IT WAS GOOD!| FIRST TIME HEARING Derek &The Dominos - Layla REACTION
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- Опубліковано 26 лис 2024
- IT WAS GOOD!| FIRST TIME HEARING Derek &The Dominos - Layla REACTION
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Welcome to Rob Squad Reactions This is a music reaction channel. My passion is being a content creator, and providing my audience with unique, funny, and never before seen reaction videos. I have come to grow a love for all types of music from my beloved rap to heavy metal and I want to share that love with all of you. Being a content creator is my passion and it brings me so much joy and being able to share my passion and joy with all of you and grow as a community is an amazing feeling. In addition to reacting to all different types of music, I am also a a husband to my amazing wife Amber and a dad to 3 amazing kids Bria, Kiya and Luca.We here to try and make a change in this world starting with something that brings us all together MUSIC!!
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“It was good!” might be a small understatement. Legendary Clapton/Duane Allman collab.
LOL!
It is a true Masterpiece.
Agree!
Absolutely Legendary!!
Total Masterpiece
The piano transition with Ray Liotta’s narration always sticks with me when I hear this song. RIP Ray Liotta.
Literally just about to type this song always makes me think of goodfellas and I read your comment haha, amazing scene ✌️
My favorite part of Goodfellas
The greatest song exit goes to the greatest Mob movie ever
Ya... this song really completed that scene in GF's
"When they found Carbone in the meat truck, he was frozen so stiff it took them three days to thaw him out for the autopsy"
The high slide guitar throughout this song that Amber is commenting on is provided by the best slide guitarist ever, Duane Allman.
Allman is great. I think Junior Brown May be better. Listen to ‘Freeborn Man’.
David Gilmour is also incredible on the slide guitar. His solo at the end of Pink Floyd’s “High Hopes” song is incredible
Only time I've heard the coda played as well as the original is a version done by Eric Clapton with Derek Trucks playing slide
Greg, on UA-cam, there is a clip of DA in an “isolated” (no other instruments) segment of his solo in Layla, before the second half begins. It is fascinating, you may have seen it.
Guess you never heard of Ry Cooder. Listen to his work on Sister Morphine by the Stones.
Layla has been around for over 50 years, & after hearing it thousands of times, you kind of take its greatness for granted. But listening to you guys hearing it with fresh ears reminds one of the brilliance of this tune. Hearing it with you makes me hear it like I heard it the first time. Thanks guys!
I have proposition for you guys. Email me please. You might like the idea.
I couldn't agree more! Well put. I was just thinking I hadn't really paid much attention to the beautiful piano piece it morphs into, in a long, long time. Mesmerizing.
Eric Clapton IS Derek, along with Carl Radle, Jim Gordon and Bobby Whitlock (3 of his band mates from Delaney, Bonnie & Friends).... however the individual that makes this entire album is the beyond magnificent "guest" Duane Allman - who is playing the higher-pitched slide and echos/refrains Clapton's vocals.... this song - actually, the whole album - was written as a tribute & plea of love to Patti Boyd Harrison, wife of Clapton's best friend, Beatle George Harrison.
Robert, if you haven’t already done so, read Eric and Pattie’s memoirs.
They were great even without Duane. Listen to the first 3 songs on the album. He wasn’t even there when they recorded them. Clapton plays 4 different guitar lines on Keep on Growing, each of which he laid down without any of the other lines playing; just the drums and bass. Sheer genius.
@@hak4890 thanx - I have already! have also had the great fortune of having seen Clapton 9 times and The Allman Bros.17 times (sadly, never had the chance to see Duane). Clapton may be "God", but Daune was the finishing component of what I consider the greatest album - "Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs".... with The Allman Brothers "Live at the Filmore East" a VERY close second - the common element being Duane Allman.
@@docbearmb true,. but Duane was the finishing touch - reworking Layla's opening (all his idea) & the echoing/refrains throughout the remainder.. actually, the best overall work is "Key to the Highway", just a warm-up tune that was caught by chance on a late-started tape (hence, the fade-in) by engineer Tom Dowd.... Clapton admitted Duane's presence drove him to his zenith - esp. on "Why Does Love...." -and made the album a complete masterpiece.
The music was co written by Rita Coolige, she never got credit but he hasn't denied it in public after all these decades and he would have it it weren't true ua-cam.com/video/l50nkA3iRyI/v-deo.html
This is an absolute masterpiece. The contrast between the song and the outro is mystifying. Duane Allman is on another plane. He is sliding to notes that only he could find. I will always love this piece.
This song touches on so many different emotions with people. I’m 61 years old, and it is absolutely my all-time, forever, favorite song. It still gives me goose-bumps, and sometimes brings a little tear-drop in my eye. Layla will always be a Classic, but was really peaking in the Summer of ‘72; which was one of the best times for me. Sadly, I can’t ever keep from thinking about little Conor Clapton when I hear this song, even though that horrible tragedy was years later. And yes, Duanes’s slide guitar, and the little “bird chirp” at the end…. I’m enjoying being a new Subscriber; keep up the great work! 👍👍👏👏⭐️⭐️💛💛
I'm 69 so you know how long I've been listening to it and it still sounds just as good today as the first time I heard it.
@@bluesman3232 I feel like when I call it a “song”, it’s an injustice. It’s a “creation”…
I'm 61 this October, and I thank God I grew up when I did. Songs like 'Layla' bring back so many memories for me, and make me grateful for the music of that era.
@@MikeInMD1961 agree. I am very partial to ‘72; I was only 11, but even then I loved Layla, and so many other songs that year~
@@bluesman3232 If you were driving in 71 you remember that your car radio was always turned on, so the radio came on with the car. Every time you started the car in 1971, the instrumental ending of Layla was playing, every time.
Duane Allman on slide guitar was genius! He didn't pick up a guitar until well in his teens and tragically died in a motorcycle accident at 23 leaving behind a rich musical legacy.
Duane started playing guitar at age 14.
They ought to Jessica by the Allman Brothers. Talented group hit by double tragedy,sadly,when in their prime.
He didn’t start playing slide guitar until he was injured in a horse accident and Greg took him a bottle of painkillers as he was listening to a blues album and he dumped the painkillers out of the glass pill bottle and started using it to play slide guitar.
@@bretdalton3268was a Taj Mahal album 😊
Nothing better than a little shot of Clapton with a side of Allman for a night cap!!
As beautiful as the first time I heard it. ❤
RIP Duane, we still rockin ya!! 😎
I'm 47 years old, and, in my opinion, this is the greatest rock song of all time! I love this song so much I named my daughter after this. I'm in the car and this comes on, the volume gets cranked. In the house I demand silence. This is just sheer perfection in every way!
Two of the greatest songs from this album, Layla & Bell Bottom Blues, were written for Patty Boyd. Clapton is great, BUT.... Duane Allman steals the show. That slide tear drop is perfection.
"Have You Ever Loved a Woman" was re-worked by Eric & JJ Cale to make it more about Patti - basically the whole album is about her and his love for her.
After the break-up of Cream, Clapton tried his hand with several groups, including Blind Faith and the husband-and-wife duo Delaney & Bonnie. In the spring of 1970, he was told that some members of Delaney & Bonnie's back-up band, including bassist Carl Radle, drummer Jim Gordon and keyboardist Bobby Whitlock, were leaving the group. Seizing the opportunity, Clapton formed a new group with Whitlock, Radle and Gordon. Naming themselves Derek and the Dominos, the band "made our bones", according to Clapton, while backing Harrison on his first post-Beatles solo album, All Things Must Pass.
During the recording of the Layla album, Duane Allman joined Clapton's fledgling band as a guest. Clapton and Allman, already mutual fans, were introduced by Tom Dowd at an Allman Brothers concert on 26 August 1970.The two hit it off well and soon became good friends. Dowd said of their guitar-playing chemistry: "There had to be some sort of telepathy going on because I've never seen spontaneous inspiration happen at that rate and level. One of them would play something, and the other reacted instantaneously. Never once did either of them have to say, 'Could you play that again, please?' It was like two hands in a glove. And they got tremendously off on playing with each other."[16] Dowd was already famous for a variety of work and had worked with Clapton in his Cream days (Clapton once called him "the ideal recording man"); his work on the album would be another achievement. For the making of his biographical film Tom Dowd & the Language of Music, he remixed the original master tapes of "Layla", saying, "There are my principles, in one form or another."
Clapton originally wrote "Layla" as a ballad, with lyrics describing his unrequited love for Boyd, but the song became a "rocker" when, according to Clapton, Allman composed the song's signature riff. With the band assembled and Dowd producing, "Layla" was recorded in its rock form. The recording of the first section consisted of sixteen tracks of which six were guitar tracks: a rhythm part by Clapton, three tracks of harmonies played by Clapton (the main power chord riff on both channels and two harmonies against that main riff, one on the left channel and one on the right channel), a track of solos by Allman (fretted solos with bent notes during the verses and a slide solo during the outro and one track with both Allman and Clapton playing duplicate solos (the 7-note "signature" riff doubled in two octaves and the 12-note "signature" riff doubled in unison). According to Clapton, Allman played the first seven notes of the 12-note "signature" riff fretted and the last five notes on slide in standard tuning. Each player used one input of the same two-input Fender Champ amplifier.
Shortly afterwards, Clapton returned to the studio, where he heard Jim Gordon playing a piano piece he had composed separately. Impressed by the piece, Clapton convinced Gordon to allow it to be used as part of the song. Though only Gordon has been credited with this part, according to Whitlock, "Jim took that piano melody from his ex-girlfriend Rita Coolidge. I know because in the D&B days I lived in John Garfield's old house in the Hollywood Hills and there was a guest house with an upright piano in it. Rita and Jim were up there in the guest house and invited me to join in on writing this song with them called 'Time' ... Her sister Priscilla wound up recording it with Booker T. Jones ... Jim took the melody from Rita's song and didn't give her credit for writing it. Her boyfriend ripped her off. Time" ended up on the 1973 album Chronicles by Booker T. and Priscilla Jones. Whitlock's story was echoed by Coolidge herself in her 2016 autobiography. The claim is also substantiated in Graham Nash's 2014 autobiography Wild Tales.
"Layla"'s second movement (the "Piano Exit") was recorded roughly a week after the first, with Gordon playing his piano part, Clapton playing acoustic guitar and slide guitar, and Allman playing electric and bottleneck slide guitar. After Dowd spliced the two movements together "Layla" was complete.
Thank you for sharing this history behind Layla one of R&R most passionate compositions, and now as the saying goes we know the 'rest' of its story.. Well done!
Great post.
Nailed it.Well told
Technical
Love the background story. Love background for lots of songs and musicians
Clapton wrote this for George Harrisons wife who he was madly in love with. He also wrote Bell Bottom Blues and you look wonderful tonight about her. George Harrison wrote Something for her. Dwayne Allman (Allman Brothers RIP) plays slide guitar on this too.
Duane
Between George (Beatles) and Eric, there are 10 songs written about/inspired by Pattie Boyd. Quite the muse❤️
@@leannmiller7153 yes she was.
I forgot about bell bottom blues. So basically 4 absolute classics are written about the same woman
@@stuartaustin8130 Leann says a total of 10 songs were written about her.
The entire album that Layla was on was incredible.
As well as the "Live at the Filmore" double album.
I like that song "I Am Yours." -- Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs (1970)
Masterpiece! Eric Clapton wrote this about George Harrison's wife who would later leave George and marry Eric
And then they divorced
The same woman George wrote "Something" about. That's always blown my mind because they're two of my favorite songs.
This may be the superior version but you have to check out the "Unplugged" version as well.
And George and Eric remained friends. That is the amazing part to me.
@@cebridges Bell Bottom Blues and Wonderful Tonight are also about her
This song is the equivalent to music as the David of Michelangelo is to art.
One of my top 5 all-time favs. In the 70s, radio would cut off the piano ending and you’d only hear it on FM stations and even then late at night. Brilliant start to finish. Thanks folks!
Even after all these years of hearing this song, the second half still gives me goose bumps. I absolutely love the first half but the instrumental part of this one is what really moves me.
Eric Clapton was in love with George Harrison’s wife at the time. This song was written about her. She eventually divorced Harrison and married Clapton. A classic song. Thank you peace ✌️
And Harrison famously said, "Well, at least she didn't leave me for some jerk."
Didnt he also write "wonderful tonight" about her and also George wrote "something" about her. So basically shes the inspiration for 3 of the greatest songs ever
George actually gave his wife to Eric whom was his best friend, because George saw that Eric was heart broken over her.
Got what he wanted and then divorced her.
@@Paul197A She divorced him -- his alcoholism & drug abuse made him impossible to live with. He only cleaned up and got his shit together after their breakup. And he and George continued to call themselves "husbands-in-law" -- because their friendship stayed strong.
That guitar riff is one of the most well known, recognizable in music!! I was 19. In a college bar. Watching the guys shoot pool. Layla comes on and everyone in the place stops! Then hits air guitar, dances, sings, kisses who they’re with…You guys are 2 for 2 today in my long time requests. Thanks❣️❣️. Another great cut from this album- more blues feeling- Bell Bottom Blues. You’ll love it! Another is Thorn Tree in the Garden. Talks of lost love and was “my story” for years. 3 decades later, I still think of that boy when I hear that song.
Duane Allman did.
This will always be my favorite version of Layla by Eric Clapton. Obviously, both Eric and Duane Allman are guitar geniuses (Eric being one of my favorites), but Duane's slide guitar sounds like the guitar is weeping for unrequited love. It is so haunting. And cannot forget to mention the beautiful keyboards played by Bobby Whitlock. This song is epic! And one of the most beautiful (instrumentation) songs ever recorded. You're right on, Amber. Thank you for reacting to this!
I do really love the acoustic version from the 90's as well.
Both are fabulous
that's Jim Gordon on keyboards, not Bobby Whitlock
@@robertheerbrandt7812 you've got it backwards.
@@FirstGaCav - and what part is that? the piano piece was composed & played by Gordon, who had written it as a solo piece for his failed relationship.
@@robertheerbrandt7812 and stolen from Rita Coolidge
This girl gets it !!! So wonderful to watch her enjoying this work of art... Love the small smile of appreciation as she grooves on the coda
This song came out in 1970 ~ I was 14 then. 52 years have passed and this song is still pure magic. Those of us "of a certain age" were blessed to grow up during this evolution of musical styles ~
@jessicalee, first time I heard this was the summer of 1972, when it was released as a single. So, Layla for me will forever be associated with that amazing summer when I was 16 going on 17. I think that makes us the same age? Class of '73 here!
I PITY the young people who have such luminaries as... nicki minaj or... Bieber for their 'music'.
🤢 🤢 🤢 🤮 🤮 🤮
You were 14 I was 19had seen Eric in Cream so was a huge fan! This song and the entire album as we used to say blew me away!!!!
Agree! I was 14 in '70, also (Class of '74) ❤️
Me too! Class of 74!
Consistently considered as one of the greatest songs of all time. Oh, The FEELS!!! The reason why I called my daughter Layla.
I have a Layla too! She is 30.
Did either of you know the history of the name? That her story was the basis of Romeo and Juliette?
The Professor of Rock has an interesting tale of what this song is really about. Thereʼs more to this than the story of Eric Clapton and Patty Boyd and George Harrison.
Very interesting story behind Derek and the Dominoes.
@just...you're correct!
Clapton read the work of Persian poet, Nizami Ganjavi, who wrote a tale titled, "The Story of Layla and Majnun".
A classic story of unrequited love that paralleled his own love for Pattie Boyd.
The rest is history...musically speaking.
Well spotted!
Pattie Boyd has probably had more hit songs written about her by music legends than any other person on this planet. A biography worth reading.
It must be lined with gold..... just sayin'
Good idea. She was so adorable George married her when she was only 18. Something -the greatest song ever written according to Frank Sinatra was written for Pattie. And this one
Patti's sister Jennifer was not left out. Donovan wrote Jennifer Juniper about her.
Songs about Pattie Boyd Harrison
For You Blue - The Beatles.
I Need You - The Beatles.
It's All Too Much - The Beatles.
Layla - Derek & the Dominos.
She's Waiting - Eric Clapton.
Something - The Beatles.
Why Does Love Got To Be So Sad - Derek & the Dominos.
Wonderful Tonight - Eric Clapton.
@@mattdandersn wait what? Great now I gotta spend all day making up jokes about it. Patti Boyd has had more songs written about her than Courtney Love AND heroin😂
The piano solo is EVERYTHING to me. Without it this song wouldn't be as great as it is, IMO.
Duane Allman’s sweet slide guitar, the beautiful piano outro, the urgency of Eric Clayton’s vocal at the beginning make this timeless. Of my faves how can you not get lost in this brilliant composition ❤️✌️
AND that driving hard rocking, desperate rhythm guitar during the first 'fast' half.
The piano outro was pilfered by Jim Gordon from Rita Coolidge....you could look it up.
💯💯💯💯💯
I still listen to that album over 50 years later . The songs on it have some of the best guitar work ever ! Listen to have you ever loved a woman and keep on growing for example .
Jay & Amber, you'll love their "Bell Bottom Blues" and "Blues Power"!!!
Bell Bottom Blues also written for Patti Boyd after she asked Eric to pick her up a pair of bellbottom jeans while in America. 👍✌️🇨🇦
Bell bottom blues is an all time fav of mine!!
Yes, Bell Bottom Blues is the best!
Bell Bottom Blues also co-written with the underrated keyboard player Bobby Whitlock
Our reaction to this when it came out was that it was mind blowing. I hate to say this, but not much out there can compare to Layla. This is almost as good as it gets for music from this era. In London the graffiti on the walls said “Clapton is God”. Layla is a masterpiece of rock music.
FINALLY!! So many times I’ve requested this, because Jordan just had to hear that piano exit, and cuz y’all like Eric Clapton. Having Duane Allman on guitar is just the cherry on top 🍒 Thanks for the reaction RS ❤️
The outro to “Layla” might be the best 4 minutes of music ever written.
This song was HUGE on the radio when it came out. There is also a slow version that is very good! RIP Duane Allman.
Liar, the slow version sucks ass. It turns a song about passion into elevator musak
Eric Clapton's vocals and Duane Allman's epic slide guitar solo is like music of the gods
Clapton set the scale for excellent guitar riffs with this song! Not many rock guitarist can even touch what Clapton did with this song... epic!
I can't believe it's been 52 years since this first came out in 1970. I was a sophomore in high school then and remember how huge this song was back then. Clapton who was originally with the British rock group "Cream" would go on to perform with other bands besides his great solo career. Mr. Slow Hand is one of the world's greatest guitarists. What more is there to say about the great Eric Clapton. Awesome!
Before CREAM, Clapton was with the Yardbirds and John Mayhall's Blues Breakers. He was already a legend by the time he did the CREAM project.
@@wadsworthaaron And don't forget Blind Faith.
Amber you have an artistic take always! Over the technical side, which doesn’t always have to be perfect, the emotional response to the music is almost always spot on. The song is about forbidden love, though never stated. But you get it by the angst and tension created by the music. You must write or paint or something, because you’re very in tune with your comments and your visceral response to these old tunes.
Thank you for that. I actually have loved to write since I was a child
Great choice ! Can't do this without getting to "Bell Bottom Blue's",and "I Looked Away" from the same album... Thank you and have a great evening
This song is simply, a masterpiece. Patty Boyd must have been a hell of a woman. She inspired no less than four songs, "Layla", from Eric Clapton, and "Something" by George Harrison, among them.
She is still alive and kicking ...
This song comes out in a lot of movies, “Goodfellas” being one of them. Please add it to the movie list. One of the greatest movies ever by one of the best directors (Martin Scorsese).
Have you noticed how many "Goodfellow" and "Godfather" actors have died all at once lately? 😳
Scorsese's greatest masterpiece.
@@scottfrench4139 Truth.
Goodfellas is AWESOME! But it is extremely violent and definitely not a family flick.
@@sueparras6028 - True! That one's definitely just for mom & dad!
This song is one of those quintessential rock songs that you can NEVER get tired of listening to!! It has successfully withstood the test of time and only gets better with age!!
The last part of the song is one of the most beautiful pieces of music I've ever heard. Peace and Love RSR!
For me what really makes this song is that gorgeous piano coda at the end. The acoustic version Eric Clapton recorded for Unplugged in the 1990s is also great. People were genuinely blown away by it.
This song is part of my holy trinity of GOAT rock songs along with Stairway To Heaven and Freebird. It doesn’t get any better than those. Added bonus, Duane Allman from The Allman Brothers played the “slide” guitar 🎸 on Layla.
I have forgotten how cool this song is especially with that instrumental part at the end. I heard it so much in grade school I think I kind of got burnt out on it at some point but this was highly enjoyable to listen to it so closely again. I love the work that he's doing on the drums even in this slower instrumental part, his symbol work is just fantastic. And the bass is killer. Love all of it.
Many of us who grew up as 60's lovers would consider this THE ANTHEM of the decade!
Released in 1970.
Cool but it's not a 60's song.
@@mikedonoghues4018 Close enough...
“Layla" is a song written by Eric Clapton and Jim Gordon, originally recorded by Derek and the Dominos, as the thirteenth track from their only studio album, Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs (1970). Its contrasting movements were composed separately by Clapton and Gordon. The piano part has also been controversially credited to Rita Coolidge, Gordon's girlfriend at the time.
The song was inspired by a love story that originated in 7th-century Arabia and later formed the basis of The Story of Layla and Majnun by the 12th-century Persian poet Nizami Ganjavi, a copy of which Ian Dallas had given to Clapton. The book moved Clapton profoundly, because it was the tale of a young man who fell hopelessly in love with a beautiful young girl, went crazy and so could not marry her. The song was further inspired by Clapton's secret love for Pattie Boyd, the wife of his friend and fellow musician George Harrison. After Harrison and Boyd divorced, Clapton and Boyd eventually married.
"Layla" has since its release experienced great critical and popular acclaim, and is often hailed as being among the greatest rock songs of all time. Two versions have achieved chart success, the first in 1972 and the second (without the piano coda) 20 years later as an acoustic Unplugged performance by Clapton. In 2004, "Layla" was ranked number 27 on Rolling Stone's list of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time", and the acoustic version won the 1993 Grammy Award for Best Rock Song.
In 1966, Beatles guitarist George Harrison married Pattie Boyd, a model he met two years before during the filming of A Hard Day's Night. During the late 1960s, Clapton and Harrison became close friends. Clapton contributed uncredited (although openly acknowledged) guitar work on Harrison's song "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" on the Beatles' self-titled double album (also known as the White Album), and Harrison co-wrote and played guitar on Cream's "Badge" from Goodbye. However, between his tenures in Cream and Blind Faith, Clapton fell in love with Boyd.
The title of "Layla" was inspired by the story of Layla and Majnun, which Clapton had been told by his friend Ian Dallas, who was in the process of converting to Islam. Nizami's tale, about a moon princess who was married off by her father to a man she did not love, resulting in Majnun's madness, struck a deep chord with Clapton.
Boyd divorced Harrison in 1977 and married Clapton in 1979 during a concert stop in Tucson, Arizona. Harrison was not bitter about the divorce and attended Clapton's wedding party with his former bandmates Ringo Starr and Paul McCartney. During their relationship, Clapton wrote another love ballad for Boyd, "Wonderful Tonight" (1977). Clapton and Boyd divorced in 1989.
Gordon the drummer, who a few years later murder his mother and spent most of his life in a prison psycho ward, took credit for the coda but his at the time girlfriend Rita Coolidge always claimed she wrote it and he stole it from her and he put as a tag on Clapton's first half.
Something about this song just tugs at my heart and I'm not sure why. The second half fills me with a beautiful nostalgic melancholy for something, someone, or some place from my youth that I don't think I remember or may not have existed in the first place. But the feeling is there.
I was trying to make a comment but couldn’t come up the right words. I couldn’t have said it better. A very moving masterpiece 🎶
I so agree!! 💞🎶 👏
Lovely.... 🙂
Amen brother, I feel the exact same way, good music is absolutely magical.
I agree. It almost feels like when I hear Mainstreet by Bob Segar. Sad, but at peace.
Listen to this song a few dozen times and the go find the movie Goodfellas and hear how Martin Scorcese takes a beautiful love song and turns it into an incredibly sad farewell late in the movie and then plays out the entire coda as the credits roll. It is an incredible use of great rock music in a great movie.
I've always seen that transition as being from his state of desperate longing, then she turns to him, and the melody transforms to one of happiness and fulfillment - that second section is their life together. 🥰
This duet of slide guitar by two of finest masters of all time never ceases to raise the hair on My arms. It's hard to believe it`s been 50 years. A timeless performance. Duane left us way too early.
Eric and a guitar... Still one of the all time bests! Thanks for bringing back old memories! You should listen to Clapton's Unplugged version of this; slower, smoother, and in the way he originally intended it to be heard.
I liked that transition music…..it made me tradition waiting for something….. it was very expectorant!
Anything from the Unplugged concert is fantastic! It’s Eric at his best…
Yes, I agree about the Unplugged series...
That piano and that guitar weeping at the end always get me. I keep wanting it to keep going forever, but all things must come to an end. Such a great song and the end is just majestic.
Another song that is EPIC in my generation. It will never get old, I’d still listen to it every day!! I kept waiting for one of you to yell OHHHH ITS ERIC CLAPTON!! Much love guys!!💜☮️
This is absolutely the BEST version of Layla, takes me back to such good times 👍
For my generation, this is better than good. It is a masterpiece that will be heard for as long as people exist.
This was written about Patty Boyed , which at the time was George Harrison's wife he was in love with her. George wrote a song or two about her.
They can't help themselves, when 95% of music is garbage in comparison, what do you expect youngen's to know.
Greatest intro riff ever! Wow. Eric as always, amazing. From the heart, this one is a gem. Glad you heard this version, although the acoustic version of Layla is amazing, done years later, too!
I bought the Derek & The Dominos album soon after its release in 1971, and nearly wore it out on my turntable. "Layla" was a favorite of mine then, and still is. BTW, I really enjoyed reading Pattie Boyd's (Layla's) book Wonderful Tonight (called Wonderful Today in the UK) about 12 years ago. It tells the story of her marriage to Beatle George Harrison and later to Eric Clapton, along with many anecdotes about the English rock scene in those days.
I, too, wore out the grooves on this album as a freshman in college, The album is loaded with
great tracks. Led Zeppelin 4 also had the grooves worn out.
I only ever bought two vinyl albums twice. This was one of them.
It was also on the K-tel 22 greatest hits album from 73 i think..My favorite song on it..plz dont laugh
Amber, you're correctly identifying the emotional content here, and it's funny Jay mentioned the Beatles in connection with this song. The lore concerning this song is that it was written for Clapton to express his love for the wife of his very close friend, George Harrison. Eventually she did divorce George and marry Eric. What always floored me was that Clapton and Harrison remained friends through it all.
I’ve lived through some tumultuous times and haven’t always felt good about it all, but when I hear songs like this again, I wouldn’t take back one minute of those crazy years! Boy was I blessed to have grown up with such great music!
Truly said and my sentiments EXACTLY. Cannot imagine life without all the great music spanning my lifetime. We ARE blessed :-D
Same. A teen age girl in the 70s, a young woman in the 80s....
Memories of my brother and I sitting in my parents car 1970 listening to this on the radio.
Like Stairway to Heaven, this is one of the most iconic songs of the rock era.
The guitars playing behind the piano near the end makes me think of fireflies on a warm summer night,
This album is one my dad got me for Christmas the year it was released & I took it over to my cousins' house & we played it. I remember riding one of their bikes down the road from their house & I could hear the song, Layla, blasting on their stereo speakers that were set up on their front porch & the song was echoing off the mountains around their house. I remember that I just had to stop & listen to the beautiful piano solo there at the end of the song just echoing everywhere. It was magic. This is my favorite Derek & the Dominos song.
Love your story. Music is magic 🎶✨
The guitar riff is a classic and it is just rammed down your throat to ecstasy. I remember when I first heard this song and I almost drove off the freeway in sheer delight. LOL
This is one song I never tire of hearing for some reason. Jordan, I agree, the repeated coda at the outro that goes on and on is soothing and beautiful. I, too, can hear it go on and on. Not so with many many other tunes, but this one has a magical soothing sound.
Never fails to make me happy and calm.
You know what makes me super happy? You guys are leveling up your ears! You're listening ACTIVELY to the music, and that will without a doubt unlock the magic in the music! This was awesome!
This song is timeless. I remember hearing it on the radio back in the seventies all the time.
He later did an "unplugged" version for a while that was okay, but doesn't compare to the electronic version.
As far as I know he still plays this today in his shows.
"Layla" was used in the movie "Goodfellas" during the scene portraying the aftermath of the 1978 Lufthansa heist. Director Martin Scorsese planned out the sequence with the song specifically in mind, playing it on set to synchronise with the staging and camera movement. The song is also synchronised with the film's ending credits, playing after a cover of "My Way" by Sid Vicious.
Greatest rock song ever written. A masterpiece…and the coolest DJs always play it to the end…and you hear the little birdies chirping. I’m glad you played it to the end.
Clapton performed an Unplugged concert for MTV. His reinterpretation of "Layla" is incredible. Not since Bob Dylan has an artist sang his own song twice so differently. It's really worth a listen.
The entire Unplugged album is amazing.
Agreed. It's amazing and doesn't even feel like the same song.
I agree with Matthew unfortunately, it is completely different than the original which is the Greatest Song of all time.
@@tedszweb5268 YEP...................
Now you are getting to the classics😊
When you put 2 of the greatest guitarists of all time together, and such a heartfelt song. Duane Allman on slide is just sublime.
I love that you finally listened to this. That ending is called the piano exit and as much as I love the beginning, I listen to the song for that exit. I’ve even cut that exit and put it on loop before. Its fantastic.
Thank you so much. Amber as a kid I was sure the slide guitar parts were a violin. Then I found out what a slide guitar sounded like. The slide guitar was played by the late great Duane Allman. I don’t know if you’d want to react to a 12 minute song but “Loan Me a Dime” preformed by Boz Skaggs and Duane Allman is worth listening to on your own time. Though I’ve read that Duane Allman is the inventor of “Southern Rock” it’s a wonderful example of “Blues” and slide guitar.
He wrote this song right out of his gut. So much love. And the way Eric and Duane weave in and out is epic. One of the best songs of the 20th century!
Please ! Do yourself a favor and listen to this song unplugged. Completely different , yet awesome. Clapton did a whole album “unplugged” and it’s a banger. This was written for George Harrison’s wife. He fell in love with her.
One of the biggest love stories in rock n' roll history. And it happened. One of the most iconic riffs ever made and reasons why kids pick up guitar. "It was good."
Clapton wrote this about Patti Boyd whom he was madly in love with. He had just stolen Patti from George Harrison who also wrote a song about her called "Something".
"bell bottom blues" and "have you ever been down and out" are a must. This is one of the best albums ever made!
Excellent choice. Best jam ever. With Duane Allman of the Allmam Brothers
One of my favorite Clapton pieces. I still would love for you to check out the man who Clapton credits for having got him back into the blues, the legendary Rory Gallagher. Two of his debut pieces from 1971 are a great place to start: "I Fall Apart" and "For the Last Time:. Both feature some outstanding lead playing. And Rory was a stickler for purity, especially as he began his studio work. When he first started recording, he played and sang at the same time-he didn't lay down multiple tracks. And he used very minimal guitar effects. He used the guitar and his two hands to wring a variety of sounds from his instruments.
The lyrics are based on the book by Persian poet Nizami, Layla and Majnun, about a man in love with a woman who cannot have her because her parents object. When they cannot be together, he goes insane. Clapton's situation with Pattie was different, but he liked the title and the theme of unattainable love.
And Derek Trucks, IMHO the successor to Duane Allman, along with Susan Tedeschi and their band are doing a 4 album set based on that story called I Am The Moon, awsome music
I never knew that!
Great info.
@@michaellockhart554 Yes. 3 of the 4 are out and the 4th comes out next week!
They came up with the idea of looking at this from Layla's point of view.
The outro is absolutely everything!
Clapton's association with various bands went on for quite a while. From the Yardbirds to John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers to Cream to Blind Faith and finally to Derek and the Dominos before he finally broke out as a solo artist in 1970.
Don't forget delanie and Bonnie 😀
Cannot overestimate how HUGE this song was and what a MASTERPIECE it is! That weeping guitar literally makes you weep. Just Gorgeous!
There is a story I heard back in the day, at one venue they were about to come on stage and a local radio dj announced them as "Eric Clapton". When they took the stage Eric walked up to the mic and told the audience "Eric couldn't make it but he sent his band 'Derek and the Dominos" and proceeded to start playing.
Song was written for Pattie Boyd, whoo was married to Clapton's and a Beatle George Harrison. They eventually married and the 2 guys remained friends for life.
One of the greatest jams on vinyl, featuring Eric Clapton and Duane Allman!
You were right about "forbidden love." This song was about Pattie Boyd, George Harrison's wife. Clapton was in love with his good friend's wife and wrote this song about it. He eventually stole her away from Harrison. Boyd was also the inspiration for Harrison's great hit, "Something."
Here we go! "Keep On Growing" is another Derek and Dominos tune. Better yet, "Key To The Highway"! You have to give equal guitar credits to Duane Allman on slide guitar. Lol! You reacted to Stairway to Heaven the other day. A local FM station does greatest of all time around Labor Day. For years, #1 would switch between Stairway and Layla. That madman Jim Gordon on drums... Right on, Jay! All day. Sweet guitar is Duane Allman, Amber. You know, you guys were on fire tonight, tune-wise and reaction-wise. Thanks!
Always get a chortle thinking about how Eric and Duane and the Dominoes heard Sam the Sham singing "Key to the Highway" in the adjoining studio, started jamming to it themselves, then recording engineer Tom Dowd, after walking back to the control booth to find the tape reels motionless, yell to his staff, "hit the godamned machine!"
@@HarkenRoad Lol. Me too. Thank goodness for Tom Dowd!!
@@HarkenRoad Tom knew to keep the tape rolling when you had a band that talented in the studio
One of the most beautiful songs ever composed.
This is such a beautiful song. I've always loved this version, so glad you reacted to it.
It was amazing would be an understatement. This is one of the very top rock songs of all time and a masterpiece on several levels.
The whole album "Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs" is just insanely great, definitely one of my desert island discs (it was a 2 record set when originally released in the ancient, arcane days of analog playback, but fits on a single Red Book CD).
An iconic song. . . instantly recognizable, in almost any movie soundtrack. For those of us that came of age in this era, this is part of the soundtrack of our life. . .
A lot of memories!! One of Eric Clapton's early days bands. Love it 💥💥✴✴
Perhaps the greatest song of unrequited love in all of modern music. It NEVER fails to move me.
The piano at the end is played by…surprise!…the drummer, Jim Gordon. He is credited with writing that coda but his gf at the time Rita Coolidge, who is also one of the backup singers on the track, claims she at least co-wrote it (never got credited). Gordon was a great drummer who was also classically trained on piano. He murdered his own mother and got life in prison (he died recently).
Jim Gordon is still alive & serving his sentence.
@@aarongoldstein7614 Yeah, you're right. I was just going to say the same thing.
From what I understand of Jim Gordon's story, it seems like a sad case of mental illness. I was also surprised to find out recently just how many other huge hits he either wrote or played drums on!
not questioning you, just wondering, wasn't the keyboard Bobby Whitlock?
@@genov9374 Piano intro is Jim The 2nd piano is Bobby
Most people do not understand that the lat great Duane Allman of the Allmam Brothers Band played slide lead guitar on this song and several other songs on this album. Layla was recorded just shortly before Duane's tragic death. R.I.P. Duane Allman. Peace.
Legendary song.
Layla, Derek and the Dominos.
Timeless music.
Another little known fact,
Duane Allman of the Allman Bros band, actually was sitting in durning the recording of Layla and created and performed the melodical instrumental ending on the song. I named my daughter Layla after this song.
Thank you Rob Squad for loving this song. Wonderful to see the younger generation appreciate such great music. Especially from the 70s.