eric clapton's best guitar solo

eric clapton's best guitar solo

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Pepperland

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29 Oct 09

swalbr- cream

rc

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29 Oct 09
1 edit

Originally posted by generalissimo
swalbr- cream
white room and crossroads - cream

free tazer tickles..

wildly content...

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29 Oct 09

hiz best wuz also hiz shortest...

badge...



rookie

s
Fast and Curious

slatington, pa, usa

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Would you count Layla as him having a solo? I know Duane did some duo work on it, and I thought Duane outplayed Eric anyway on that particular cut.

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While My Guitar Gently Weeps

F

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30 Oct 09

Third Degree (on From The Cradle).

g

Pepperland

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Originally posted by FMF
Third Degree (on From The Cradle).
thats a good one.

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Originally posted by generalissimo
thats a good one.
Clapton has bad ones? 😛

B
Death

is no semi-colon

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have been listening to his guitar work on the album he did with Mayall's Bluesbreakers. revolutionary tone for the time, at least for an album with relatively wide exposure, and a big influence on Hendrix's sound.

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sorry dont mean to change the subject but i was just watching a documentry about peter green and everybody was saying he was better the clapton. it was well before my time and dont know greens work that well, so is this true or a case of biased documentary making?

g

Pepperland

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Originally posted by stellspalfie
sorry dont mean to change the subject but i was just watching a documentry about peter green and everybody was saying he was better the clapton. it was well before my time and dont know greens work that well, so is this true or a case of biased documentary making?
peter green better than clapton?

what a joke!

rc

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Originally posted by generalissimo
peter green better than clapton?

what a joke!
how can one measure better in taste, ok, one may argue that there are those who have more taste buds than others, but this' better than', seems to me to be nonsense, personally i like peter green better more, there is more texture to the fleetwood mac sound, oh well is classic parts one and two, black magic women is just awesome as is the green manilishi with the two pronged crown, not to mention albatross. There was such great creativity all around in those days. Rather interestingly I heard that peter green was one of the few guitarists who was not intimidated by Hendrix, can the same be said of Beck and Clapton?

g

Pepperland

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Originally posted by robbie carrobie
how can one measure better in taste, ok, one may argue that there are those who have more taste buds than others, but this' better than', seems to me to be nonsense, personally i like peter green better more, there is more texture to the fleetwood mac sound, oh well is classic parts one and two, black magic women is just awesome as is the green manil ...[text shortened]... e few guitarists who was not intimidated by Hendrix, can the same be said of Beck and Clapton?
intimidated by hendrix?

are you serious?

rc

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1 edit

Originally posted by generalissimo
intimidated by hendrix?

are you serious?
yes Clapton and Beck , were terribly intimidated by Hendrix, or have never saw the cream video , live at the Albert hall , in which Jack Bruce relates a famous account of Jimi, blowing everyone away with a rendition of 'killing floor', in which Eric just put his guitar down and slinked away like a wounded hound with the tail between his legs? Peter Green was not intimidated by Jimis playing, for he had his own evaluation of these things.

Guitarist

@William Penn's gaze

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Green certainly had a moment, but you can't compare his work with the body of work that Clapton has created. I saw Peter Green about 5 years ago, he truly sucked, and had a hot Texan guitarist with him to keep any energy on stage. I went to see him because I respected his earlier works _ he wrote Black Magic Woman, that Santana borrowed. Fleetwood Mac, when they were a blues band, had some great Peter Green stuff - Bare Trees Album.

Clapton can still play with a lot of performance energy. What made him the monster guitarist, in my opinion, was the extended soloing allowed by Creams' music. There is nothing previous to Cream in rock LP's that allowed for such lengthly jam forms with guitar as the lead instrument, you can compare it to Coltrane, or Miles in it's extended virtuosity, but not content. Wasn't "Spoonful" the whole side of an album? Maybe Zappa's King Kong variations predates Cream, but the guitar wasn't the only focus of that jam.

Clapton / Hendrix discussion: when I was a kid, that topic took up many nights of conversation while hanging on street corners, when the girls weren't around. Was like Ali/ Frazier, who was better. Blow by blow, head cuttin' time, .. ... I take Hendrix.