teech
10-15-2007, 07:10 AM
one of my heroes growing up and playing the guitar for the last 30 years--I am excited to read this
Clapton is God," the graffiti in London once said. But Eric Clapton knew better. He wasn't God. He was struggling mightily to be a man, and by his own admission didn't quite become one until he was well into his sixth decade.
"Clapton: The Autobiography" (Broadway Books) does what many rock historians couldn't: It debunks the legend, de-mythologizes one of the most mythologized electric guitarists ever, puts a lie to the glamor of what it means to be a rock star.
"Backstage, John [Lennon] and I did so much blow that he threw up." Those few words capture the book's tenor: intimate, scandalous, titillating, but ultimately sad, at times pathetic. Legends reduced to drug-addled buffoons.
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Clapton is God," the graffiti in London once said. But Eric Clapton knew better. He wasn't God. He was struggling mightily to be a man, and by his own admission didn't quite become one until he was well into his sixth decade.
"Clapton: The Autobiography" (Broadway Books) does what many rock historians couldn't: It debunks the legend, de-mythologizes one of the most mythologized electric guitarists ever, puts a lie to the glamor of what it means to be a rock star.
"Backstage, John [Lennon] and I did so much blow that he threw up." Those few words capture the book's tenor: intimate, scandalous, titillating, but ultimately sad, at times pathetic. Legends reduced to drug-addled buffoons.
[Only registered and activated users can see links]