John Mayall's Bluesbreakers

Bluesbreakers With Eric Clapton (Decca ’66) Rating: A-
Like Paul Butterfield, John Mayall is something of an unfairly forgotten figure, as he was a truly seminal influence on '60s British blues rock. At various times the likes of Jack Bruce, Eric Clapton, Peter Green, Mick Taylor, Aynsley Dunbar, Mick Fleetwood, and John McVie passed through this terrific bandleader's ranks (albeit usually briefly), though none of his subsequent incarnations delivered anything nearly as influential as this album, which he cut with Eric Clapton immediately after Clapton left the increasingly commercially aspirant Yardbirds. After all, this is the album that inspired "Eric Clapton Is God" graffiti all over the walls of London, and indeed the album's biggest asset is the wonderfully thick and muscular tone Clapton achieves throughout. His pioneering use of distortion and atypical phrasings raised the bar for all who followed (such as that Hendrix fella), and his inspired playing easily makes up for the album's somewhat patchy songwriting. Featuring a mix of Mayall originals along with covers from the likes of Otis Rush, Freddie King, and Robert Johnson, some of these songs are overly repetitive and simplistic, and songs such as "Another Man," "Parchman Farm," and "It Ain't Right" feature far too little of Clapton's guitar. The focus is also elsewhere on the r&b-based "Key To Love" and "Ramblin' On My Mind," on which Clapton's guitar is relatively restrained as Eric was likely more concerned with his first vocal on record. The cover of "What'd I Say" even features a regrettable drum solo, but its unexpected "Day Tripper" riff also showed the 21 year old upstart being loose and irreverent, qualities that would unfortunately disappear in due time. The rest of the album also features Eric at his fiery best, with Mayall chiming in with moody Hammond organ (one of my favorite instruments) and serviceable but unremarkable harp playing and singing. Whether covering Otis Rush ("All Your Love") or Freddie King ("Hideaway"), the best songs here were henceforth Eric Clapton songs, and slow, heavy blues originals such as "Double Crossin' Time" (Clapton's first co-write) and "Have You Heard" feature some of his most spectacularly intense and emotional solos. "Steppin' Out" is another highlight here that later became a live favorite with Cream, as beyond its punchy horns it has that beefy guitar tone that many saw as being God-like. It sure was ahead of its time, and by and large this album is still extremely enjoyable today. Alas, the ever-restless Clapton soon wanted out, so he left Mayall to team with former Mayall bassist Jack Bruce ("Double Crossin' Time" is about Bruce leaving Mayall's band to join Manfred Mann) and Ginger Baker (formerly of the Graham Bond Organization) in Cream.

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