Eric Clapton – From the Cradle
The music gear and equipment used by the artists, producers, engineers, and more involved in the making of the 1994 album From the Cradle.
Music from From the Cradle
Artists on From the Cradle
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Roles:
Groups:
Mark Knopfler’s Guitar Heroes Cream Derek and the Dominos The Yardbirds The Plastic Ono Band John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers Eric Clapton & His All Star Band George's Band The Secret Police The Louisiana Gator Boys The Dirty Mac Blind Faith T.D.F. The Singing Rebel's Band The Singing Rebel's Band Eric Clapton and the Powerhouse Delaney & Bonnie and Friends Eric Clapton & The Powerhouse Immediate All Stars Eric Clapton And His Band Slowhand and Van Sting with Eric Clapton Sean Head Showband B.B. King & Eric ClaptonProducer
Gear Used On From the Cradle
Explore the instruments, equipment, software, and production tools used in the making of Eric Clapton – From the Cradle (1994). Click more on each item to see exactly how it was used.
Guitars used by Eric Clapton on From the Cradle
Semi-Hollowbody Electric Guitars
Eric Clapton recalled that he played "...period" numbers on this guitar such as Reconsider Baby and that he used this guitar on the 1994-5 blues tour. Lee Dickson informed us that Eric used fourteen or fifteen guitars on this particular tour, changing guitar for almost every song he performed. This guitar was also used during recording sessions for the 1994 From The Cradle album.
Semi-Hollowbody Electric Guitars
Avg price: $9,087.26
This guitar was used by Clapton on the Nothing But The Blues Tour and on recording sessions for the album From The Cradle including the Ray Charles number Sinner's Prayer.
1966 Martin OOO-28-45 Conversion
Lee Dickson recalled that this guitar was one of Clapton's two favourite acoustics before the development of his custom signature Martin in 1995. The Longworth has been regularly used by Eric Clapton on recordings, and the phrase 'Get me the Longworth' has been a regular request to Lee in the studio over the years.
Eric Clapton acquired this customised 1966 Martin 000-28 in Nashville in November 1970 whilst he was on his US Tour with the Dominos. He'd stopped there for filming the Johnny Cash show with Carl Perkins as his fellow guest. He used the guitar for recording sessions at Criteria Studios in Miami in the spring of 1974, which produced the album 461 Ocean Boulevard. Clapton was photographed playing the guitar in front of the house he'd rented at that address whilst he was recording that album, and the photo was used as the back cover of the record.
When Clapton went on tour to promote the album later that year, he used this guitar on stage to open the concerts in Scandinavia and the US with Charlie Chaplin's Smile, Let It Grow from 461 Ocean Boulevard and Easy Now from his first solo album. The guitar travelled with Clapton on his first tour of Japan in November 1974, and was used for the opening segment of concerts which consisted of Better Make It Through Today from the album There's One In Every Crowd in addition to Smile and Let It Grow.
This guitar seemed to have remained Clapton's main acoustic guitar throughout 1975/1976 until the 'Rodeo Man' 000-28 took its place on the 1976 tour. It made a brief appearance on stage again during the ARMS tour in the autumn of 1983 for the encore number Good Night Irene with Ronnie Lane. Nine years later, it was played by Andy Fairweather Low during the session for the MTV Unplugged at Bray Studios in 1992. It subsequently made a stage comeback when Clapton used it during the acoustic section of the Blues season at the Royal Albert Hall in 1993 alongside the vintage 000-42 [Lot 19] he used for the Unplugged session. From that point on, 'The Longworth' was regularly used for acoustic numbers on stage throughout the From The Cradle Tour until November 1995.
Eric Clapton said that he used this guitar on the Blues Tour, 1994. According to Lee Dickson, Eric Clapton purchased this guitar from Charlie Chandler when he was at Olympic Studios, London, during the recording sessions for the From The Cradle album.
Avg price: $5,411.38
Eric Clapton said that he used this guitar on stage for a couple of numbers during the From The Cradle Tour 1994-5. Lee Dickson recalls that a fan appeared at a gig with this guitar and gave it to Eric who, to Lee's surprise, used it that night for two numbers.
Eric Clapton said that he used this guitar for the number that opened the show on the 1994-5 From The Cradle Tour - Motherless Child.
This guitar was used by Clapton on the album From The Cradle and like its companion, the same model with different fingerboard inlays, [sold in Crossroads Auction at Christie's New York in June, 1999] for the opening song of the subsequent 1994/5 Nothing But The Blues Tour called Motherless Child. In the TV special From The Cradle which showed the Nothing But The Blues Tour rehearsal at Manhattan Center Studios, 28th September, 1994, this guitar was seen being used by Clapton to rehearse Motherless Child, but it suffers a broken string a little way into the song and gets replaced by its companion.
Fender Telecaster ( duplikats) 1975
Avg price: $3,400.00
Eric Clapton used the 1975 Fender Telecaster (duplikats) on his album "From the Cradle," as evidenced by a user-uploaded photo.