(born March 30, 1945)
is a British guitarist, nicknamed slowhand or, in
the 1960s, God.
Having learned to play as a boy, and growing up
listening to blues recording by the likes of Robert
Johnson, Eric Clapton first made his name as a
member of the Yardbirds, a pop-influenced rock and
roll band whose biggest hit "For Your Love" came
whilst Eric was a member. Feeling the need to return
to his blues roots he joined the Bluesbreakers, with
John Mayall. His emotional playing on their first
album (which features Eric reading a copy of the
Beano on the cover) made his name as a blues player,
and inspired a short-lived craze of graffiti
deifying him ("Clapton is God", it read).
Limited by Mayall's traditional blues format,
and destroyed by Jimi Hendrix's newly formed
Experience playing a double-timed version of
"Killing Floor" at the Central Polytechnic in
London, he left in 1966 to form Cream, one of
the earliest examples of the supergroup, and
also one of the earliest 'power trios', with
Jack Bruce (also of Bluesbreakers) and Ginger
Baker (of the Graham Bond Organisation). During
his time with Cream he began to develop as a
singer as well as play, though Bruce took most
of the vocals.
Cream's repertoire varied from pop soul ("I Feel
Free") to lengthy instrumental jams
("Spoonful"). The group achieved commercial
success during its brief existence with the song
"Sunshine of Your Love", from the Disraeli Gears
album, and "White Room" from Wheels of Fire. The
Goodbye album, released shortly after Cream
disbanded in 1968, featured the single "Badge,"
co-written by Clapton and Beatle
George
Harrison. The friendship between the two, which
had resulted in Clapton playing on "
While My
Guitar Gently Weeps" from
The Beatles' White
Album (a tactic by Harrison to make the other
band members take his song seriously) was later
sorely tested when Harrison's wife, Patti
Boyd-Harrison, left him for Clapton.
Following a second spell in a supergroup, the
far less successful Blind Faith, Eric Clapton
first played as one of Delaney and Bonnie &
Friends before releasing a restrained solo
album. The next record, however, was better
received. Taking the sidemen from his solo
record, he recorded Layla and Other Assorted
Love Songs as "Derek and the Dominos", along
with an unplanned late addition of slide guitar
virtuoso Duane Allman, whom Eric first met when
he attended a show by the Allman Brothers in
Miami, where Eric was recording. The title
track, a statement of unrequited love for
Boyd-Harrison with an immediately recognizable
guitar riff, remains one of the most widely
played rock songs of the 1970s. The remainder of
the album, which was heavily blues-influenced,
featured a winning combination of the two
guitars of Allman and Clapton.
Despite his success, Eric Clapton's personal
life was a mess. In addition to the romantic
entanglements, he had become addicted to heroin,
which resulted in a career hiatus interrupted
only by the Concert for Bangladesh and the
"Rainbow Concert" in 1973 (see 1973 in music),
organized by
The Who's Pete Townshend to help
Clapton kick the drug. Relatively clean again,
he released 461 Ocean Boulevard (1974), an album
with the emphasis on songs rather than
musicianship. Its cover of "I Shot The Sheriff"
was important in bringing the music of Bob
Marley to a wider audience. The 1975 album
There's One In Every Crowd continued this trend.
(Its original intended title The World's
Greatest Guitar Player (There's One In Every
Crowd) was altered, as it was felt the ironic
intention would be missed.)
The late 1970s saw Eric Clapton struggle to come
to terms with the changes in popular music, and
a relapse into alcoholism, that eventually saw
him hospitalised and spend a period of
convalescence in Antigua, where he would later
support the creation of a drugs and alcohol
rehabilitation centre. His albums continued in
the 1980s, with only 1989's Journeyman achieving
much critical acclaim, featuring a strong return
to his blues roots.
The early 1990s saw tragedy enter Eric Clapton's
life on two occasions. On August 27, 1990
guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan, who was touring
with Clapton, and two members of their road crew
were killed in a helicopter crash between
concerts. Then, on March 20 1991, Clapton's
four-year-old son Conor died following an
accidental fall from an apartment window. A
fraction of Clapton's grief was heard on the
song "Tears In Heaven" (on the soundtrack to the
movie Rush), co-written with Will Jennings,
which, like the MTV Unplugged album that
followed it, won a Grammy award.
Like Unplugged, his 1994 album From The Cradle,
featured a number of versions of old blues
standards, and highlighted his economical
acoustic guitar style. In 1997 he recorded
Retail Therapy, an album of electronic music
under the pseudonym TDF, and he finished the
twentieth century with critically-acclaimed
collaborations with Carlos Santana and B. B.
King. Clapton's 1996 recording of the Wayne
Kirkpatrick/ Gordon Kennedy/Tommy Sims tune
Change the World won a Grammy award for song of
the year in 1997.

Discography
- 1970 Self-Titled
- 1970 Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs
(as Derek and the Dominoes)
- 1973 Live at the Fillmore (as Derek and
the Dominoes) (Live 1970)
- 1973 Eric Clapton's Rainbow Concert
(Live 1972)
- 1974
461 Ocean Boulevard
- 1975 There's One In Every Crowd
- 1975 E.C. Was Here (Live 1975)
- 1976
No Reason To Cry
- 1977
Slowhand
- 1978
Backless
- 1980
Just One Night (Live 1979, Double Disc
Set)
- 1981 Another Ticket
- 1982 Time Pieces: Best Of Eric Clapton
(1969-1979)
- 1983 Money And Cigarettes
- 1984 Too Much Monkey Business
- 1985 Behind The Sun
- 1986
August
- 1988 Crossroads (Box Set)
- 1989 Homeboy
- 1989
Journeyman
- 1990 The Layla Sessions (as Derek and
the Dominoes) (20th Anniversary Edition, Box
Set)
- 1991 24 Nights (Live 1990)
- 1992 Rush
- 1992 Unplugged (Live 1991)
- 1994
From The Cradle
- 1995 The Cream Of Clapton (Live)
- 1996 Crossroads 2: Live In The Seventies
(Live from 1974 to 1978, Quadruple CD Set)
- 1998
Pilgrim
- 1999 The Blues (Double Disc Set)
- 2000 Riding With The King
- 2001 Reptile
- 2002 One More Car, One More Rider (Live
2001)
- 2003 TBA
Singles Discography
- 1970 After Midnight
- 1974 I Shot The Sheriff
- 1974 Willie And The Hand Jive
- 1976 Hello Old Friend
- 1978 Lay Down Sally
- 1978 Wonderful Tonight
- 1978 Promises
- 1979 Watch Out For Lucy
- 1980 Tulsa Time
- 1980 Cocaine
- 1981 I Can't Stand It
- 1983 I've Got A Rock N' Roll Heart
- 1985 Forever Man
- 1990 Bad Love
- 1992 Tears In Heaven
- 1995 Love Can Build A Bridge
- 1996 Change The World