In the late 1960s, one of the most prominent pieces of graffiti seen
in London and New York was "Clapton is God." Thirty years
later, the stalwart guitarist and singer continues to hold the initiated
enthralled, and a fair share of his present-day fans weren't even born
when those words of worship were emblazoned on public edifices. Clapton's
meandering and groundbreaking musical career has been punctuated by
extreme personal hardship and tragedy. Through the emotional truth of
his music, he has sought refuge and release from the suffering of drug
and alcohol addiction, personal relationships gone awry, and the deaths
of several loved ones.
Born illegitimately in Ripley, Surrey, Clapton was left by his mother
to be raised by his grandparents, the Clapps, when he was a toddler.
(Clapton was told that his grandparents were his birth parents, and
that his mother was his sister - the truth of his parentage was divulged
when he was nine years old.) As an adolescent, Clapton glimpsed the
future when he tuned in to a Jerry Lee Lewis appearance on British television.
Lewis's explosive performance, coupled with young Eric's emerging love
of the blues and American R&B, was powerful enough to ignite a desire
to learn to play guitar. He commenced studies at the Kingston College
of Art, but his intended career path in stained-glass design ended permanently
when the blues-obsessed Clapton was expelled at seventeen for playing
guitar in class. He took a job as a manual laborer and spent most of
his free time playing the electric guitar he persuaded his grandparents
to purchase for him.
In time, Clapton joined a number of British blues bands, including
the Roosters and Casey Jones, and eventually rose to prominence as a
member of the Yardbirds, whose lineup would eventually include all three
British guitar heroes of the sixties: Clapton, Jimmy Page, and Jeff
Beck. The group became a sensation for their blues-tinged rock, as did
the budding guitar virtuoso Clapton, who earned the nickname "Slowhand"
because his forceful string-bending often resulted in broken guitar
strings, which he would replace onstage while the crowd engaged in a
slow hand-clapping. Despite the popularity of the band's first two albums,
Five Live Yardbirds and For Your Love, Clapton left in 1965, because
he felt the band was veering away from its bluesy bent in favor of a
more commercially viable pop focus. He joined John Mayell's Bluesbreakers
almost immediately, and in the ferment of that band's purist blues sensibilities,
his talent blossomed at an accelerated rate - he quickly became the
defining musical force of the group. "Clapton is God" was
the hue and cry of a fanatic following that propelled the band's Bluesbreakers
album to No. 6 on the English pop charts.
Clapton parted company with the Bluesbreakers in mid-1966 to form his
own band, Cream, with bassist Jack Bruce and drummer Ginger Baker. With
this lineup, Clapton sought "to start a revolution in musical thought
. . . to change the world, to upset people, and to shock them."
His vision was more than met as Cream quickly became the preeminent
rock trio of the late sixties. On the strength of their first three
albums (Fresh Cream, Disraeli Gears, and Wheels of Fire) and extensive
touring, the band achieved a level of international fame approaching
the Rolling Stones and the Beatles, and Clapton became even more almighty
in the minds of his fans. In fact, the "Clapton is God" gospel
contributed largely to Cream's disintegration--the band had always been
a three-headed beast of warring egos, and their intense chemistry, exacerbated
by the drug abuse of all three, inevitably led to a farewell tour in
1968 and the release of the Goodbye album in 1969.
Early in 1969, Clapton united with Baker, bassist Rick Grech, and Traffic's
Steve Winwood to record one album as Blind Faith, rock's first "supergroup."
In support of their self-titled album, Blind Faith commenced a sold-out,
twenty-four-city American tour, the stress of which resulted in the
demise of the band less than a year after its inception. Clapton kept
busy for a time as an occasional guest player with Delaney & Bonnie,
the husband-and-wife team that had been Blind Faith's opening act during
their tour. A disappointing live album from that collaboration was released
in 1970, as was Clapton's self-titled solo debut. That album featured
three other musicians - bassist Carl Radle, keyboardist Bobby Whitlock,
and drummer Jim Gordon--from Delaney's band, and yielded a modest pop
hit with Clapton's version of J.J. Cale's "After Midnight."
The collective proceeded to baptize themselves Derek and the Dominos,
and commenced recording Clapton's landmark double album Layla and Other
Assorted Love Songs, with the added contribution of slide guitarist
Duane Allman. An anguished lament of unrequited love, "Layla"
was inspired by a difficult love triangle between Clapton, his close
friend George Harrison, and Harrison's wife Pattie (she and Clapton
eventually married in 1979 and divorced in 1988).
Unfortunately, personal struggles and career pressure on the guitarist
led to a major heroin addiction. Derek and the Dominos crumbled during
the course of an American tour and an aborted attempt to record a second
album. Clapton withdrew from the spotlight in the early seventies, wallowing
in his addiction and then struggling to conquer it. Following the advice
of the Who's Pete Townshend, he underwent a controversial but effective
electro-acupuncture treatment and was fully rehabilitated. He rebounded
creatively with a role in the film version of Townshend's rock opera,
Tommy, and with a string of albums, including the reggae-influenced
461 Ocean Boulevard, which yielded a chart-topping single cover of Bob
Marley's "I Shot the Sheriff."
Some critics and fans were disappointed by Clapton's post-rehab efforts,
feeling that he had abandoned his former guitar-heavy approach in favor
of a more laid-back and vocal-conscious one. Just One Night, Clapton's
galvanizing 1980 live album, reminded devotees just exactly who their
guitar hero was, but unfortunately, this period marked Clapton's critical
slide into a serious drinking problem that eventually hospitalized him
for a time in 1981. He experienced a creative resurgence after reining
in his alcoholism, releasing a string of consistently successful albums
- Another Ticket (1981), Money and
Cigarettes (1983), Behind the Sun (1985), August (1986), Journeyman
(1989) - and turning his personal life around. Though some say Clapton
never regained the musical heights of his heroin days, his legend nevertheless
continued to grow. That he was a paragon of rock became more than apparent
when Polygram released a rich four-CD retrospective of his career, Crossroads,
in 1988; the set scored Grammy awards for Best Historical Album and
Best Liner Notes.
In late 1990, the fates delivered Clapton a terrible blow when guitarist
Stevie Ray Vaughan and Clapton road crew members Colin Smythe and Nigel
Browne - all close friends of Clapton's--were killed in a helicopter
crash. A few months later, he was dealt another cruel blow when Conor,
his son by Italian model Lori Del Santo, fell forty-nine stories from
Del Santo's Manhattan high-rise apartment to his death. Clapton channeled
his shattering grief into writing the heart-wrenching 1992 Grammy-winning
tribute to his son, "Tears in Heaven." (Clapton received a
total of six Grammys that year for the single and for the album Unplugged.)
In 1994, he began once again to play traditional blues; the album, From
the Cradle, marked a return to raw blues standards, and it hit with
critics and fans.
The fifty-one-year-old Clapton shows no signs of slowing down: in February
of 1997 he picked up Record of the Year and Best Male Pop Vocal Performance
Grammys for "Change the World," from the soundtrack of the
John Travolta movie Phenomenon. Already a double inductee into the Rock
& Roll Hall of Fame as a member of the Yardbirds and Cream, a third
nod as a solo artist is an inevitable honor for the legendary guitarist.
Until Clapton springs his next album on a waiting world, fans can content
themselves with his latest side project, TDF. The band's techno-pedigreed
1997 release, Retail Therapy, represents a marked musical departure
from Clapton's blues-rock roots, and he appears on the album with the
correspondingly off-the-wall pseudonym "X-Sample."