The seven-note guitar riff
blazes from your speakers, then an intense, intoxicating cry of
unrequited love opens with a pleading query:
“What'll you do when
you get lonely
And nobody's waiting by your side?”
And nobody's waiting by your side?”
The music becomes an
immediate indelible sound of your memory. The iconic recording is, of
course, “Layla” by Derek and the Dominos, written by Eric Clapton
and Jim Gordon and released in 1971. The song has remained a rock
classic ever since. It's a long-lasting love song … well, sort of.
The legend behind the song
is familiar to most rock aficionados. “Layla” is about George
Harrison's wife, Pattie Boyd. Yes, that is the same “George
Harrison” of the Beatles. Eric Clapton was seeing Pattie Harrison
and deeply in love with her when he wrote the song. Many people knew
about the affair. Bobby Whitlock, who was in the Derek and the
Doninos and good friends with both Harrison and Clapton, said …
"I was there when
they were supposedly sneaking around. You don't sneak very well when
you're a world figure. He was all hot on Pattie and I was dating her
sister. They had this thing going on that supposedly was behind
George's back. Well, George didn't really care. He (George) said,
'You can have her.'”
Eric Clapton said he
initially wrote the song as a ballad for Pattie. It was his attempt
to persuade her to stop “holding off” and move in with him.
Ironically, Eric was living with Pattie’s younger sister, Paula, at
the time. When Paula heard the song Layla, she immediately moved out
and felt that Eric had used her, to get to her sister, Pattie.
Clapton
is said to have based the lyrics for “Layla” on a book by a
12th-century Persian poet called Nizami about a man who is in love
with an unobtainable woman. He identified with
the character Majnun, who was in love with Layla bint Mahdi idn Sa’d
– a name much too long for a popular song title.
Pattie's version of the
story is that one day, after Eric had been trying to persuade her to
leave George and come with him, Eric played her a taped version of
“Layla.” Later that same night at a party, Eric blurted out to
George Harrison that he was in love with his wife. In an article
published in The Guardian on December 13, 2008, Pattie said:
"I wasn't so happy
when Eric wrote 'Layla,' while I was still married to George. I felt
I was being exposed. I was amazed and thrilled at the song – it was
so passionate and devastatingly dramatic – but I wanted to hang on
to my marriage. Eric made this public declaration of love. I resisted
his attentions for a long time - I didn't want to leave my husband.
But obviously when things got so excruciatingly bad for George and me
it was the end of our relationship. We both had to move on.”
Pattie and Clapton began
living together in 1974 and married in 1979. Clapton and Harrison
remained good friends, with George playing at their wedding along
with Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr. Clapton left her for actress
Lory Del Santo (with whom he had his son, Conor) in 1985.
What about the recording?
That memorable riff was taken from Albert King’s “As The Years Go
Passing By.” “Eric took the song to Criteria Studios in Miami
with him in 1970. We’d gone through it before,” says Whitlock.
“Eric brought that seven-note lick with him to the recording
sessions. And then Duane Allman stirred ’em up.”
The Allman Brothers played
a show in Miami on August 26, 1970. Duane called to see if he could
stop by after the gig, and Clapton decided to bring his band to the
show. Duane froze up when he saw Clapton near the stage, but the
admiration was mutual, and Clapton arranged for Duane to keep coming
by and help with the album.
And then guitars were
everywhere in the mix. Tom Dowd, recording engineer and producer for
Atlantic Records, recalled layering six guitar parts on the track.
“There’s an Eric rhythm part, three tracks of Eric playing
harmony and the main riff, one of Duane playing that beautiful
bottleneck, and one of Duane and Eric locked up, playing counter
melodies,” he said. “There had to be some kind of telepathy going
on, because I’ve never seen spontaneous inspiration happen at that
rate and level. One of them would play something and the other would
react instantaneously. Not once did either of them have to say:
‘Could you play that again, please?’. It was like two hands in a
glove.”
That piano? In its varied,
long composition, the song is not without criticism. Jim Gordon’s
piano coda, added three weeks after the song had been recorded,
irritates Whitlock. “It taints the integrity,” he sighs. “It
has nothing to do with the rest of the song. It just sounds like a
mess. It’s like Guitar Wars – you’ve got three or four guitars
and everybody’s going all over the place.” Whitlock also claims
that Gordon stole the piano part from Rita Coolidge, his then
girlfriend. It certainly sounds similar to the Coolidge-penned
“Time,” released by Booker T. and Rita’s sister Priscilla in
1973.
“Layla” eventually
became a hit in December 1972, two years after its first release. (An
edited version was released as a single in 1971. It ran 2:43 and
flopped on the charts. The full, 7:10 version was released a year.)
By then, the Dominos had imploded, and Clapton all but retreated from
the world for three years, doing nothing much beyond sitting around
at home, taking heroin and building model airplanes.
Fate? Within a year of its
recording, Duane Allman was dead, followed by bassist Carl Radle,
whose kidneys gave up in 1980. After murdering his mother in 1983,
drummer Jim Gordon was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and
spent two decades in a mental hospital.
“I tried to give you
consolation
When your old man had let you down
Like a fool, I fell in love with you
You turned my whole world upside down”
When your old man had let you down
Like a fool, I fell in love with you
You turned my whole world upside down”
Legacy
In 1970, Jamrock
Entertainment listed "Layla" as the best song of the year.
Acclaimed Music rated the original version as the best song of 1970
and the 12th most popular song of the 1970s. In 1972, "Layla"
was one of the most performed songs of the year. The acoustic version
won the 1993 Grammy Award for Best Rock Song.
With
its re-release in 1982, the Rock song cemented its reputation as a
global Rock hit track.It is featured on a number of "greatest
ever" lists. The song was chosen by the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame as one of their "500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll.”
and Rolling Stone ranked the song at number 27 on their list
of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.” The Recording
Industry Association of America ranked "Layla" at number
118 on their Songs of the Century on March 7, 2001. As of 2011,
"Layla" had attained more than six million broadcasts on
television and the radio or performances on other records and during
live concerts.
More “Layla” Trivia
Vocalist Rita Coolidge
claims that she is responsible for penning part of "Layla"
but had received no credit. She claims that Clapton had taken the
chords and melody that she performed for him at Olympic Studios in
London, England in 1970, and alleges he had taken them when she heard
them on the radio.
Pattie Boyd worked in
London, New York, and Paris, side by side with the world’s top
models. Boyd appeared in the UK and Italian editions of Vogue
magazine, as well as in several commercials. Her turning point came
in 1964 when she was cast in a very small part in the Beatles’ film
A Hard Day’s Night, where she met George Harrison. Pattie
was immediately attracted to him, and she explains that he was
incredibly good-looking but rather shy.
Regular drug and alcohol
abuse, as well as Clapton’s many affairs, provoked Boyd to leave
him in 1987 and later divorce him in 1989. In a recent interview,
when Boyd was asked to answer who her greatest love was, she said,
“That is so difficult, but I would say (Harrison). He will always
stay with me.”
Pattie Boyd married for
the third time in 2015. She wed a property developer named Rod Weston
she’d known for a long time.“It’s almost our silver
anniversary, so we thought we had better get on with it,” her
husband declared jokingly.
At the end of the song,
Dwayne Allman produced the "crying bird" sound with his
guitar while Clapton played acoustic. It was a tribute to Charlie
Parker, a jazz legend known as "bird."
The piano at the end has
become a cultural touchstone. It was used to great effect at the end
of the movie Goodfellas, and radio stations almost always play
the version with the piano.
Duane Allman’s only
child, Galadrielle Allman, sued his record company for at least $1
million in 1999, charging that her late father’s estate is owed
royalties for his work on the ``Layla″ recordings. Allman said a
contract between her father and record producers called for him to
get 2 percent of retail sales of any recordings that came out of the
sessions. Ms. Allman says PolyGram was supposed to continue payments
after 1981 but did not.
The 1957 Les Paul that
Duane Allman played on the Derek and the Dominos 1970 hit “Layla”
went for $1.25 million at an auction in Macon, Georgia (2019).
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