Cream biography
Arguably the most famous trio in rock music, Cream comprised Jack Bruce
(b. John Symon Asher, 14 May 1943, Glasgow, Lanarkshire,
Scotland; bass/vocals), Eric
Clapton (b. Eric Patrick Clapp, 30 March 1945, Ripley, Surrey,
England; guitar) and Ginger
Baker (b. Peter Baker, 19 August 1939, Lewisham, London, England;
drums). In their two and a half years together, Cream made such an impression
on fans, critics and musicians as to make them one of the most influential
bands since the Beatles.
They formed in July 1966 at the height of swinging London during the 60s and were soon thrust
into a non-stop turbulent arena, hungry for new and interesting music after the
Merseybeat boom had quelled. Cream were promoted in the music press as a pop
band, with Clapton from John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, Bruce from Graham Bond and
briefly Manfred Mann, and Baker from the Graham Bond Organisation via Alexis
Korner's Blues Incorporated. Baker and Bruce had originally played together in
the Johnny Burch Octet in 1962. Cream's debut single, "Wrapping
Paper", was a comparatively weird pop song, and made the lower reaches of
the charts on the strength of its insistent appeal. This
was a paradox to their great strength of jamming and improvisation; each member
was already a proven master of their chosen instrument. Their follow-up single,
"I Feel Free", unleashed such energy that it could only be matched by
Jimi Hendrix. The debut album Fresh Cream confirmed the promise: this band were
not what they seemed, another colourful pop act singing songs of tangerine
bicycles. With a mixture of blues standards and exciting originals, the album
became a record that every credible music fan should own. It reached number 6
in the UK
charts. The following year, Disraeli Gears, with its distinctive dayglo cover,
went even higher, and firmly established Cream in the USA, where they
spent most of their touring life. This superb album showed a marked progression
from their first, in particular, in the high standard of songwriting from Jack
Bruce and his lyricist partner, former beat poet Pete Brown. Landmark songs
such as "Sunshine Of Your Love", "Strange Brew" and
"SWLABR" were performed with precision.
Already rumours of a split prevailed as news filtered back from America of
fights and arguments between Baker and Bruce. Meanwhile, their live
performances did not reflect the music already released from studio sessions. The
long improvisational pieces, based around fairly simple blues structures, were
often awesome. Each member had a least one party piece during concerts, Bruce
with his frantic harmonica solo on "Traintime", Baker with his
trademark drum solo on "Toad", and Clapton with his strident vocal
and fantastic guitar solo on "Crossroads'. One disc of 1968"s
magnificent two-record set, Wheels Of Fire, captured Cream live, at their
inventive and exploratory best. Just a month after its release, while it sat on
top of the US
charts, the trio announced they would disband at the end of the year following
two final concerts. The famous Royal Albert Hall farewell concerts were
captured on film. The posthumous Goodbye reached number 1 in the UK charts and number 2 in the USA, while even
some later live scrapings from the bottom of the barrel enjoyed chart success. Clapton
and Baker were soon reunited in Blind Faith while Bruce established a solo
career. Clapton would go on to become one of rock's leading artists during the
70s and 80s.
The three members of Cream
came together in 1993 for an emotional one-off performance at the Rock And Roll
Hall Of Fame awards in New York, before the CD age finally recognized their
contribution in 1997, with the release of an excellent 4-CD box set, Those Were
The Days. Two CDs from the studio and two from the stage wrap up this brief
career, with no stone left unturned. In addition to all of their previously
issued material there is the unreleased "Lawdy Mama", which Bruce
claims features the wrongly recorded original bass line of "Strange
Brew". Another gem is a demo of the Bruce/Brown diamond, "The Weird Of
Hermiston", which later appeared on Bruce's debut solo album, Songs For A
Tailor. This collection reaffirmed Cream's greatness, as three extraordinary
musicians fusing their musical personalities together as a unit.
The band's most famous album, Disraeli Gears, was reissued in 2004 as
rumours of another reunion were heard. Confirmation followed that Cream would
re-form for four nights only at the venue of their farewell concert in 1968. Tickets
for their Albert Hall concerts sold out within two hours, and a few hours later
were being resold at ridiculous prices over the internet. Cream came and went
almost in the blink of an eye, but left an indelible mark on rock music as
clearly demonstrated by their continuing selling power and influence.