Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Christgau wrote in conclusion: "his meaning is realized at those searing peaks when a pained sense of limits – why does love have to be so sad, I got the bell-bottom blues, Lay-la – is posed against the good times in an explosive compression of form."
The three songs not included are "Why Does Love Got to Be So Sad," "Let It Rain," and "Tell the Truth." Live at the Fillmore also includes these songs, although they are from different sets than the ones appearing here.
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. [2] [3] [4] 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 ...
Crossroads 2: Live in the Seventies is the seventh live album and a box set by Eric Clapton, released in 1996.Unlike the first Crossroads box set that encompasses more than three decades of Clapton's work, Crossroads 2 is a chronicle of Clapton's live shows between 1974 through 1978.
Damn Right, I've Got The Blues : Buddy Guy & Robert Randolph & Quinn Sullivan - 6:39; Why Does Love Got To Be So Sad (Eric Clapton/Bobby Whitlock): The Allman Brothers Band & Eric Clapton - 8:25; Congo Square (Sonny Landreth/Mel Melton/Dave Raonson): Sonny Landreth & Derek Trucks - 6:57; Change It (Doyle Bramhall II): John Mayer & Doyle ...
On May 19, 2007, at a free concert titled "The Road To Austin", Bobby Whitlock performed his electric arrangements of Layla and Why Does Love Got To Be So Sad with dueling guitars courtesy of David Grissom and Eric Johnson. [1] Grissom released his first solo album Loud Music in 2007.
In four days, the five-piece Dominos recorded "Key to the Highway", "Have You Ever Loved a Woman" (a blues standard popularised by Freddie King and others) and "Why Does Love Got to be So Sad?" In September, Duane briefly left the sessions for gigs with his own band, and the four-piece Dominos recorded "I Looked Away", " Bell Bottom Blues " and ...
The St. Petersburg Times wrote that Buckwheat "mixed vibrant, up-to-the-minute sound quality and full production with the kinetic rootsiness of straight-up zydeco." [7] The San Francisco Chronicle found the album to be inferior to On a Night Like This, but praised Buckwheat's decision to give "Clapton a chance to outdo his old solo on a romping, rollicking 'Why Does Love Got to Be So Sad'."