Mastermind Behind "Layla" - Tom Dowd

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  • Опубликовано: 18 окт 2008
  • Tom Dowd was a musician, engineer, producer, physicist, mathematician, and everyday genius. Along with Eric Clapton he discusses how the album Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs came together with Clapton, Duane Allman, and Derick and the Dominos.
    Filmed at Criteria Studios in Miami, FL, Dowd is shown at work behind the soundboards and reflecting on his memorable career. Dowd, whose creative spirit and passion for innovative technology helped shape the course of modern music, takes the controls behind the mixer relearning the title song Layla 30 years after its creation. From "Tom Dowd The Language of Music."
    Mr. Dowd's credits include recording sessions with Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles, Eric Clapton, Otis Redding, John Coltrane, The Allman Brothers Band, Tito Puente, Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk, Cream, Rod Stewart, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Booker T. & the MG's and countless other musical luminaries.
    Born 20 October 1925 in New York, New York, died 27 October 2002 in Aventura, Florida.
    One of Tom Dowds legacies is a music treasure chest filled with timeless classics.
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Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @puertodeluna
    @puertodeluna 4 года назад +447

    I fell in love with a girl one night, 46 years ago, as we listened to this song.... it was a summer romance and when summer was over we parted ways and never saw each other again. But then one day, a few years ago, she found me on social media....she sent me a message...”I heard ‘Layla’ playing on the radio today and thought about you and I on that long ago night “. I replied that I cannot listen to that song without thinking about her! Some songs can be powerful memories...Layla is one such song!

    • @mrttripz3236
      @mrttripz3236 3 года назад +26

      Jesus man.
      What could have been...

    • @kongsovs530
      @kongsovs530 3 года назад +10

      Man, thats a beautiful comment.

    • @johnrouille8273
      @johnrouille8273 2 года назад +10

      Absolutely, it’s usually bittersweet

    • @beetleything1864
      @beetleything1864 2 года назад +5

      Music is emotional and it roots you in a time and place .......& a girl - sometimes ! Takes you right back to that time and emotion.

    •  2 года назад +4

      Great True Story And Thanks for your service I did 20 years US Navy caught Desert Storm in 90 Yes Layal is POWERFULLY Emotionally Awesome I have been practicing and studying and playing Blues guitar since I was in Junior High school maybe before I'm 64 years young still practicing and studying and playing Blues guitar in bars and parties since I retired from the US Navy Eric Clapton is just one of my favorite Guitarists to try to emulate and learn something from Yes Brother Vietnam Vet This Blues Rock Anthem will stand the test of time Its one of the Greatest Guitar Songs and Duane Allman's Slide guitar Les Paul is Outstanding and Eric Clapton Soulful Stratocaster is one of the most Amazing Awesome Gorgeous Playing

  • @donnieluc6830
    @donnieluc6830 5 лет назад +270

    In my opinion "Layla", is in all aspects the most beautiful rock ballad ever.
    Period!

    • @matthatter2849
      @matthatter2849 5 лет назад +9

      It's not that beautiful when you think of the situation surrounding it. That's kinda ugly. The song itself is great and masterfully pieced together.

    • @vibekeschneidermann689
      @vibekeschneidermann689 5 лет назад +10

      @@matthatter2849 There was no adultery. They didn't get together before long after the divorce.

    • @arjanpetersen
      @arjanpetersen 3 года назад

      @@matthatter2849 not really mate....

    • @michaelc4639
      @michaelc4639 3 года назад

      @@matthatter2849 Judge not... A is wrong. But not for MattH or me or ? to judge.

    • @savanahmclary4465
      @savanahmclary4465 3 года назад +2

      It held the record for the longest ever recorded song, of all time until the song "Stairway to Heaven."

  • @Hirogebra
    @Hirogebra 10 лет назад +53

    Listening to that Duane's part on Layla on its own, I have had to realise how much more beautifully and emotionally he played it than I thought I knew.

  • @fw1421
    @fw1421 3 года назад +95

    I can’t listen to Layla without tears coming to my eyes. It’s been my favorite song since the early 70’s.

    • @dreamyjeannie3385
      @dreamyjeannie3385 2 года назад +5

      Me too, it’s my absolute favorite song, when i hear the first chords it gives me goosebumps. Best rock song, EVER! 💕💕💕💕

    • @blucheer8743
      @blucheer8743 Год назад +1

      If you’ve ever loved a woman….

  • @andrewgraulich6602
    @andrewgraulich6602 2 года назад +35

    Dowd plays his board like a master organist plays his instrument-swells, stops, parts, layering, both hands constantly moving in a fluid painting of sound. What a genius of the recording arts.

  • @georgeorwell4534
    @georgeorwell4534 10 лет назад +422

    When he starts isolating the tracks to Clapton and Allman, it's like these guys suddenly pop out of the music and they're standing there in the studio playing. These men come alive right there. It sent goosebumps through me.

    • @dougmisantoni4384
      @dougmisantoni4384 6 лет назад +5

      George Orwell .... Precisely... astute

    • @SeanmanBand
      @SeanmanBand 5 лет назад +2

      Exactly

    • @philiphaushalter8281
      @philiphaushalter8281 5 лет назад +8

      It seems people. Put me in the has been categories.THIS MUSIC WILL ALWAYS INSPIRE ME TO BE THE BEST MUSICIAN I CAN.AND TO SHARE WITH. ANY ONE WHO PLAY FROM THE HEART Philip Haushalter

    • @gostrum1
      @gostrum1 4 года назад +3

      George...is it really you?

    • @mennotimpo8746
      @mennotimpo8746 4 года назад +1

      Same! 😎🤠

  • @rabendranath
    @rabendranath 8 лет назад +559

    This is one of my most cherished clips on youtube, Tom Dowd recalling the birth of a masterpiece.

    • @taylorfusion
      @taylorfusion 6 лет назад +13

      yeah that was pretty touching actually. It's heart warming to know that well into our years, one's passion can stay just a fresh as the beginning it's discovered.

    • @asm1
      @asm1 6 лет назад +6

      Completely agree. Mine too. I am SO glad it exists. My favourite song. Has got me through a lot and continues to do so.

    • @betsyleiss8938
      @betsyleiss8938 6 лет назад +2

      Have you seen the entire documentary?

    • @markmoormann1978
      @markmoormann1978 6 лет назад +2

      Me too.

    • @horowizard
      @horowizard 5 лет назад +1

      @Twila
      Maybe you can find it to take out from your local Library

  • @dwaynewladyka577
    @dwaynewladyka577 8 лет назад +23

    This is a brilliant piece of work. RIP Duane Allman and Carl Radle. Tom was a brilliant producer.

    • @gwonya
      @gwonya Год назад +3

      … and Jim Gordon 13/03/23

  • @hkeith133
    @hkeith133 12 лет назад +50

    The part when Dowd was rediscovering the tracks is just magic

  • @wayneellsworth2340
    @wayneellsworth2340 3 года назад +60

    I was blessed enough to have tom dowd as one of my best and closest friends growing uo in south florida,Tom was the most humble person i ever met i had tge pleasure of meeting many wonderful musicians thru Tom ,i attended his masters of music awards party in 1996 at Julio Iglesias house and sat with Jaimoe and Butch Trucks and their wives ,Tommy loved me enough to call me when he was on his deathbed to share his last days talking ,i miss him so very much Much love goes out to Tommy Cheryl Dana and tge rest of the family RIP my friend

    • @djm4457
      @djm4457 3 года назад +4

      What a wonderful post you've written about your friend, the late Tom Dowd. I've listened to Layla in awe ever since I first heard it way back when....To read about how it came together and now your comments here, makes the song all the more personal to me. Thank you for sharing your thoughts and feelings, and to Tom Dowd and the great musicians he worked with for such beautiful, impeccable artistry.

    • @lsilvaj
      @lsilvaj 3 года назад +1

      thanks for sharing

    • @guitarsncarsnart
      @guitarsncarsnart 3 года назад +2

      Thanks for sharing this. I'm sorry for the loss of your friend.

    • @carlozippi2569
      @carlozippi2569 3 года назад +2

      Wayne, thank you for the heartfelt post. Very moving and grateful tribute to the great Mr. Dowd. The music world was forever changed and made better for millions by his passion and hard work.

    • @chickasawstarrmountain9747
      @chickasawstarrmountain9747 2 года назад

      Man you were blessed , I bet you've heard some great stories bout skynyrd and allmans

  • @kentbeery4941
    @kentbeery4941 Год назад +3

    Three Masters Tom and Eric and Duane

  • @joelserey8437
    @joelserey8437 5 лет назад +18

    Tom Dowd was a genius in the studio! He captured the ultimate beauty of Eric bending strings, and Dwayne sliding! Still gives me shivers....
    .

  • @gioknows
    @gioknows 5 лет назад +16

    That has to be considered one of the the greatest songs in rock and roll history.

  • @3beanlimit
    @3beanlimit 10 лет назад +136

    You know you hardly ever hear mention of Bobby Whitlock's contribution to this great album and it was pretty important.

    • @skelecaster
      @skelecaster 5 лет назад +20

      Finally someone mentions Bobby!

    • @diomedestydeus3298
      @diomedestydeus3298 4 года назад +18

      He co-wrote most of the songs on the album with Eric.

    • @jaypaget8068
      @jaypaget8068 3 года назад +11

      Right and along the same lines no mention of Jim Gordon playing drums or writing/playing the piano part. He mentions the "bass part" but no mention of Carl Radle. Kinda strange given how respected the rest of the band was. Eric and Duane hardly need mention since everyone already knows!

    • @lastnamefirst4035
      @lastnamefirst4035 3 года назад +25

      @@jaypaget8068 Rita Coolidge wrote the entire piano part and got no credit, no mention

    • @DVineMe
      @DVineMe 3 года назад +5

      I don't think it's anyone's fault really, it's just because you're basically standing in the shadow of god. No matter how brightly you shine you'll always be outshone be that other guy. George had the same problem, to a lesser extent, in the Beatles.
      And honestly I'm not sure it really matters. Sure you want them to get more recognition, but the people who can actually appreciate the artistry will know and in the end those are the only people that really matter, because just like the artistry any sense of recognition will get lost on anyone else.

  • @designermite
    @designermite 13 лет назад +9

    Like a father visiting his child after 30 years...simply amazing

  • @adspur
    @adspur 2 года назад +10

    Hand down one of the best rock songs ever recorded!!!!

    • @Bodieman11
      @Bodieman11 Год назад +1

      This is a ballad like no other. One of the best songs ever recorded by the best musicians of all time

  • @damnbigfish
    @damnbigfish 9 лет назад +75

    So great to hear the isolated tracks, and it really says something about how actual "music" works. There are so many flat/sharp notes in the guitars when solo'd, and IT DOES NOT MATTER! You mix it all together and it sounds amazing! Our current auto-tuned, every note fixed and quantized rock stars could learn a thing or two from this.

    • @goldtopgrandeur6935
      @goldtopgrandeur6935 7 лет назад +6

      I owe Duane Allman a LOT - and my opinion doesn't detract from either of these geniuses...What could I possibly say that would diminish their impact? Nothing. That said - My OPINION about the end of Layla (just before the piano coda) is that it is beyond noisy. Tom Dowd has more talent than I'll ever have, but he's not perfect. Who do you turn down in the mix? The guy paying you or the guy who the guy paying you loves and invited over? So, you get dueling guitars. The flat and sharp notes are still audible to me and I have to skip that minute or so of music...One of the two should have taken the "lead" and either bowed out in the session or bowed out in the mix. My surprise is that they listened back to that section and said - yep, that's great. Such a great song, such a great ending...but that part has never agreed with me. It's my opinion, so it's not some grand statement. I play guitar (25 years), slide and steel guitar in many tunings - E, G, A, D, C6...etc. So, I'm not just a critic, I actually play and my opinion is informed by that...just BTW in case someone says I have no idea what I'm talking about... : ) I'm sure I'll still get that! Take care all. Off now to revisit Tulsa Time, Motherless Child, and Idlewild South...!!!

    • @davidratcliffe6497
      @davidratcliffe6497 7 лет назад +1

      Originally they had it at the beginning of the song.

    • @CreamFreshCream
      @CreamFreshCream 6 лет назад +1

      I understand your point... However I like the solo I can't help myself! :D

    • @kirbygene
      @kirbygene 6 лет назад +1

      I couldn't agree more! Your point about sharps and flats reminds me of something I heard about the Beatles' recording sessions. There were times they DELIBERATELY placed slight sharps and flats into their mixes-- especially vocal harmonies-- to give it that vibrating resonance you hear between John and Paul in the early recordings especially. Even as late as Abbey Road, during the "1-2-3-4-5-6-7- all good children go to heaven" part John goes slightly flat to give the multiple harmonic sound a greater richness. But back to Layla, the slight sharps and flats make the guitars sound like they're talking to us. Love this clip

  • @johnlaverty9217
    @johnlaverty9217 4 года назад +33

    Tom Dowd was part of so much Earth-shattering music, it is difficult to wrap one's mind around how loved he was by all musicians and the significant role he played in recording history. In addition to all the great rock-influenced music, it is easy to forget he recorded John Coltrane's Giant Steps.

    • @southsideman4891
      @southsideman4891 Год назад +1

      Wow! I did not know that.

    • @mauriceclemens3286
      @mauriceclemens3286 Год назад +4

      There’s a great video on Tom Dowd. Amazing how he worked on the Manhattan Project in WWII and ends up as a music engineer for Atlantic Records. What a genius.

    • @southsideman4891
      @southsideman4891 Год назад +2

      @@mauriceclemens3286 wow! This guy like forest gump

  • @brettharootunian3696
    @brettharootunian3696 7 месяцев назад +16

    Duane's slide work is a brilliant Peace of artistry that can never be duplicated.

  • @wecandobetter9821
    @wecandobetter9821 5 лет назад +15

    Tom Dowd could be called the “conductor of the orchestra” or in this case the best damn rock band ever!
    Thank you Mr Dowd for producing such great music.

  • @fastdraw30
    @fastdraw30 5 лет назад +30

    Unreal...if you can't feel chills from those isolated duet parts, you can't feel anything...its like the two are right there in the studio playing away...simply fantastic.

  • @francishiggins2418
    @francishiggins2418 7 лет назад +318

    To me, this whole album, Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs, is one of if not the greatest recording in music history. The guitars cascade around you like a shower of love, tears, grief, pain, longing, and hope. The music tries to feed the deepest part of your soul with the unattainable, and yet the musicians sacrifice still, chasing that thing that can never be. As close to heaven as music can take you. "And maybe someday soon,...someway..."

    • @walterpewen7903
      @walterpewen7903 6 лет назад +13

      I agree-it's one of the finest rock albums ever made, yet many who like Clapton are not really aware of it. This is what the promise of raw, melodic rock from the heart led to. None better.

    • @leighfoulkes7297
      @leighfoulkes7297 6 лет назад +5

      I agree with that. I would even venture out and make the claim that it is a close to being a concept album.

    • @daryl6659
      @daryl6659 4 года назад +1

      Yes

    • @andrewptob
      @andrewptob 4 года назад +11

      Duane really brought out the best in Eric. It is, in my opinion, far and away the greatest album Clapton ever made.

    • @dangrossheider7304
      @dangrossheider7304 4 года назад +1

      Francis Higgins I think the song is too “busy” too much going on in the background. It used to be one of my favs, but over the years I think it’s too much mixed in. Would love to hear it scaled back some

  • @rogerbrown6471
    @rogerbrown6471 3 года назад +23

    First time realizing how time and skills went into this song. I am blown away by the talents of Eric and Duane to where I can’t add enough praise.

  • @LouiePlaysDrums
    @LouiePlaysDrums 15 лет назад +18

    This is taken from the DVD "Tom Dowd and The Language of Music". I totally recommend it. The entire film is excellent and gives an amazing insight to Dowd's genius.

  • @dianakoljonen2418
    @dianakoljonen2418 2 года назад +6

    My God, it's angelic the sound has a quality & Is as smooth and as good as it gets. The loss of Duane is such an un-imaginable and crazy timing of his talent mixed with true feelings of empathy for the band. I have so much admiration for what he accomplished before he died and what Gregg did with all of it afterwards that I do call them my favorites

  • @Rammstein56
    @Rammstein56 3 года назад +6

    Unbelievable how he knows how to explain the musicians parts and how he has finally been able to arrange the song from all the instruments , Layla is one of my all time favorite albums but I never ever realized the genius of the producer Tom Dowd !

  • @TheIoniaboy
    @TheIoniaboy 10 лет назад +104

    I was a DJ on a university station when I heard " Layla " for the first time in late 1970. I think it is beyond a rock and roll classic it is music for eternity. I have heard it hundreds of times and it always sends chills through me.

    • @TheIoniaboy
      @TheIoniaboy 9 лет назад +4

      Thanks, that was great.

    • @pabloperez4063
      @pabloperez4063 9 лет назад +4

      Donald Dawkins i also remember my ·first time of hearing Layla, in a record shop, in 1981, being 14, and being blown away, of course What power!

    • @ronniebishop2496
      @ronniebishop2496 9 лет назад +6

      Donald Dawkins I have to agree. I was in Oklahoma, and of course was exposed to every type of music, and then when I heard this. I thought this is all of it in one. I went to see The Allman Brothers, right after Duane was killed, and Dickie Betts, took his place.

    • @pabloperez4063
      @pabloperez4063 9 лет назад +5

      It must have been amazing, to have seen the Dominoes live, in a good night...it is a pitty there is not good bottleg...Eric,s strato sounded better than ever, and his playing at the "Fillmore cd" is top of the top, as far as i am concerned...However. I have heard these gigs werre not particularly good..Can it be true??? As i dont have any other reference...
      Hard to imagine Eric playing better than in "Blues Power2 or "Let it raaaaiiin"

    • @8656737s
      @8656737s 5 лет назад +2

      I agree beautiful

  • @ErJoeJehosaphatz
    @ErJoeJehosaphatz 5 лет назад +9

    Man, just goes to show you what an amazing achievement that mix was. There's so much going on.

  • @hiroishi3668
    @hiroishi3668 5 лет назад +4

    Duane's solo bit is just like notes from above. Great choice of notes, brilliant vibratoes, and highest quality guitar sound.

  • @musiccuts2300
    @musiccuts2300 15 лет назад +7

    When it's broken down like that, you can appreciate the brilliance that went into the song. I hope one day they could release classics like this with the option of adjusting every track to your liking. Imagine how many versions you could come up with.

  • @erreugeto
    @erreugeto 8 лет назад +69

    Duane elevates the song to magic. While his outro side playing is rightly lauded, for me it's his soul-searing slide that enters at 3:51 above that makes almost incarnate the raw emotion of the song. It leaves you almost exhausted, and really requires the peaceful outro to restore your emotions to something hopeful

    • @MariaRodriguez-lv5gx
      @MariaRodriguez-lv5gx 2 года назад +3

      Very well said. Duane's slide guitar really lifts this song into another level.

  • @tobanradymski390
    @tobanradymski390 8 лет назад +37

    The late great Tom Dowd, who changed the way music is recorded today. He worked with just about everything I listened to through my life, a true genius.

  • @Snakefinger1000
    @Snakefinger1000 5 лет назад +14

    There were many babies named Layla after their parents heard this beautiful song. and I'm one of them.

  • @danandkiko
    @danandkiko 4 года назад +3

    That album has been my close friend for many years and on so many different issues. I can't imagine life without it.

  • @jcdova29
    @jcdova29 Год назад +2

    That is sweet magic!! This is the most amazing video in which we get to see and hear insight of the Layla recording and we are spoon fed the greatness of two great guitarist. Just brilliant!!

  • @fingletoad
    @fingletoad 7 лет назад +15

    5:16, so cute! Tom Dowd is so tickled. I loved those years. I was so lucky to see Derek and the Dominos in 1970. Fab!

  • @James57AOL
    @James57AOL 8 лет назад +49

    Tom Dowd, was the most prolific producer/engineer that I ever witnessed on the console. he was amicable, self effacing and the most wonderful kind of human being I have had the pleasure of meeting. His dry humor, and close relationships with many of the rock era Giants, self evident that he really owned his ability to create. To those he taught, the value of great music. So that they could continue to offer more than musical passages in due era. But, to give the whole of the music industry a model of human ability as well as masterful skill in people and music. Some thought he was slightly corny at times, and some thought his gaze and his demeanor, above and beyond reproach, that he studied his bands, his voice and his behavior held us all in secure faith that he would be there to offer the best of his efforts.

  • @davidp2888
    @davidp2888 3 года назад +6

    Layla is a beautiful song. The coda always puts a lump in my throat and a tear in my eye. So simple, yet so complex, so elegant, so rich.

  • @2011littleguy
    @2011littleguy 7 лет назад +14

    I met Tom in Miami in the eighties. Damn nice guy. Smart as a whip. RIP sir.

  • @frankswiech5544
    @frankswiech5544 9 лет назад +111

    Did some sessions at Criteria Studios in Miami , with engineer Jim Sesody .. Sat down at the piano one day in Studio B started hammering out Layla piano part ....when Jim said you know that's the piano that's on the record ....well ....I just about soiled my pants ...you can figure the feeling I had after that ....Frank ....from the old days

    • @ZiddersRooFurry
      @ZiddersRooFurry 9 лет назад +5

      That is a legitimately awesome story

    • @donrutter6765
      @donrutter6765 5 лет назад +1

      Very cool.

    • @mjsmcd
      @mjsmcd 5 лет назад

      Frank Swiech I guess Jim Gordon who wrote piano part ia still in prison?

    • @mindcontrol67
      @mindcontrol67 5 лет назад +3

      He supposedly stole it from rita coolidge and it was played on her sisters record. ruclips.net/video/9IJPLcwHOes/видео.html

    • @chuckpotockimusic2288
      @chuckpotockimusic2288 5 лет назад +1

      Mike Mcdonnell He's in medical confinement with no chance of release as he requires constant treatment and supervision. Gordon believes that his mother is still alive...damn, mental illness is awful. 😥

  • @twlttznr
    @twlttznr 5 лет назад +7

    One of the greatest of all time. Perhaps THE greatest of all time. Such a tragedy that Duane died so very young. Who knows what he would have
    reached by his later years. What a blessing he left to us

  • @jontheundertaker
    @jontheundertaker 8 лет назад +13

    I wonder at how many people that have listened to this song only thought it was Eric on the guitar work and never knew about Duane. I personally didn't know about Duane being a part of Layla until about a year ago. Amazing guitar, everything about this song is amazing! Thank you Tom Dowd! RIP

    • @traviswhite1020
      @traviswhite1020 7 лет назад

      Four Part Harmony same here! Makes the song even better imo!

    • @TheFruitloop186
      @TheFruitloop186 7 лет назад

      People who didn't know that Duane played on Layla aren't Allman dans.

    • @jimlabos
      @jimlabos 6 лет назад +1

      He also plays on Boz Scagg's version of Loan Me Dime recorded at Muscle Shoals Studios. One of the longest and best phrased Blues guitar playing I've ever heard. Derek (an amazing player in his own style) may be more accurate as someone above stated but Duane had a way to lift the level of anything he played on. It was always about the "whole" tune not just about him. He made it more than the sum of the parts. Beauty where there was none I always say.

    • @gypsyjones6789
      @gypsyjones6789 5 лет назад

      Four Part Harmony dude me lol i’m just finding this out today

    • @AyeCarumba221
      @AyeCarumba221 3 года назад +1

      I am one of those that had no idea Duane Allman was on this song. Love the song, love Clapton, love Duane. Very very cool.

  • @chuckydall9250
    @chuckydall9250 Год назад +2

    It was such a pleasure watching him go over these tracks!!

  • @mikeaustin4138
    @mikeaustin4138 9 лет назад +151

    This is from a movie on Tom Dowd - Tom Down and the Language of Music. It is well worth checking out...

    • @pradishbijukchhe2389
      @pradishbijukchhe2389 8 лет назад +3

      +Mike Austin thank you very much

    • @jimih011
      @jimih011 7 лет назад +3

      This is the first time I have seen, heard ,ect. this. Amazing ! I will look up this movie and hope it still can be seen.

    • @davidratcliffe6497
      @davidratcliffe6497 7 лет назад +2

      I was at the premiere in the Regal theater on Lincoln Rd., Miami Beach.

    • @Featherfunflower
      @Featherfunflower 6 лет назад +1

      thanks!

    • @MacTeee
      @MacTeee 5 лет назад +1

      Yes...great documentary

  • @MoneyistheAim
    @MoneyistheAim 12 лет назад +6

    Just found out about him. This man was responsible for alot of the greatest music from 50,s to the 80,s hell of all time

  • @The_WaryWanderer
    @The_WaryWanderer 4 года назад +3

    One of the greatest recordings there will ever be. Absolute treasure!

  • @biffroberts1007
    @biffroberts1007 7 лет назад +19

    RIP Tom Dowd. We miss you.

  • @LeadGuitarWorkshop
    @LeadGuitarWorkshop 5 лет назад +2

    so magical, I was so lucky to get to know and work with Tom Dowd for a few days while we recorded our album on the Allman's side label. Our conversations would go from this recording to him engineering Coltrane's Giant Steps. It was so surreal.

  • @zodiacbluesbaby
    @zodiacbluesbaby 9 лет назад +39

    A pretty well unimprovable track. Amazing serendipity Duane being there for the recording, chills listening to his whistling slide on the Part 1. outro.

  • @greglarry11
    @greglarry11 7 лет назад +26

    Lovely explanation of some magical playing. "It's the touch."

  • @glueforall
    @glueforall 11 лет назад +2

    What a wonderful man. Just his never ending sense of astonishment and wonder. I especially love right at the end of the clip where he is concentrating on hearing the tracks...and re--discoverers duane's 'bird call' slide part that duane threw in at the end....Tom's laugh is priceless....i wish i could have met him

  • @dolnick7
    @dolnick7 7 лет назад +23

    This in some strange way breaks my heart.

  • @aylbdrmadison1051
    @aylbdrmadison1051 5 лет назад +5

    This was one of my favorite songs as a child. Although at that age the lyrics in the beginning I couldn't totally relate to until I was a teenager, but the ending always made me feel as if someone understood me. I used to even make my own lyrics up to it.
    Years later I also understood what the refrain meant to the beginning of the song. Then the whole tune took on an even different feel, and these days it means something more as well. Still the fascination for the ending I felt as a kid is just as strong.
    Some songs are so good they grow with you and never fade.

  • @jeffdoyle4703
    @jeffdoyle4703 3 года назад +3

    Tom Dowd, take a bow. I know you're still mixing it up somewhere. Genios.

  • @ozarkdem
    @ozarkdem 7 лет назад +1

    So glad that Tom Dowd received a Grammy Award this year for his contributions. Well deserved, long overdue.

  • @fredevans7117
    @fredevans7117 5 лет назад +5

    The piano coda and the swirling guitar mastery vis-a-vis Eric and Duane moves me to tears. I heard it for the first time in 1971 one year after the album was released and the effect was the same. It's such a timeless masterpiece. One for the ages.

  • @ledzepdeu
    @ledzepdeu 3 года назад +5

    He spoke like a cheerful David Lynch. Such a charming man.

  • @RT060789
    @RT060789 8 лет назад +7

    What a great technician of music. Real music. Just wonderful.

  • @stormbringercoming8105
    @stormbringercoming8105 3 года назад +1

    The complete documentary on Tom Dowd has become a rare pricey DVD. It’s a treat to watch and worth seeing. Tom was a genius when it came to sound.

  • @michaeldinunzio3002
    @michaeldinunzio3002 Год назад +1

    Thoroughly enjoyed that. I was touched how Eric talks about his vulnerability about writing. I didn't think that he would be insecure about that. That's quite honest. Thank you Eric

  • @NNYSPAZ
    @NNYSPAZ 13 лет назад +4

    Love Tom's take on Layla!

  • @jontheundertaker
    @jontheundertaker 8 лет назад +144

    Whoever says that one musician and or guitar player etc is better than another simply doesn't understand or appreciate music for what it is.

    • @lorettayates7098
      @lorettayates7098 6 лет назад

      Four Part Harmony Wayne perkins

    • @lorettayates7098
      @lorettayates7098 6 лет назад

      Wayne Perkins

    • @Jellybeantiger
      @Jellybeantiger 6 лет назад +2

      I like bands as a whole,every musician performing together creates the vibe,not just the guitarist.
      Gees,guitarists are such control freaks lol,god bless their cotton socks. :-)

    • @Jellybeantiger
      @Jellybeantiger 6 лет назад +1

      Btw as a drummer,my fsv guitarist is John McLaughlin,magnificent technique but also feel and tone especially the Mahavishnu Orchestra stuff.

    • @aaronbeltrancabron79
      @aaronbeltrancabron79 6 лет назад +1

      Four Part Harmony there is always a mystic respect between musicians,one does'nt talk about it but it is there:)

  • @dbrinkm1
    @dbrinkm1 11 лет назад +2

    This is a great Trieste on "Layla", a song that I used to play for hours on end while attending Graduate School ! I did not learn until recently the hand that Duane Allman had in the recording of this Masterpiece".I have been a follower of both " The Allman Brothers Band and EC since their beginnings. Thanks for sharing this great insight ! Peace !!!

  • @xlake218
    @xlake218 Год назад +1

    An undisputed masterpiece. Never gets old.

  • @ChooseCompassion
    @ChooseCompassion 3 года назад +3

    I was blessed to have known this wonderful man. And was so grateful that the documentary was made before we lost him. This to me, is the greatest rock ‘n’ roll song of all times. I get chills just watching this. My nephew who is a extremely talented artist is coming over tonight to watch the documentary so he can see what a brilliant sound engineer that has a true love of music can do.

    • @jefflancaster4423
      @jefflancaster4423 10 месяцев назад +1

      Mee too bro I came across this video and it reminded me of meeting him in my mid teens at an ABB show at freedom weekend aloft in SC .He was an amazing and humble guy. He gave me his business card, told me to call him, treated me like we knew each other from birth, and squared me up to play with D.T. twice! 😊 RIP Tom. 🙌

    • @ChooseCompassion
      @ChooseCompassion 4 месяца назад

      @@jefflancaster4423What year was that?

  • @nelsondejesus2796
    @nelsondejesus2796 9 лет назад +41

    Tom Dowd was the mastermind behind the recordings of Ray Charles early success and the Great Joe Bonnamassa in his teenage years, even suggested he'd better have learned to play slide guitar on standard tunings than just open tunings. He in the '40s was in the think tank of the making of the A Bombs (Plutonium & Uranium) of Nagasaki and Hiroshima! His true mastery came of the 8 track recorder while others were using one or two 4 track machines mixed down to a half track to stereo before those technologies ever existed, he also upon his death was found to have had numerous Allman Bros recordings that eventually were remixed and released by Gregg Allman, all tucked away in his attic, incredible!

  • @sandmanCQB8541
    @sandmanCQB8541 9 месяцев назад +1

    This, and Led Zep's Houses of the Holy were the very first Albums I was given by an older cousin who just happened to get "doubles" as birthday gifts back in '73. I played those Records NON-STOP. Damn near had the needle cut thru to the B sides. My Mom would yell to my Dad (may he rest in peace)... HE'S PLAYING THAT RECORD AGAIN !!! And my Dad would shout back "I KNOW... IM LISTENING TO IT WITH HIM !!!" God I miss those days. Growing up in the late 60s and 70s was like a gift from God. Id give anything to go back, even just for a day. Now Im the one playing all this incredible music for my daughter, and she loves it. 😁✌️

  • @MegaSickcat
    @MegaSickcat 5 лет назад +1

    I can remember buying this album...and falling in love with every song....

  • @andyjor574
    @andyjor574 5 лет назад +3

    He's like a wizard. Lovely clip. Thank you for uploading!

  • @patclark18
    @patclark18 7 лет назад +4

    We went to the Big House museum in Macon on Oct.29th. It was amazing, seeing all the memorabilia from the band. I wish he was still here.

  • @tiagoduarte7560
    @tiagoduarte7560 6 лет назад +1

    This is so beautiful... Brings tears to my eyes. My favourite album ever. Fantastic guitar playing, wonderful song-writing. But the thing about this record is emotion... This album sweats emotion... That is what music is all about...

  • @gioknows
    @gioknows 4 года назад +1

    Truly this is one of the greatest works of music of the modern era.

  • @Medevah
    @Medevah 10 лет назад +121

    That piano...

    • @kirkpearson7404
      @kirkpearson7404 5 лет назад +13

      Beautiful. Of course, the guy who played it killed his mom... but still... beautiful

    • @joelserey8437
      @joelserey8437 5 лет назад +3

      Billy Powell talked about that same piano when he first got to muscle shoals to record.....he couldn't believe where his craft had landed him! One of those fucking pinch me moments.....

    • @rickg8015
      @rickg8015 5 лет назад

      Don't Irk Kirk I feel sad just finding out about his mental illness and how tragic things turned out.. I’m a big fan of Traffic and Derek and the Dominos..

    • @hallucinatedovens8414
      @hallucinatedovens8414 5 лет назад +3

      Played by Jim Gordon the drummer

    • @if6was929
      @if6was929 5 лет назад +14

      It was written by Rita Coolidge, who never got credit for it!

  • @krisscanlon4051
    @krisscanlon4051 7 лет назад +16

    Dowd just the ultimate recording engineer and producer.

    • @donrutter6765
      @donrutter6765 5 лет назад +2

      Alan Parsons is still my favorite.

    • @billthomsen9788
      @billthomsen9788 5 лет назад +2

      Eddie Kramer is the only engineer who could possibly rival Dowd.

    • @krisscanlon4051
      @krisscanlon4051 3 года назад

      Glyn and Andy John's were really incredible however it's all very subjective...Kramer is incredible 👏

  • @Astralpains
    @Astralpains Месяц назад +1

    The record would never have been a hit without Duane’s touch

  • @lewismacfadyen5657
    @lewismacfadyen5657 3 года назад +2

    His laugh at the end🥺

    • @sueayers7065
      @sueayers7065 3 года назад

      He's laughing at Duane's little bird sound. It was one of his trademarks.

  • @RangKlos
    @RangKlos 7 лет назад +15

    Shit I have just learned one can cry hearing isolated tracks. RIP Mr.Dowd.

  • @hiroishi3668
    @hiroishi3668 10 лет назад +10

    Guitar sound can be THIS beautiful...Duane...

  • @WhenHerbSpeaks
    @WhenHerbSpeaks 4 года назад +2

    Beyond brilliant. A gift to humanity (and dogs) for all time.

  • @aarfeld
    @aarfeld 15 лет назад +2

    I love those little bird calls that Duane used to do off the end of the neck. I think that he'd be proud to know that Butch's nephew has his old slot, and quite proud of how much Derek has learned from him--especially given the quality of that young man's playing.

  • @adonaldson618
    @adonaldson618 11 лет назад +9

    I am gonna get me a stained glass window of Duane Allman! Absolute Heaven!

  • @susankimball9148
    @susankimball9148 7 лет назад +50

    Tom Dowd was an absolute genius, his parents were musicians, he was a musician, employed by Columbia University in the physics department. He worked on the freakin' Manhattan project (just sayin'...) check out the man's bio.,the people and music he made into legends .... its awesome!

  • @VenaBlanchard
    @VenaBlanchard 13 лет назад +1

    This IS one of the best part of the parts of the documentary Tom Dowd the Language of Music... Thanks for that even posting so more people can appreciate this exquisite Eric Clapton - Duane Allman duet... and the extraordinary talent of Tom Dowd.

  • @markg.2501
    @markg.2501 5 лет назад +1

    WOW...Just wow. If that doesn't send chills up and down your spine you seriously should have your spine checked. Duane, Eric and Tom.....Absolute Legends! Never to be duplicated!

  • @DirkjeA
    @DirkjeA 12 лет назад +6

    Mr. Dowd tells the story of the meeting between Duane Allman and Eric Clapton with so much enthousiasm and joy, it makes me happy just to watch. The way he explains the song, and tells how he is rediscovering it again by listening, is so charming, really touching.

  • @Mikem-mq2hh
    @Mikem-mq2hh 5 лет назад +3

    i love how Duane's slides were on the verge of failing. The imperfections were gold.

  • @Steve_643
    @Steve_643 Год назад +1

    This was such a great documentary, Tom really had a hand in some of the greatest music ever recorded. Anybody that doesn’t know about him should watch it

  • @ydoic1111
    @ydoic1111 3 года назад +1

    I was born in 81 so this was b4 my time but I dont care what kind of music u like when you know good music and you hear it it instantly moves you and make a impression on your soul you can play this tune to a young kid and he will get the melody and the beauty inside this gem

  • @CDH41057
    @CDH41057 11 лет назад +4

    Layla, by Derek and the Dominos is, in my opinion, the best song in rock music history. This song is phenomenal, awesome, incredible, magical and totally amazing. I've loved this one since it first came out in 1970 and re-released in 1972 I believe. Whatever. I have a really great stereo in my car and makes this song even more incredible. You can pick up all the instruments so clearly. I could lilsten to this song over and over until my ears bleed!

    • @ClassicTVMan1981X
      @ClassicTVMan1981X Год назад

      Right. The edited 7" version came out in March 1971, but it only went to number 51. Then, a re-release in 1972 (as you said) of the song on both Eric Clapton's The History of Eric Clapton and Duane Allman's An Anthology, un-edited, saw it go up to number ten here.
      In Clapton's native U.K., the album never charted, perhaps, since his real name only appeared on the back cover. Meanwhile, the single (using the full-length cut) reached number seven in 1972 due to its inclusion on the aforementioned The History of Eric Clapton, and would return to the U.K. top ten a decade later, doing even better the second time around making number four.

  • @JoshuaMuse
    @JoshuaMuse 4 года назад +3

    2019 thanks RUclips for finally showing me this.

  • @jeffholliday8304
    @jeffholliday8304 Год назад +1

    Literally the soundtrack of our lives

  • @dannysimon2320
    @dannysimon2320 5 лет назад +54

    Do I like This?
    Named our son Derek, daughter is Layla
    Enough said!

    • @dalekelly7639
      @dalekelly7639 4 года назад +3

      Do you have a canine named Skydog?

    • @nickoshana2246
      @nickoshana2246 4 года назад +1

      Named my son Derrick, also a musician!

  • @PutItAway101
    @PutItAway101 8 лет назад +11

    When I was a kid this song came on the radio every now and then, and I never realised the instrumental at the end was part of the song. I thought it was some random instrumental that they kept playing but frustratingly never announced it, and I always wondered what it was. It took years for the penny to drop that the unnamed instrumental I kept hearing always came on immediately after Layla...

  • @vincentwhitley8197
    @vincentwhitley8197 5 лет назад +1

    Tom is spectacular...a musical genius with few peers and no betters.

  • @sueayers7065
    @sueayers7065 3 года назад +1

    I bought the Layla album in 1971, and it's been my favorite album for 50 years. I didn't know about Duane Allman at that time, but after I discovered the Allman Brothers (their A Decade of Hits album) I was hooked on the Allman's during the time Duane was alive. Their Fillmore East album is another of my favorites. At some point I learned that Duane had played on the Layla album, and I realized those otherworldly sounds above the melody had to be him. I was ecstatic to find this video because I'd heard about Tom Dowd's involvement. And I finally got to hear both Eric's and Duane's parts!! So cool!!!

  • @bluesky6985
    @bluesky6985 9 лет назад +10

    Touch, says it all. Wail on Skydog.

  • @nakulbhargava
    @nakulbhargava 10 лет назад +3

    Goosebumps!

  • @dcthegreatest24
    @dcthegreatest24 4 года назад

    That outro gets me every time. It's like heartbreak and hope are shaking hands

  • @johngilsoncoleman
    @johngilsoncoleman 14 лет назад +1

    Thank you for posting this video; the shear passion of this recording still brings tears to my eyes to this day, 40 years after the magic that was this session. Tom Dowd was and still is one of the greatest engineers/ producers of all time. Thanks again!

  • @27mondo
    @27mondo 7 лет назад +5

    Wish they would do this with "Why Does Love Have to be So Sad." Far superior guitar work.

    • @michaeldurham5768
      @michaeldurham5768 5 лет назад +1

      You are correct Roberto. "Why Does Love........." is THE tour de force on that album.

    • @sueayers7065
      @sueayers7065 3 года назад

      I agree, and it's Duane on his Gibson playing lead. Had he lived, he might have been even greater than Hendrix. Another song I love on the Layla album is I Am Yours. Duane's slide is so good it makes me cry,