The Guitars of Eric Clapton: A Short History
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- Опубліковано 5 лип 2022
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ERIC CLAPTON TONES: Stomp/Helix and Pod Go presets from Jeff McErlain and me: jmguitarlessons.com/p/clapton...
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Eric Clapton established himself as a guitar hero long, long ago. The only musician to be inducted into the Rock 'n Roll Hall of Fame in three separate bands, he's changed styles and guitars repeatedly throughout his career. Whether your favorite Clapton is with Cream, Blind Faith, Derek and the Dominos or Unplugged, there's a lot to learn from this man's catalog and his legacy.
So this was a logical next chapter in the "Guitars of our Heroes" series. I hope you enjoy it.
All the best,
Keith
ERIC CLAPTON TONES: Stomp/Helix and Pod Go presets from Jeff McErlain and me: jmguitarlessons.com/p/clapton...
5WW, please look at amplification at big rock concerts. Legend has it that The Beatles' break out (1965?) concert at Shea Stadium is said to have been terrible if you attended - the screaming drowned out the songs - the amplification was under-powered. The Grateful Dead was said (by my mates) to have the most powerful speakers set-up then known to man. I attended a The Who concert at Wembley Arena in the mid 1970s and the volume hurt, it was on the pain threshold. Townsend said everyone in The Who suffered hearing damage from their many concert tours. How did these mega touring rock bands amplify sound in a 150,000 seater stadium in say, Wichita (spelling?) ?
I also would like to see how big shows are put together.
I love this. I’d love to hear a rundown of the (scientifically) loudest bands in rock history and how they got there.
They always said The Who were the loudest but an outdoor reunion gig by Madness at Finsbury Park in the early 90's actually registered as an earthquake lol (True story)
Loudest show I ever saw was Neil Young and Crazy Horse, and I saw the Who in 1975 with Keith.
P.S. In the 1974, the Dead built the "Wall of Sound." Each string on the guitar/bass, every drum, every keyboard had it's own speaker and amplifier.
It wasn't only that for Shea. There was NO centralized speaker location. The band literally plugged into the Stadium's PA that just had those shitty vocal-only focused bullhorn looking speakers. There was no time aligning back in the day. That's where that "classic Stadium" reverb/echo comes from. All of those speakers being out of time-alignment, the metal bowl of bleachers, etc.
So not only did the Beatles still have no monitors on stage to produce any sound back at them, they didn't even have the speakers near the stage facing out to an audience like they were used to. There were no walls for the sound of these missing front stage speakers to bounce back at the Beatles off of. It's basically the pinnacle of rock music at its absolute worst of huge crowd + terrible sound equipment. They were hearing a cascading slap of echoes of every single thing they were doing back at them the whole show. By the time the slowest and latest ones were echoing the previous word, the fastest responding speakers were already pushing the next one out as well.
21:30 - I have a classical guitar made by the same luthier, Lorenzo Alvarez, who made the Clapton 'Tears in Heaven' guitar shown here. Mine was made in Madrid in 1966, and it's breathtakingly beautiful.
Keeping count of the actual guitars he played is almost impossible but you covered pretty much the most important ones that shaped today's music.
Reminder to protect your hearing - if it's too loud it's too loud. You only have one set of eardrums, look after them. Chronic tinnitus and pain hyperacusis is no joke.
Great video Keith! Always enjoy watching these guitar and amp history videos!
Keith, these just keep getting better and better. Bravo!
This was a WONDERFUL watch. Thanks for posting!
Keith, your passion is so contagious. Your video tells such a great story.
As always outstanding story. Thank you so much!
Terrific job as usual, Keith - no matter the subject, I always learn something from your videos. Very grateful to have you around! Cheers - ❤🔥👍
Yet again, a fantastic, informative and super-entertaining history, and Jeff McErlaine’s incredible playing added another dimension! Thank you so much.
Hey Kieth,
Another fantastic feed here and so interesting! I really dig the guitars used by such & such uploads too since I’m a complete guitar geek ahah! Hoping you do more of these 🤙
Thanks for all the research you do to create these.
Like how you ended this. When I was young I got a Cream record for Christmas. I fell in love with it and took a particular liking to Spoonful. I looked on the label and it said W. Dixon. Who’s that? Thus began a lifetime journey where I applied my history and research education to learning more and more about the music. So now I live in Vicksburg, the birthplace of Willie Dixon, I head to festivals and concerts at places like the Blue Front Cafe and up in the Delta whenever I can, and I get to see new young talent develop, like Christone Kingfish Ingram, who was a student and now has a Grammy and just opened for the Stones. I see old talent like T Model Ford and Kenny Brown, RL Burnside’s side man. I’ve learned from the scholars of the musicology and ethnography of blues. But nothing compares to just sitting in with the folks who play. It’s been a wild journey that started with a Cream album.
That was a fun cruise through history. Thanks 5WW!
Love these short history videos!! Keep it up Keith :)
I'm giving "thumbs up" even before I start watching - I'm a huge fan. I love your dedication and I can only imagine how much time and effort it takes to prepare each of the videos. Thank you!
Great video Keith! Thank you for your research and presentation! 🔥🎸
brilliant as always Keith. simple direct and clear. accuracy and well documented. Keep with the great job.
Beautifully done, thank you!!!
Thanks again, Keith. Great episode!
Another fantastic short history Keith (and Jeff) ! Covered the key guitars and eras there for sure. Am now on my way to go check out the HX preset.
Yay! A new Short History! And about one of my favorite players! Nice job, Keith!
I read Clapton's autobiography this week so this was a great video to come across. This was a fascinating watch! I love the content you put up! It's always so informative and interesting to watch. Plus it is presented in a way that is accessible to all people and not gear heads. Please do keep it up! ✌🏼
Nice work Keith. Keep the videos coming.
There's a good video clip up from The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus of the supergroup, The Dirty Mac, performing the song Yer Blues. Eric is playing his 335 in it along with John Lennon on lead vocals and rhythm guitar, Mitch Mitchell of the Hendrix Exp on drums, and Keith Richard's on bass. Out of all Eric's bands and supergroups it would've been amazing to see how far that group of talented musicians could've gone and what type of music they would've composed. It's amazing how many iconic, awesome guitars Eric has played over the years and each guitar you see you automatically know what era and period of his music it's associated with.
Any particular link - or should we just guess within the 2 billions online videos---??
There's also a giant mountain of gold ingots -- free for the taking. Help yourself to as many as you like,,.
Great video Keith. You've done EC's rich instrument history justice in a mere 25 minutes. Well done!
Great video once again!
Luv it!
When I was younger, I was obsessed with getting a Candy Green Clapton Strat. I was lucking enough to order and received a Candy Green Clapton Strat with Lace Sensors in February 2001, just before Fender switched over to Vintage Noiseless pickups in the Clapton model.
That would also be my first choice,
Cheers!
But do you have a purple suit to wear when you play it? Seriously though, I’m a little jealous. The green strat is sweet.
@@thaddeusfields4360 for a second, I had no idea what you were talking about. I have no idea what Clapton was thinking. It's a great duet.
@@thaddeusfields4360 the funny thing is, the green Clapton Strat is the rarest of colors Clapton Strat colors.
When I ordered it thru a dealer in January 2001, the dealer called me up and told me that I could have any other color in a week, but green would take a month, because they didn't have any.
Excellent work as always.
Another amazing video! Thank you Keith.
Another great video. Can't get enough of these👍👍👍👍👍
Thanks for a great run-through of Eric’s guitars, Keith! He’s a true master, always with a strong sense of melody at the core. (More so than many of his contemporary peers if I may say..)
Excellent video as always Keith. I've mentioned this before, your presentation style is spot on. Concise and precise without any fanboy gushing or bias. Top stuff man. 👏
Eric sounded best on the SG through the Bluesbreaker combo. I just can't get beyond that tone. This is not to say he didn't sound great on other instruments, but the SG tone was something special with his style. I feel that moving to the strat made his tone too thin at times. There's a time for a thin tone, and a time for a thicker tone. I just prefer how he sounds through humbucking guitars, particularly the SG.
Hi Angus Clapton never used his SG through a Bluesbreaker he used JTM 45’s with double stacked 4 12’s because Jack Bruce used the same thing. A Bluesbreaker combo is only 22 Watts like a Fender Deluxe reverb. They came with either 2 12’s or 4 10’s I have all three along with a few other nice amps. Clapton used a Bluesbreaker on the Beano album.
Yep, only the first Les Paul went through a bluesbreaker. The start of Cream and the switch marshall stacks were almost simultaneous.
For most of the Cream studio work, it was a marshall head and a single 4x12.
Hi The Nameless I know I’ll never be able to play like Clapton but his tone of the Les Paul through a Marshall has been so emulated by other greats. The Woman tone is my favorite, and so many greats built off of it! Mind boggling.
There's a video of Eric at Hyde Park in the '90s, I think, playing Have You Ever Loved a Woman with his ES-335, and it's among his best tones. I really wish he would play more guitars with humbuckers, but I get that he's been associated with Strats for over 50 years now.
I said basically the same thing in another post. Agreed!
Great history, thank you very much. I always enjoy these videos.
I'm a Clapton devotee for life and my favorite tone he ever got was from his 335. Holy crap that guitar just brought out an absolute animal from him. The tones he was getting during the From The Cradle era are absolutely out of this world. I saw him back last September from 14 rows back and he has still got it. Dude has absolutely given his life to his guitar for sure.
From the Cradle is a ridiculously underrated album. Every track is dripping with soul.
It doesn’t bother you: his racism, anti-immigrant sentiment for decades? Or recently his anti-vaxx/mandate nonsense? I don’t understand how this man gets a pass on his repeated disgusting behavior.
@@winstonsmith8236 No it literally doesn't bother me that idiots say that Clapton has been "racist" for decades. Especially considering he has toured for years with multiple black musicians and literally he got vaccinated. Twice. It was the Astra Zeneca vaccine and no it doesn't bother me that Clapton doesn't want people to get forced to do something that doesn't even work anyway against their will. I actually celebrate him for that but it's totally irrelevant to his actual music. Did you know that if you like a Woody Allen movie you support pedophilia or if you like a Tarantino movie you support rape since Harvey Weinstein produced a lot of his movies? Do you renounce Quentin Tarantino for collaborating with a known sexual predator? You should never watch another Tarantino film ever again in order to be consistent.
It’s called freedom of speech. You don’t want to silence people, especially if you disagree with them.
@@fivewattworld Thank you. This should be fairly simple but apparently it's really complicated. On an actually related note, have you heard the new Clapton song? I really like it and his tone is absolutely on point. It was a stealth release the other day and it's called Pompous Fool.
Great show as always !
Been looking forward to this one . Thanks from oz mate
Another wonderful video history. So good, I'll be watching it again. Thanks 👍😎
Thanks for this Keith - for those of us born-late-50's kids who grew up listening to the first and second British Invasion bands, Clapton was omnipresent - played with the Beatles & the Plastic Ono Band, first of the Golden Trilogy of lead guitarists in the Yardbirds, recorded THE quintessential British Blues album with John Mayall (Beano album), formed Cream, Blind Faith, Derek & the Dominoes, played with Delaney & Bonnie and Friends - and that was just the first 8 years of his career! You've done an excellent job of connecting his various bands and incarnations to his choice of guitars. And Jeff McErlain doesn't just play guitar, he embodies it - just sublime. The deep research and attention to detail is, as always, mightily impressive. Took me back to my roots - thanks!
Excellent video! Eric Clapton and Cream got me started playing guitar back in 1967 and I've been playing (and collecting vintage guitars) ever since. I've owned quite a few "Fool" replica's simply to stare at them and get transformed back into the best years of rock, blues, etc. Note: Cream performed two shows at the Royal Albert Hall final concert and he used his Firebird for one show and his 335 for the other. Lots of photos show this.
Excellent video. Much apreciated.
I can't get enough my brother.. appreciate you and All your knowledge ❤❤❤
Great video on EC. I saw him last year here in Nashville. He was amazing and played the same Strat all night.
Keith as usual very well done. What drives you drives me, but not in the same way. You are so polished and prepared. I on the other hand am a see what it do. I have no playing talent, but can help others find it. I love this channel!
Thanks Keith and Jeff for covering my favorite electric guitar player, can never get enough of this kind of stuff and I appreciate the time and care that you put into it!
Sir, my apologies if, when rewinding certain sections, I somehow inadvertently bypassed your segment on this guitar. But, I don't recall coverage by you of Eric's mid '60s Fender Electric XII, which I believe he recorded only one song with, the dazzling exotic sounding "Dance The Night Away" on Cream's Disraeli Gears album!
Excellent as always. I get so much pleasure from your videos, Thank You!
Keith great video. I'm really glad you showed and detailed the difference between the slab board tele's and the veneer rosewood fretboard models. I've often wondered how to tell the difference...🎸😎
I LOVE these concise history videos!
Another great video with a complete historical view os Eric’s tools! Thanks for sharing with us!!!!
Absolutely brilliant. Eric Clapton is a absolute legend . Thank you
Great as always man! Thanks
Yet another stellar video!🎸
Now, there's a name I've not heard in a long time: Paul Kossoff. Died of a drug over-dose. The title of his greatest record is on his gravestone, 'All Right Now'. Great tune. Part of a very gifted family. Broke his father's (David Kossoff) heart when he passed
Free is a really underrated band, really great musicians especially Kossoff
@@vladertx43 - Sadly, a lot of the greatest musicians at that time took Class-A Drugs.
I went to see David Kossoff talk about his son in Prestwich in the mid '70s. Of course we all went to hear about his son. It was not that.
best vibrato in the game no cap
@@Jamzamurai I was gigging in Italy pre-Covid and took my iPod with me. The other guitarist in the band knew Free but I had a Kossoff compilation that included an extended studio edit of 'The Stealer'. The expression on his face when Koss started playing some big bends with vibrato was something to behold. Pure awe!
Great Video, your always spot on with wonderful information AND History...
Thank You.
Randy, Great North Woods Michigan
Love this series! EC is my absolute favourite guitarists and a major influence on my playing.
keith you do unbelievably great work
Thanks for another great one!
Another great video Keith. Thanks.
We all like different sounds etc. so each to their own. That being said, I love the Clapton Gibson sound. When he went Fender I thought his stuff was good but not enough bite to it which is what got my adrenaline going. People I know who are into "pop" like his Fender years which go on and on.... I still bring out the old Clapton Gibson music and wish he stayed with it....
Hey Keith, great video. I can think of only one guitar Eric Clapton owned that was missed. An early '80's Red Fender Lead ii... I don't know if it played much of a role if any in his career. I believe he played it live a few times. I don't think he even had it that long. He did donate it to the London Hard Rock Cafe.
Thanks for all the hard work you do in producing your channel it shows in the quality of the videos 😎👍
Awesome, as always. Thanks!
A very classy channel. Appreciate your style and attention to detail 😊
I was waiting for that one for a long time ! Excellent vid ! cheers from France
Salut! Thanks for watching.
Knocked it out of the park again, Keith!
Always great! Thank you
The way you described how Clapton "translated" the Mississippi blues reminds me of a story here in Japan about the woman who translated LM Mongomery's Anne of Green Gables into Japanese. It became a huge hit in Japan not only for the original story but because the translator was an awesome talent in her own right. In fact, they made a TV drama here in Japan about this translator.
Wow Keith. Your Aunty was a deadset legend! What great albums to pass on to you young 'uns. An older friend who started teaching me guitar in the 80's got me hooked on Cream. So that was an enjoyable overview of Clapton's guitars too. Thank you 😁
Clapton is one of my absolute favorites! As you mentioned for other players, he and Page turned me onto many blues players that I would have otherwise never heard of. Many guitarists are known for their tone, but there aren't very many who are known for many different and great tones as Clapton is. I've become an even bigger fan over the years, even purchasing albums that aren't considered to be among his greatest works, learning that I like much of that as well. I never knew that Clapton owned a Washburn early on. I have a Washburn D10-CE that I've had for close to 25 years. It has aged very well and is a joy to play. Great video!
I like all your videos. You do them so well. Thanks
Your send off was beautifully put!!
Thanks Alex. I worried that haiku in translation might be a bit of a stretch. :)
Great job Keith 👌
I first heard the Beano record in highschool back in 1967.....that tone and Duane Allmans Live at the Fillmore East tone is all I have in my brain when I go for a sound out of a guitar and an amp.....
Although I first heard both of those tones 45 years after you did I feel that same way. A Les Paul into a Marshall will always be the guitar I hear in my head.
Great as always!!!!
Nobody does this sort of deep dive documentary like at all Keith. This video is stellar.👍🏻
Great video! Being a Clapton fan since my early teens, 70 now!, I never get tired to watch anything related to his life, playing, gear and everything else in between. Clapton is still GOD!!!
Beautiful synopsis at the end!
This is my new favorite UA-cam channel
Thanks. Enjoyed the history
great job, Keith!
I'm an electric guitar person, but I severely loved that Martin acoustic at the end. Only Kieth could know that would be awesome to include that for a perfect ending to a great awesome video.
I seen to recall that Martin Guitar's documentary 'The Story of the Dreadnought' claimed that Clapton's 'MTV Un-Plugged' Concert helped to save a financially floundering company. Suddenly, Martin Guitars sold like hot cakes. Although I might have mis-remembered that. They still sell a Clapton Signature 000-28 for about $4,000.
Another fantastic History! Thank you!
Keith, Excellent job, hypes. It is information I pretty much knew, but never packaged like this.If I had your talents , I wouldn’t have changed a thing. Thank you,buddy. Rocky
Super as always Kieth. What’s important ?
My first electric guitar was a earlier 1960s (‘64?) Gibson SG Jr. I wish I still had it But what’s more important is the memory of my dad driving me all around Houston to Music stores till we happen to find it among the used guitars. That was in1966. My dad has since left this planet but my memories of us finding my ‘first’ is in the long run what’s most important. The love of a caring father matters most.
Another great video! I was fortunate enough to see Clapton live in either 1977 or 1978 in Knoxville, Tennessee, on the Slow Hand tour. I just stood there at the edge of the stage for two hours, in awe. The opening act? Muddy Waters….
Saw the same tour in Johnson City Tn. Amazing .
Saw Clapton play in San Diego quite a few years ago. They had video footage of him up on the big screens. Think he played majority of the show on a strat. I noticed from watching the video that he played almost all of the songs entirely in the middle position.
Pete "Guitar" Lewis taught me the basic rudiments of blues guitar in Bakersfield, CA when I was a young kid when we both lived there in the early 1960s. But Mike Bloomfield and later on Eric Clapton, were my idols. I still play their music every day to this very day and I'm now 76. I feel blessed to have lived through the musical trends of the late 1940s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, and the 2000s up to this point in time. I was fortunate enough to attend many of Eric's Crossroad concerts and to have purchased three of the guitars for sale while there, and no, I'm not talking about his personal guitars, only millionaires could afford them. At all Crossroad concerts there are countless guitar vendors who also sell their guitars too, but at affordable prices, and of course EC's company renting them the space and collecting a percentage of the sales, as any good business people/person would do. Yes, I truly have been blessed and I ain't even religious.
I’ll bet the lions share went to the crossroads charity . Artists are given a plane ticket & hotel room. That’s it.
Greetings from Nashville north, Louisville, Ky.
Keith I think you covered the electrics top to bottom with the detail and information people want to hear about. Nothing more, nothing less….
Great job as usual. Thanks
Thanks Mike
Another great SH! Clapton is one of the great blues musicians. Loved the in-depth look at his guitars.
Awesome as always.
Your videos enthrall me, especially since this one featured guitars of my all-time guitar hero, Mr. Clapton.
Love Clapton's guitars and love this breakdown!
Even though I grew to like the 335 more, the Beano Les Paul is ALWAYS a holy grail for me!!!
Very interesting video full with information. Thanks.
In the early 2000's Clapton used a custom shop strat with an interesting color design. That guitar can be seen in the "One more car, one more rider" video made for the 2001 tour.
That's the same guitar that he used when he came to Venezuela that year.
The guitar in question was the very first "Crashocaster" painted by John "Crash" Matos.
Eric had also another pair of Crashocasters in his guitar arsenal, the most famous being "Crash 3" used extensively during the 2004 world tour and the Crossroads Guitar Fest at Dallas' Cotton Bowl.
Thanks for sharing such valuable information. Subscribed and supported via your store (HX Stomp patches). 🎸🙌🏼
Nice job... loved this one.
Love it Keith!!
You should do a history video on Lawsuit Era guitars from Ibanez. If love to know more about these instruments!
Keep up the great work, I love the Five Watt World channel!
Blackie: in 2003-2004. I worked for Christie’s in New York City. I was computer support for them. One day I get a call.. Kerry Keane down in musical instruments needs to see you. I had just helped him the week before with a printer issue. I get down there thinking the printer was acting up again. Kerry said come with me. I was like ok and we went into this vault. He reached in a bin and pulled out a guitar case and said open it. In it was Blackie. He said enjoy it and come get me when you are done. I spent about 15-20 mins with that guitar. It is a very cool guitar. I am so grateful for that moment that he thought enough of me to do that. There are moments in your life you never forget. This was one of them. 😊
Great story!
Excellent as always. And yes … we’ll take that acoustic episode please
Great video's! I learn so much from watching your stuff! I would love to see a guitar history of Roy Buchanan video! Or a history of Jerry Garcia's amps and pedals. Keep up the great work!
My wife and I are going to see EC for the first time in our lives! We don’t go to very many shows (I have gotten to see BB, Buddy & a few of my country music heroes). Anyway, next month I’m going to snag some 5W merch to support this channel. I have watched the strat and p-bass videos countless times. Thanks Keith and friends for your research and presentation.