Strange Brew: Eric Clapton and the British Blues Boom 1965-1970: (Foreword by John Mayall)
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Average customer review:Product Description
This is the day-by-day story of the 60s British blues boom, centering on key guitarists Eric Clapton, Peter Green, and Mick Taylor and the groups that they played in from 1965 to 1970 - John's Mayall's Blues breakers, Cream, Fleetwood Mac, Blind Faith, The Rolling Stones, Delaney & Bonnie, and more. The book's day-by-day format, peppered with great photographs and memorabilia, reveals the way the musicians behind the blues boom worked together, influenced each other, and pushed one another to ever greater achievements. "Eric Clapton & The British Blues Boom" uses intensive research to present and explain the work of some of the music's greatest musicians in a unique and engaging format.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #38678 in Books
- Published on: 2007-02-09
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 352 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
'This exhaustive history of gigs, radio/TV appearances, sessions and anecdotes puts the likes of Clapton and Fleetwood Mac under the microscope, presenting a multitude of never-before-published stories alongside evocative memorabilia and photos from the era. It's a perfect 'dip-in-at-any-page' tome.' Guitar & Bass, November/December 2007 --Guitar & Bass , November/December 2007
About the Author
Christopher Hjort (born 1958) a rock historian who combines a love for popular music with an interest in typography and graphic design. He has written record reviews and artist profiles in various Norwegian music magazines.
Customer Reviews
British blues blockbuster
The highest praise I can give this extraordinary book is that it's like a Pete Frame rock family tree come to life. A huge tome (350+ pages, nearly A4 in size), it is endlessly fascinating. It traces the interlocking careers of John Mayall, Eric Clapton, Peter Green and Mick Taylor in the form of a week-by-week, often day-by-day, chronicle of the years 1965-1970, taking in gigs, recording sessions, record releases, radio and television appearances and much more. The author has assembled a wealth of material including contemporary interviews and reviews and (particularly interesting) eye-witness accounts of gigs. What prevents all this information becoming a drudge to read is the author's style: lively and lucid throughout, it welds the huge amount of material into a compelling and readable narrative. The book is also enlivened by many humorous anecdotes (including Mayall, following a spat with Hughie Flint, leaving the drummer by the side of the road after a gig to find his own way home - plus drumkit), and lots of photographs many of which I hadn't seen before: a strangely poignant one of Clapton crouching, dwarfed by a bank of Marshall speakers, and one of a nearly unrecognisable pre-Bluesbreakers Peter Green playing bass (presumably with the Muskrats).
The book concludes with sections summarising the post-1970 careers of the key figures, an incredibly comprehensive concert location index and an equally detailed list of recording sessions, plus an informative account of the equipment used by Mayall, Clapton, Green and Taylor.
I was pleased to see that the book gives proper respect to John Mayall. Notwithstanding his I-live-in-a-tree-and-make-my-own-clothes-and-guitars eccentricity, he emerges as a generous bandleader and serious musician capable of rousing audiences by his own playing and singing, whoever happened to be playing with him at the time. There's an unescapable sense of melancholy as the book draws towards the end of 1970: Peter Green is entering his sad period of mental illness, Mick Taylor is becoming dissatisfied with the shortage of live Stones gigs and lack of writing credits, and Clapton is getting heavily into drugs. For all this, it's a book that will appeal to anyone interested in the so-called British blues boom. To those I rubbed shoulders with at the Black Prince, the Marquee, the Bromley Court Hotel and elsewhere, and those who turned up at countless pubs and small halls up and down the country to enjoy this music, I say this: if this book doesn't make you hunt out and listen again to your copies of the Beano album, A Hard Road and Fresh Cream, I'll eat my Les Paul (copy).
British Blues Guitar Heaven!
This is a goldmine of information about the work of Messrs. Clapton, Green and Taylor. I thought I was pretty genned up on them, but there are a great deal of facts and figures new to me. The book also features some pictures I have never seen before, and lots of reprints of adverts for gigs all over the country (interesting to see the various spellings of "Mayall", and one for The Bluesbreakers featuring ex-Yardbirds "singer" Eric Clapton!). This must have been a huge labour of love, and anyone interested in British blues, and in particular these 3 guitar heroes, should buy it without hesitation.
Phew!
This book is an amazing piece of work. I've been reading it for several weeks now and I am amazed by the information Mr. Hjort has compiled and stored in this book. It made me want to got out and check out CD's of the various acts that are described in the book. Hats off!




