Posted on 08/23/2005 6:23:32 PM PDT by Aussie Dasher
This affair must be giving the Glimmer Twins their 19th nervous breakdown!
PROFILE: Laylas real name was Patti Boyd -- or more accurately, Patti Boyd Harrison. She was the wife of Beatle George Harrison when Eric Clapton began pursuing her. Harrison first met her on the set of A Hard Days Night in 1964. A stunning nineteen-year-old blonde model, she was only supposed to make a brief appearance in the film and leave; instead, she and George fell in love and eventually married. George and Eric were close friends. Theyd known each other since the days when the Beatles and the Yardbirds (Erics group at the time) were becoming popular. As they both became superstars, they hung out together more and more. They even contributed to each others recordings. Eric played a magnificent solo on While My Guitar Gently Weeps, George co-wrote and played on Creams Badge: George wrote Here Comes the Sun while sitting in Erics garden; he wrote Savoy Truffle specifically for Eric, who was having dental problems but still couldnt resist chocolates. George joined Eric on the Delaney and Bonnie tour; etc.
George didnt realize, however, that over the years Eric had quietly fallen in love with his wife. Eric told Patti (but not George) about his feelings, but she wouldnt hear anything of it. She remained dedicated to the man who had written Something for her. Already a tortured soul, Eric was plunged into despair. In an outburst of emotion, he wrote Layla. Later, when people asked him who he was singing for, all he would say was, Layla was about a woman I felt really deeply about and who turned me down, and I had to pour it out in some way. You may be wondering how Patti became Layla. The answer: Clapton lifted the name Layla from a Persian love story called Layla and Mashoun. The tale had little similarity to the Eric/Patti/George love triangle. Clapton just liked the title. The song was recorded and released in 1970, with Bobby Whitlock, Jim Gordon, Carl Radle, and Duane Allman, of the Allman Brothers Band, playing on it. But it flopped. The record was attributed to Derek and the Dominoes, and no one knew it was Clapton. So Eric, who had poured his heart and soul into the record, threw in the towel. He gave up music and took up heroin. He withdrew for several years-during which the record was re-released and became one of the all-time FM favorites, and a Top 10 single.
A few years later, Clapton kicked the habit and reemerged with I Shot the Sheriff: his first #l song. The story has a happy ending for Eric. Patti eventually divorced George and, in a secret ceremony in Tucson, Arizona, in 1979, married Clapton. Ultimate irony: Patti and Eric later joined George in a recording of the Everly Brothers old hit, Bye, Bye Love.
Probably, but you get away with what you get away with.
Presumably autobiographical? Oh, yeah:
"no money in our coats"
Whenever I see his wrinkled face
I see the stabbing at Altamont
and the destroyed, equally wrinkled midriff
of the young girl drawing the water in
that brilliant documentary by the two brothers.
I have a strong dislike of Mick Jagger. Perhaps that why The LORD has conscripted me to pray for him upon occasion.
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