishes the lick off provides a fitting climax to the run.
Finally we move things forward to
more-or-less present day with a live version of Cocaine from 2017.
This particular performance has some absolutely incendiary playing
from EC and showcases his deft use of the Mixolydian (R 2 3 4 5 6
b7), both directly and by blending elements of major and minor
pentatonic scales. To give some theory, E Mixolydian contains E F# G#
A B C# D, whilst E major pentatonic contains E F# G# B C#, whilst E
minor pentatonic contains E G A B D. When you blend them together you
get E F# G G# A B C# D, so effectively getting the Mixolydian plus an
additional minor 3rd (G), which EC alternates with G# to
milk the blues feel.
This particular lick is an absolute
barnstormer, with Clapton going full pedal to the metal here
(performed with a healthy dose of wah pedal too) – note F# bent up
a semitone (2nd into minor 3rd), the repetitive
3 Magic notes phrasing grouped first in 4 then in 3s to build
intensity, the C# (6th) bent to D (b7th) and the quirky
wide interval finger roll he performs on his way down the scale, as
well as the use of chromaticism to spice up the ending, which
finishes on a bluesy b7 rather than the safer root note.
I
think Clapton often gets overlooked by a lot of guitarists as the
“Radio 2 Guitar Hero”, the non-guitarist's guitar hero – and to
be fair, tracks like “Wonderful Tonight” do him no favours there
– but getting deep into EC's playing in his later days has shown me
there is a lot to learn here and that the guy is the genuine article.
Certainly, working through the epic live “Cocaine” solo was
something of an eye opener as you really could feel like Clapton has
taken some steps forward, proving that even the big names can still
practice, can still improve as long as the will is there to do so.
That EC clearly does is something I think we can all take as an
inspiration.
Back next month with Brad Paisley, so break out
the Stetsons and the Telecasters and get ready for some down-home
country shred, y'alls
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