Eric Clapton, Tears In Heaven - A Classical Musician’s First Listen and Reaction

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  • Опубликовано: 22 авг 2024
  • #virginrock #ericclapton #tearsinheaven
    Sometimes, the creative power of the human spirit feels god-like - the ability to create something so beautiful, so moving, out of total emptiness and darkness. Eric Clapton has done exactly this with Tears In Heaven.
    Here’s the link to the original song:
    • Eric Clapton - Tears I...
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    / @littleliesel
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    Amy Shafer, LRSM, FRSM, RYC, is a classical harpist, pianist, and music teacher, Director of Piano Studies and Assistant Director of Harp Studies for The Harp School, Inc., holds multiple degrees in harp and piano performance and teaching, and is active as a solo and collaborative performer. With nearly two decades of teaching experience, she teaches privately, presents masterclasses and coaching sessions, and has performed and taught in Europe and USA.
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    Credits: Music written and performed by Eric Clapton
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Комментарии • 200

  • @LeeKennison
    @LeeKennison Месяц назад +35

    Another key artist added to your list. Many of us know Eric best from his music in the 60s and 70s. Particularly with the iconic 60s band Cream and later as a solo artists, including his Derek and the Dominos band. I loved your reaction, observations, and words of wisdom. You brought the right perspective to this song. Without being melancholic and filled with platitudes, as I see in so many reactions to this. Instead focusing on the wisdom to be drawn. Loved when you said: "Love is eternal. Whether you have lost somebody, the connection is still there." Glad you also gave the music attention and not just the story. You have much more of Eric yet to explore, including his more classic rock sound. Great reaction and observations.

    • @rk41gator
      @rk41gator Месяц назад +2

      Excellent comment and advise to explore more of his music.

    • @thekaratekidpartii2169
      @thekaratekidpartii2169 Месяц назад +3

      I met Eric Clapton years ago at a party in Chelsea. He sat right next to me and we chit chatted for a bit, but I hadn't recognized him-he essentially looked like an old tramp-until my mate elbowed me and whispered "that's Eric Clapton". I rolled my eyes and went "ugh, I hope he hasn't brought his guitar."

    • @marysweeney7370
      @marysweeney7370 Месяц назад +5

      I think Cream would be a next logical listen for many reasons including the blues rock elements, and psychedelic elements as well. Since Cream was so early in the 60's as a major influence it would be useful as a comparison to the Beatles progress say from 66-68.

    • @LeeKennison
      @LeeKennison Месяц назад +2

      @@marysweeney7370 Absolutely! I completely agree!

    • @garymaidman625
      @garymaidman625 Месяц назад +3

      You missed out the Yardbirds, an incredible band that morphed into the Led Zeppelin and had three of the greatest guitarists of all time in it, Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page.

  • @JS-TexanJeff
    @JS-TexanJeff Месяц назад +36

    I'm 54, have a 7yr old son. I have NO IDEA how Eric can sing this song without breaking down. It gets me every time.

    • @kayprice7800
      @kayprice7800 Месяц назад +4

      He did stop performing it as his life moved forward.

    • @Michael-px9rw
      @Michael-px9rw Месяц назад +1

      Eric said years ago that he won't sing this song again
      ...too painful

    • @blackknighthood
      @blackknighthood 26 дней назад +1

      thats why robert plant (led zeppelin) didnt perform "all of my love" many times

  • @jamespowers8826
    @jamespowers8826 Месяц назад +28

    The best version of this song is from the Eric Clapton "Unplugged" album from 1992.

    • @drivers99
      @drivers99 Месяц назад +3

      Is this not the unplugged version? No wonder I’m hearing sounds I didn’t recognize. The unplugged version is the one that charted and won the awards and I don’t think I’ve even heard another version. Weird! Why did they choose this version? (Eric Clapton Unplugged and Metallica Master of Puppets were the first 2 CDs I owned.)

    • @jamespowers8826
      @jamespowers8826 Месяц назад +2

      @@drivers99 Yeah. The Unplugged version was recorded live for MTV. Big Clapton fan, but I think this was my favorite album.

    • @robertwoodward9231
      @robertwoodward9231 Месяц назад +2

      Right. He only played acoustic on unplugged, which is the version most of us go to.

  • @jca111
    @jca111 Месяц назад +40

    I'm a 54 year old, big huge fella, bald head etc. I still cry whenever I hear this song.

    • @kathylee1261
      @kathylee1261 Месяц назад +7

      Ditto from a 63 year old big Black woman

    • @ohana_is_family
      @ohana_is_family Месяц назад +3

      And Circus? It is the only other song about the accident and I think it is even more powerful.

    • @jonadolfsson7777
      @jonadolfsson7777 Месяц назад +2

      Same…

    • @ceebee491
      @ceebee491 Месяц назад +2

      52 mate, big bald guy too. This song breaks me!

    • @henkgaas9446
      @henkgaas9446 Месяц назад +2

      Same here...

  • @binxbolling
    @binxbolling Месяц назад +30

    Clapton is most famous as a guitarist with a strong blues background.

  • @gwengoodwin3992
    @gwengoodwin3992 2 месяца назад +25

    Clapton has been open about his alcoholism and drug use. He has said that before he got sober, he never performed on stage - for decades - unless he was high on heroin or nearly blind drunk.
    "Tears in Heaven" would be the crown in any songwriter's career, but it is not Clapton's top song. That song would be "Layla," which he wrote as frontman of Derek and the Dominos. He wrote the song to convince the wife of his best friend, George Harrison, to leave the Beatle for him. Patti Boyd did leave George Harrison and married Clapton. Harrison and Clapton remained best friends. The 1972 original version of "Layla" is a classic of psychedelic rock. In 1992 Clapton released a soulful acoustic version that replaces the original's anguished howls with quiet desperation.
    Since 1967, graffiti reading "Clapton is God" have appeared all over the world. The slogan is a tribute to Clapton's mastery of the guitar.
    You mentioned hearing of the Yardbirds. It may interest you to know that three of music history's top 10 electric guitar players - Clapton, Jimmy Page (Led Zeppelin), and Jeff Beck - all played with the Yardbirds at different times.
    Also, George Harrison brought Clapton in to recording sessions for the Beatles's "White Album." It is Clapton who plays the guitar solo on the Harrison-penned Beatles song, "While My Guitar Gently Weeps."

    • @Nogill0
      @Nogill0 2 месяца назад

      As a gear head I've been fascinated by his guitar changes over the years, and how he finally seems to have settled on Strats, although he blocks the trem.

    • @LukeMaynard
      @LukeMaynard Месяц назад +1

      @@Nogill0 Awesome! A gear head will really appreciate all the technical nerdery here:
      Clapton has kind of taken the best of both worlds by designing his signature Strat. It looks a lot like "Blackie," the Strat he played live throughout the 1970s and retired in the 1980s. But the original Blackie was standard vintage ('50s) Strat parts, and you can hear in the incredible live shows from that period how twangy and shrill it is, as Strats are generally known.
      The biggest thing he's done is combine hum-reducing single-coil pickups - first Lace Sensors, and then the "Vintage Noiseless" ones in the current generation Clapton Strats - with an incredible 25 dB active mid-boost circuit right inside the guitar in place of one of the tone knobs.
      It's basically like having a clean boost pedal on the floor at the start of his signal chain, except that he can control it onboard from one of the knobs. The combination of these two things basically gives him the ability to replicate the thick, meaty sounds of the Gibson SG humbucker pickups from his Cream days, while also being able to dial it back to get that powerful edgy top-end of a classic Stratocaster tone without being too shrill. It also has the effect of pushing a nice tube amp straight into overdrive, seemingly without any pedals on the floor at all. Clapton is famous for being able to plug straight into an amplifier and suddenly sound like himself. A lot of that is in the way he's designed the guitar.
      Another important thing is to note how well he plays the mid-boost knob as if it's part of the instrument, shaping individual solo lines and notes the way Jeff Beck plays the whammy bar. He's constantly adjusting it throughout his solos, and while his total volume is controlled by the front-of-house sound guy, what you really hear is an absolutely fine manipulation of his own gain, the way he moves from clean rhythm playing and glassy bell-like "gentle solo" lines to the really thick, beefy sound he needs for "Sunshine Of Your Love" or the sound that's now become his standard solo tone.
      The best place to hear it in action is the big 10-minute arrangement of "I Shot The Sherriff" that he's done with his band from about 2005 onwards. It's now characterized by a big, somewhat indulgent solo at the end (I can't get enough of it) that immediately drops off the volume of the whole band, starts in at a very soft, clean tone, then gradually builds back up to full volume: the gradually changing guitar tone as he dials back up to full gain basically directs the band without us seeing any visual cues. It's a neat thing to watch, and very powerful when it's used well.
      For those guitar players who can't afford or don't want to bother with a signature Clapton Strat, you can get the effect through "gain staging." If you have a robust multi-effects unit (I use a Helix) or a really high-end boost/overdrive pedal that lets you connect an expression pedal to any parameter of the pedal, like the Strymon Sunset or a couple of its other beefy pedals, you can assign the expression pedal to the gain or boost that comes ahead of the second overdrive, and use the pedal to adjust the signal going into the second overdrive the same way Clapton uses the mid-boost knob.
      I haven't played a Clapton Strat in live performance, or really in any venue outside my local music store. But I think I much prefer using the pedal to do the work, as I don't have to take my hands off the strings to do it as Clapton does (it also means I don't need to keep changing the 9-volt battery in the guitar, as I don't have a tech team like he does). Different strokes for different folks, but that's my trick not for copying Clapton's exact sound, but for adopting one of his signature tone-shaping techniques that is a vital component of what he does, and a great instrument for any working guitarist to have in their trick bag.

    • @lynby6231
      @lynby6231 Месяц назад

      My favourite Clapton song is “Wonderful tonight”

    • @garymaidman625
      @garymaidman625 Месяц назад +1

      On the Yardbirds point, to further that, they morphed into one of the most critically acclaimed bands of all time, Led Zeppelin. Another note. Eric Clapton performed on While My Guitar Gently Weeps, which you have mentioned. Something you haven't mentioned is that George Harrison co-wrote and performed on Badge by Cream.

  • @thetrainingpod5722
    @thetrainingpod5722 Месяц назад +14

    I bet in an opportune moment, Eric might like visiting your show.
    You should look into it. You two would definitely appreciate each other

  • @garymaidman625
    @garymaidman625 Месяц назад +3

    The best way to describe his voice in this song is vulnerability, he sounds incredibly vulnerable in this.

  • @Dr_Jekyll77
    @Dr_Jekyll77 Месяц назад +7

    Can I suggest the MTV unplugged version of 'Old Love'. Alongside Clapton the pianist will either make you take up piano.......or never start😂. Excellent EXCELLENT tune.

  • @thetrainingpod5722
    @thetrainingpod5722 Месяц назад +11

    I hope Eric gets to see this.
    He would really appreciate it I think🎸

  • @41Forethought
    @41Forethought 2 месяца назад +15

    Every time I listen to your analysis of a familiar song, you point out something new. I can't count the number of times I've heard Tears in Heaven - I even learned to play it on the guitat - I never heard, or perhaps didn't recognize, the stopped guitar technique.
    I really love the way the horn provides a soft, gentle base for Clapton's expressive guitar and puzzled, yearning voice.
    Thank you once again, Amy, for expanding my awareness and understanding of musicality and technique.
    BTW, I would LOVE to hear your performance of Tears in Heaven on the harp - I suspect it would be transcendent.

  • @jerryhelm7848
    @jerryhelm7848 2 месяца назад +10

    The beautiful steel guitar work of Jay Dee Maness is such a perfect choice as it flows, so smoothly through the entire song. As for the Yardbirds, At various times they featured Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, and Jeff Beck, all of whom can be found on virtually any list of top 10 rock guitarists of all time. Also in the great covers category consider Clapton's original recording Layla, a hard rock screamer reimagined entirely as an acoustic piece for MTV Unplugged.

  • @blacksunfish
    @blacksunfish Месяц назад +14

    Nathan East's gorgeous fretless bass part adds perfect motion to the arrangement.

  • @pippin210
    @pippin210 Месяц назад +6

    Like Mahler's Kindertotenlieder, this is a piece of music I've found very difficult to listen to since becoming a father - whcih shows that it conveys the deep feelings behind it

  • @n.brucenelson5920
    @n.brucenelson5920 Месяц назад +9

    Amy, I saw the Yardbirds play their first US concert when I was in high school. A friend, Steven Tallarico - later known as Steven Tyler of Aerosmith opened for them, and Linda Eastman who later married Paul McCartney, taught me how to expose to photograph spotlight stage lighting.
    Eric had already left, but I saw Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page play and it changed our lives.

  • @rk41gator
    @rk41gator Месяц назад +5

    "Catching the essence of innocence" is such a wonderful description of this tune. To balance the emotions without being cloying or nostalgic is so difficult yet so successfully achieved. "Bewildered" is an excellent observation. Asking his questions without an answer is so delicately presented and achingly painful.

  • @oopswrongplanet4964
    @oopswrongplanet4964 Месяц назад +4

    The version from "Eric Clapton Unplugged" (live) is even better. It is simpler and more personal.

    • @rk41gator
      @rk41gator Месяц назад +1

      Yes. It is wonderful. I could not say better, but different. He has performed this many times and it seems special with every performance.......especially as he got older.

  • @rk41gator
    @rk41gator Месяц назад +5

    Thank you for reviewing this song. It is one of a handful for which I most want your comments. And I am not disappointed.

  • @meryuk
    @meryuk Месяц назад +10

    Thank you for this! Clapton has so many great songs. Forever Man, Wonderful Tonight, Change the World, Pretending... 💜

    • @garymaidman625
      @garymaidman625 Месяц назад +1

      One of my favourites of his, a song I think is quite underrated, is Promises.

  • @bobfoale3000
    @bobfoale3000 Месяц назад +4

    As a variant of the Great Covers strand, I would suggest comparing the Derek and the Dominoes version of Layla, with the version from MTV Unplugged

  • @mlong1958
    @mlong1958 Месяц назад +3

    Eric Clapton is the only person who has been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Three separate times. In the 70's people would randomly write "Clapton is God." on walls. His nickname is Slow Hand. He is also the lead guitarist on The Beatles "While My Guitar Gently Weeps"

  • @richardfehlmann4593
    @richardfehlmann4593 Месяц назад +10

    I enjoyed your reaction a lot. I love the way you describe Claptons voice here ... lovingness is a good word for his expression in this tender song 👌 And the guitar ... you hear it sobbing, so well said 👌 A glimpse into the future: I'm so much looking forward into hearing you talk about the weeping sound in Eric Claptons guitar in the Beatles song "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" ... but for that we have to wait now still for a while 😉

  • @Peter-oh3hc
    @Peter-oh3hc Месяц назад +6

    Went to a concert and during a solo I felt happy, the sad, then nostalgic and felt he had a joy stick and was moving my emotions at his whim. My brother said " he has the guitar plugged into his heart". Accurate

    • @garymaidman625
      @garymaidman625 Месяц назад +1

      If you want to hear another emotional rollercoaster, check out Evie by Stevie Wright. Stevie Wright is famous for being in the Easybeats and the song is around 10 minutes long, but it certainly doesn't feel that long. It is an absolute masterpiece.

    • @Peter-oh3hc
      @Peter-oh3hc Месяц назад

      @@garymaidman625 will check it out. Thx

  • @emmanuelmartin1238
    @emmanuelmartin1238 Месяц назад +4

    'Time can bend your knees'.

  • @HellenKillerProject
    @HellenKillerProject Месяц назад +3

    "Wonderful Tonight"...

    • @ronnydowdy7432
      @ronnydowdy7432 Месяц назад +1

      Me and my wife's favorite song. Sadly she passed away 1-1-2015 I miss her so much and this was our song.
      I listen to it often.

  • @richardfehlmann4593
    @richardfehlmann4593 Месяц назад +9

    This is such a wonderful song 👌 I'm very happy I made it to this reaction 😃👍

  • @daveking9393
    @daveking9393 Месяц назад +6

    Another fantastic post by you! Thank you so much for sharing and all your work.

  • @gerrydantone6834
    @gerrydantone6834 Месяц назад +2

    This is, of course, one of the most beautiful songs ever. And yet, Clapton has conributed other great groundbreaking songs, including "Sunshine of Your Love," "Layla," "Bell Bottom Blues," contributed to other classics such as "White Room" and "While My Guitar Gently Weeps." You should review them all. There is a reason he's in the Hall of Fame 3 times.

    • @garymaidman625
      @garymaidman625 Месяц назад

      And then there is one of his most underrated songs, that is also one of my favourites of his, Promises.

  • @hejbrian
    @hejbrian Месяц назад +2

    Tears in heaven was on a movie sound track, and express some of the grief Clapton felt after losing his son.
    Another song Circus left town, is directly about loosing his son. Their last night together they went to a circus.

  • @tonywhite7083
    @tonywhite7083 Месяц назад +1

    Im 49 have 1 year old and 5 this in this is heavy as it gets

  • @juanjoseescanellas3798
    @juanjoseescanellas3798 Месяц назад +3

    Amy, I feel grateful I can listen to your work and Vlad's.

  • @HellenKillerProject
    @HellenKillerProject Месяц назад +2

    Eric Clapton... WoW .... Most amazing career and so many genres ... And then this ...

  • @firstnamelastname-bu1xm
    @firstnamelastname-bu1xm Месяц назад +2

    I think there are some people in the world who you can be away from for a long long time & the love never leaves & when you meet them again its like they never left

  • @RicoMusap-te3om
    @RicoMusap-te3om Месяц назад

    This was on the UNPLUGGED session all acoustic!!

  • @Jaxy451
    @Jaxy451 Месяц назад

    This song is remarkable. It doesn't get more real than this.

  • @TangoEliott
    @TangoEliott Месяц назад

    This song breaks my heart in pieces. It is so sad. I do not know how he does it because I am crying just listening.

  • @Will_E_Wonty
    @Will_E_Wonty Месяц назад +2

    It sounds like a lullaby.

  • @rk41gator
    @rk41gator Месяц назад +1

    An incredible song about an excruciatingly difficult loss. It is hard to imagine how difficult it must have been to write it but how much more difficult it must have been to perform it.
    It takes a strong man to cry.
    At the opposite end of this spectrum is 'Wonderful Tonight', one of the best and most romantic love songs I have had the pleasure of hearing. Eric Clapton is a must listen.

  • @robfriesen2341
    @robfriesen2341 Месяц назад +9

    I heard a story that Eric did not play publicly for a long time after the loss of his son. One night he showed up at his local pub and just asked if he could play a new song. He played this song and sang with tears streaming down his face. Everyone sat in complete silence and respect. Then he left. Wondering if anyone knows this to be a true story.

  • @WindmillChef
    @WindmillChef Месяц назад +2

    Beautiful video to expose a beautiful song.
    Thank you Amy, we notice the videos in which the song choice speaks strongly to you.
    I noticed for the first time that in this song two bass guitars are used.
    I'm certain that you'll get into Eric Clapton some more on your channel, and it's a deep dive. It is unimaginable to set out to explore and learn the history of rock music without "The Slowhand" (Clapton's nick name). Rather than thinking in terms of "the best guitarist", music is too subjective, there are probably about 10-15, or so, great guitarists whom I find to be significant to the genre and Clapton most certainly is one of them.
    He was there early on, 1964, 1965, somewhere around there and people often don't realize that that is merely 9-10 years after Fender issued their first solid body electric guitar and Gibson issued their solid body guitar, which was, in many ways, a new instrument, it changed in what fashion guitar were to be used in music. And Eric Clapton was one of the early ones who shaped and came to define how the instrument was to be played and used in music.
    In this video Amy focusses on the fact tat Clapton composed this song because he did but to me Clapton is also and distinctly known for his creations in covering existing composures.

  • @billboth6572
    @billboth6572 Месяц назад

    There is a live, acoustic version he sung shortly after writing thus on a talk show that will tear your heart out.

  • @J0hnC0ltrane
    @J0hnC0ltrane Месяц назад +2

    Amy I can say that you are fortunate to be discovering rock and popular music, and other people are fortunate to discovery classical and other genres of great music. Thank you.

  • @-R.Gray-
    @-R.Gray- Месяц назад +3

    For an example of the playing which he became famous for earlier in his career, you could compare Robert Johnson's "Crossroads" from 1939 to Clapton's live cover on the Cream's 1968 album Wheels of Fire. Clapton also fell in love with his friend George Harrison's wife, and wrote the song "Layla" about her.

  • @jenscee7679
    @jenscee7679 Месяц назад +2

    Damnit, just listening to the song had me in tears again. It’s unbearably sad and poignant. I don’t know how he even sang it. It’s like singing a lullaby to your child.

  • @DavidPChristian2
    @DavidPChristian2 Месяц назад

    Clapton is one of the big three English blues rock guitarists, with Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck who all came to public attention in the same band. His only album with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers is legendary.

  • @johnleebold8894
    @johnleebold8894 Месяц назад +2

    Thank you it means a lot to me your deep and moving thoughtfulness of this piece of heart felt emotional music . This sensitive and grief filled yet resolving healing song helps me every time I hear it. As I to lost a 16 year old son and Eric Clayton’s guitar renditions are so soulfully consoling . Eric is such a master of Robert Johnson blues as well as a brilliant lead guitarist

  • @beatrizfiscowich33
    @beatrizfiscowich33 Месяц назад +1

    So delicate , so true . . Beauty 🌼

  • @fromchomleystreet
    @fromchomleystreet Месяц назад +8

    Clapton dropped from that #2 to somewhere in the low thirties in Rolling Stone’s recent (highly politicized) update of their list of the greatest guitarists, once ideological considerations which have nothing to do with music became part of the criteria, and Clapton found himself on the “wrong side of history”. Notably, the other three members of what had for decades been established as the “Mount Rushmore” of rock guitar, none of whom had recently uttered any unforgivable wrongspeak, all retained their place in the top five.

    • @system3008
      @system3008 Месяц назад

      Rolling Stone has become a political magazine, which has lost it's way and is no longer relevant in anyone's eyes. Only to be propped up by it's propagandist beneficiaries.

  • @fernandobarreto1418
    @fernandobarreto1418 Месяц назад +1

    Thanks again for your incredible talent to explain music with words and give us a chance to dig deeper into an artist's soul and creative process. One of the lines that really touch me is when he say that he knows he don't belong in heaven, because he knows he did a lot of bad and nasty things in the 60, 70 and 80s. I'm a fan of his work since I was 11, in 74, so I know a lot of things about him. He fears that maybe they won't meet again because he's almost sure that he's not going to heaven.

  • @lathedauphinot6820
    @lathedauphinot6820 Месяц назад +1

    Thank you for that. I really mean it. Bless the three of y’all.

  • @drothberg3
    @drothberg3 Месяц назад +3

    Lovely reaction to a remarkable song. I would beg to differ with your comment that it is a simple song. The chordal structure behind the lines “I must be strong and carry on” are chromatic and very unusual. And the bridge temporarily modulates to another key. That’s not simple for a pop/rock song.

  • @Jaxy451
    @Jaxy451 Месяц назад

    Yeah, it brings tears to the eyes.

  • @joeljohnson4512
    @joeljohnson4512 Месяц назад +1

    So hope you end up diving in to some of Eric's back catalogue ....like his collab with BB King "Riding with the King". Two Blues Masters with their unique guitar skills. Not to forget all of the early stuff with Cream and the Yardbirds
    And for those looking for some great concert listening ... Eric's Crossroads Foundation does a Crossroads Guitar Festival featuring guitarists from all over every couple of years

  • @thetrainingpod5722
    @thetrainingpod5722 Месяц назад +3

    Clapton is the king of the palm mute which likely accounts for that controlled muffling of notes coming from his guitar

  • @georgecarney3083
    @georgecarney3083 Месяц назад +2

    Eric played the guitar for the Beatles song "While my guitar gently weeps" a big friend of the late George Harrison. He is also an excellent blues player. Eric is the only member with us from the group Cream.

    • @markforster2794
      @markforster2794 Месяц назад

      Thanks for letting us know that

    • @LukeMaynard
      @LukeMaynard Месяц назад +1

      My favourite moment from Peter Jackson's 6-hour Beatles documentary "Get Back" is when they're fussing over a song, and Paul McCartney again suggests what they need is to get Eric Clapton in on the track. You can tell that this is right around the time that George and Patti Boyd were on the outs, because he's in a real sour mood and she's the only Beatle's wife who doesn't even make an appearance on set. Even Ringo's usually quiet & absent wife Maureen is there.
      With hindsight and the Internet, we all know now that George's marriage was falling apart and she was falling for Clapton (this is right around the time he dropped the "Layla" album). Paul is a musical genius operating at his very best in these sessions--you can tell he's really driving the band at this point--but he's completely unaware of the love affair or the breakdown of the marriage. When he says "On this song we really need Eric Clapton again," you can see George quietly fuming. And John, whose response to Paul's taskmaster mode is to chill out, get high and step back from things thorughout the sessions, is the peacemaker who catches the vibe, even if he doesn't know the specifics, and answer back, "On this song we REALLY need George Harrison again."

  • @user-oj9oy7mi1j
    @user-oj9oy7mi1j Месяц назад

    A song that goes to your heart, and your analysis reveals why it´s so.

  • @renanvieira2595
    @renanvieira2595 Месяц назад +2

    React Eric Clapton concerto for eletric guitar!

    • @bobfoale3000
      @bobfoale3000 Месяц назад +1

      The Concerto for Electric Guitar was composed by Michael Kamen - it was written for Eric Clapton as the soloist

  • @neilgraham8430
    @neilgraham8430 Месяц назад

    Absolutely heartbreaking ❤
    Thanks for the review Amy

  • @rabeksmom
    @rabeksmom Месяц назад +1

    His voice sounds tired - from grief. And the music reminds me of a lullaby.

  • @mtheberts
    @mtheberts Месяц назад

    You mentioned and I agree with the genius of this well crafted song. There is a brittleness to his voice as if he can only provide just enough air to sustain the words. He does a great job of being specific to his own tragedy - that just rips your heart out, but leaves out just enough that the listener can apply it to their own heartaches and tragedies so that hopefulness and comfort at the end of each section - despite his unfathomable loss and grief, he still is offering that comfort and support to the listener.

  • @Deathbird_Mitch
    @Deathbird_Mitch Месяц назад +1

    I heard that Clapton doesn't play this song live anymore. He said it expressed, and helped him explore/process, his feelings after his son's death and he is done and has moved on from that place.

  • @Tom-xy9yy
    @Tom-xy9yy Месяц назад +1

    Thank you, Amy.

  • @davidlopan7152
    @davidlopan7152 Месяц назад

    I LOOOOOVE that fretless bass!

  • @dboss7239
    @dboss7239 Месяц назад +2

    Clapton is indeed Rock and Guitar Royalty. In fact you are going to, or have heard his guitar on a Beatles song! His guitar work was featured on "While My Guitar Gently Weeps". And indeed in the "Concert for George" after his untimely death, Clapton and a huge array of his peers, including Paul and Ringo did the song with Clapton both singing and playing with his "slow hand". After you listen to the Beatles version watch the video on RUclips titled " While My Guitar Gently Weeps (Taken from Concert For George) ". It would be a wonderful candidate for a "Great Covers" video analysis on your part.
    In fact in addition to a myriad of Rock legends playing, is George's son Dhani, who is a spitting image of a young George Harrison. Also some history - at some point, Lennon quipped that the Beatles were more popular than Jesus, and Clapton fans slapped back that Clapton was God!

  • @babyfacemichael1
    @babyfacemichael1 Месяц назад

    Beautiful and very sad. , this video was always going to be very moving. . Watching this reminded me of another lovely song about a child, sung by Luke Kelly called `Scorn not his Simplicity` Written by Phil Coulter whose son had Downs syndrome.

  • @WayneKitching
    @WayneKitching Месяц назад

    Such a nice surprise. I taught myself to play this song (from 90s era tabs) on classical guitar.

  • @rk41gator
    @rk41gator Месяц назад +1

    An interesting side note about this song. Phil Collins was/is one of Clapton's best friends and, when he heard about the tragedy, penned a song about Eric's loss for the next Genesis album. He asked Eric to hear 'Since I Lost You" and get his approval. After the tears, Eric asked Phil to listen to a song he had just written for his opinion. After hearing 'Tears in Heaven' and more tears, he responded that, while a wonderful and heartfelt song, he did not think it would be a good single release.
    "Shows what little I know!" quipped Collins to the interviewer.

  • @seajaytea9340
    @seajaytea9340 Месяц назад +1

    Your thoughtful and affecting analysis put me in mind of Brahms's Requiem. Music born of tragedy that brings consolation.

  • @markk.4941
    @markk.4941 Месяц назад

    I can't listen to it without crying. There is no way I could sing it.

  • @altair8598
    @altair8598 Месяц назад +2

    I know this song, but confess to tearing up when hearing it - not because I have been in a similar position with a tragedy like this, but still as a father it is so relatable. None of us expect to outlive our children, right? Yes his vocals are as you say 'ethereal' but I also take from them fatherly love: the sort of tone we would adopt if our child was hurt in any way. You have reacted to a Nick Cave song previously, did you know he had two experiences like this (one worked out musically in The Skeleton Tree album)?
    This is Clapton at his most subdued and comes from a period close to when he wrote another touching song, 'Wonderful Tonight'. However he is perhaps best known for one of the greatest guitar solos of all time in his early 1970s song 'Layla'. At the time he was infatuated with George Harrison's wife Pattie (nee Boyd), they had an affair and then she left George for Eric. However the two men eventually remained great friends, so much so that after George's death Eric co-organised (with Jeff Lynne) a wonderful tribute concert, 'Concert for George'. It is a great video and features many well know rock performers.
    I will look forward to the day when you have time to react to Eric's pioneering work in The Yardbirds and Cream. Two great bands.
    Beautiful, intelligent reaction as usual Amy.

  • @aaronz1326
    @aaronz1326 Месяц назад

    I am really enjoying this reaction. I have to say, you sing this beautifully, and if you chose to cover it, I would be thrilled.

  • @lupcokotevski2907
    @lupcokotevski2907 Месяц назад

    Wonderful choice. The piano accordion ? in the intro is a perfect touch.

  • @michacieslak2346
    @michacieslak2346 Месяц назад +1

    I do understand Clapton's feelings and capability of singing about it. I'm writing a book and after my father's death I noticed how I strengthened various mourning plots - added more deaths and characters mourning and dealing with it. It's also transferring my feelings on them, I'm guessing similar way Eric Clapton did with song and putting his emotions and feelings in it, making it easier to deal with by talking about it that way, rather than in a straightforward manner.

  • @michaelfrank2266
    @michaelfrank2266 Месяц назад

    For me the back story detracts from this wonderful love song. Imagine singing this to a woman. It is how I first heard it. In my view my hearing was the best interpretation.

  • @garylester8621
    @garylester8621 Месяц назад

    Beauty out of a tragedy. Godda love Eric.

  • @incamoran9532
    @incamoran9532 Месяц назад

    I've been a Clapton fan since I was a young teenager - in the middle of a whole other century - and among all the things he wrote was the most frightening line I've heard in any song. In "Holy Mother", written in the depths of his addiction, he wrote "when my hands no longer play..." and I just can't conceive of a world where that's a reality.

  • @craigwells3655
    @craigwells3655 Месяц назад +1

    Brilliant!

  • @michaelb1761
    @michaelb1761 Месяц назад

    Another song that tugs very hard at the heart strings is actually a pair of songs "10,000 Days/Wings For Marie" by Tool. Maynard Keenan wrote several songs about is mother, but these two are about her death. I have no idea how he could sing them without breaking down.

  • @nathanbrady2704
    @nathanbrady2704 Месяц назад

    If i could change the world by clapton is also amazing. As are Layla and Wonderful tonight. But Cream is truly great. Tales of brave Ulysses, The white room and Sunshine of your love.

  • @jonathanhill9748
    @jonathanhill9748 Месяц назад +1

    Clapton wrote another song about the death of his son called “Circus.” The day before the tragedy, Clapton had taken his son to the circus. It is a very different song, from the album “Unplugged” - the Deluxe edition, as well as in the 1998 album “Pilgrim.” The version of “Tears in Heaven” on the “Unplugged” album is my personal favourite version.

  • @Jaxy451
    @Jaxy451 Месяц назад

    There was a phrase ' Clapton is God' going round in the 70s. He is usually placed second greatest rock guitarist of all time behind Jimi Hendrix.

  • @anthonyadams8668
    @anthonyadams8668 Месяц назад

    Eric Clapton and Wynton Marsalis “Just a closer walk with thee” Play the Blues: Live from Jazz at Lincoln Center is an excellent example Blues

  • @RobertJohnson-gk2gj
    @RobertJohnson-gk2gj Месяц назад

    Sister Rosetta Tharpe “The Queen of Rock &Roll” (the 1st before anyone) Was a big influence on Eric Clampton & Jimmy Hendrix blew all of their minds, but also his main style that he directly infused is J.J. Cale , who wrote “after midnight” & “cocain” & “call me the breeze”

  • @svenpoletka5236
    @svenpoletka5236 Месяц назад

    Love the hair! This song has some serious Beatles vibes.

  • @johnfarmer2047
    @johnfarmer2047 Месяц назад +1

    13:52 you have heard Pink Floyd “The Wall”.
    But the album “Dark Side Of The Moon” from 1972 is likely their best work.

  • @dianecourtney2724
    @dianecourtney2724 Месяц назад

    I can’t bear listening to this song but I wanted to see Amy’s thoughts on it 😔 🌷

  • @patmcgroin6916
    @patmcgroin6916 Месяц назад +1

    There's a slide guitar in there, is there not? Usually heard in country music tunes. Nice use of the instrument.

  • @t.e.1189
    @t.e.1189 Месяц назад

    So so happy you finally did Eric Clapton. But really you need to listen to Layla to get a better feel of what he really is known for, his sensational blues/rock guitar playing.

  • @tonytjandra4798
    @tonytjandra4798 Месяц назад

    Phenomenon
    "Change the World" is a song written by Tommy Sims, Gordon Kennedy, and Wayne Kirkpatrick and recorded by country music artist Wynonna Judd. A later version was recorded by English singer Eric Clapton for the soundtrack of the 1996 film Phenomenon. It began in Nashville Omni Studio A in 1991...
    Thank's.

  • @ChrisFreund-rt8rf
    @ChrisFreund-rt8rf Месяц назад +1

    Eric Clapton is a blues artist.He always before this tragedy and always will be.He’s also a very gifted guitarist and songwriter.He helped George Harrison finish writing While My Guitar Gently Weeps when Lennon/McCartney showed no interest in the song.

    • @garymaidman625
      @garymaidman625 Месяц назад +1

      This song, when you think about it, is the ultimate blues song.

  • @petertreid
    @petertreid Месяц назад

    To my ear there are elements of the music composition that owe their dues to the influence of John Martyn and the wonderful sliding bass-lines of Danny Thompson who played with John throughout his career.

  • @pablolazaromartinez3541
    @pablolazaromartinez3541 Месяц назад

    Let It rain, please❤

  • @susanstein6604
    @susanstein6604 Месяц назад

    Eric Clapton is generally more of a Rock and Blues musician.
    I think composing and singing this song helped him from going back to alcohol and drugs after such a heartbreaking event.

  • @Jaxy451
    @Jaxy451 Месяц назад

    Stopping on the guitar is a fairly common practice called muting. The non-plucking hand is able to mute the strings to create that effect.

  • @karentargaryen7959
    @karentargaryen7959 Месяц назад

    My favorite Eric Clapton is with Derek and the Dominoes, a song call Bell-Bottom Blues. Give it a listen.

  • @myownchannel247
    @myownchannel247 Месяц назад +1

    Co- written by Will Jennings ( lyrics )

  • @lovisalindstrom7920
    @lovisalindstrom7920 28 дней назад

    Sometimes we are baffled by life. No matter what age, sometimes we only have questions and not answers at least not from outside world. Sometimes we need to listen to our inner voice and sense. Fortunately that voice become more and more mature with experience and that i think is what is wisdom. There are only question marks and they are important, they make our life important and wonderful, we can be fascinated and moved. Knowledge can solve a lot of problem, but i think we need to be aware of the great mystery that our world and life really is and should be. Do not take this as an argument in any political question. Its just sociology.

  • @KM769
    @KM769 Месяц назад

    Cream - I feel free, Sunshine of your love, White room,
    Derek and Dominos - Layla.

  • @derek91362
    @derek91362 12 дней назад

    Co-written with Will Jennings.
    Clapton wrote the first line and Jennings the rest.

  • @getexis8685
    @getexis8685 Месяц назад

    It cuts so deep... it hurts so much that the pain is greater than all the physical pains combined.
    And then there is the creation of something so beautiful arising from a situation so painful that it even confuses its creator, almost as if it were a mischief of something superior that should have been more serious in relation to such a terrible situation.