Eric Clapton Truly Hated Him More Than Anyone
The two of you go back a really long way. ; A long way. Back to the early 60s, yeah. In fact, I was with The Yardbirds when I first met George and he we were on the The Beatles’ Christmas Show. And uh we hit it off and I love him very much. He’s a great guy. Not because of jealousy, not because of ambition, but because there are wounds that cut deeper than pride itself and remain there forever, even long after the applause has faded.
When the whole world calls you God, what can possibly frighten you? What can make you step off the stage in silence without saying a single word? What can make you write a song like a heart-wrenching cry offered as a gift to someone you are never allowed to love? The answer is not found in the legendary recordings.
It is not found in the sold-out global concert nights. The answer lies in the six names that Eric Clapton has carried with him throughout his life, like thorns embedded in the palm of his hand. They hurt the most when he grips the guitar tightly and tries to forget everything. Today, we are going to talk about those people. But first, let me tell you the story of a child who did not know who he was, Eric Patrick Clapton was born on the 30th of March 1945 in a small, quiet village named Ripley in Surrey, England.
From the very beginning, his life was marked by uncertainty. He grew up believing that his grandparents were his real parents, that the woman he called his older sister was actually his biological mother. The truth did not come gently. It arrived like a punch straight to the chest, leaving a lingering wound that nothing could ever fully heal.
Loneliness began right there and in that loneliness, young Eric found music. Not British music, not the familiar melodies on the radio. He found American blues, sounds that were raw, painful, and so real that you could feel the suffering behind every single note. B.B. King, Muddy Waters, Robert Johnson.

These people spoke a language that the young English boy understood better than any other, the language of pain. When Clapton first picked up the guitar, it was not a hobby. It was survival. The guitar was the only thing that never lied to him. It never hid the truth. It never made him doubt himself. And from that moment, the journey began.
From The Yardbirds to John Mayall and The Bluesbreakers, Clapton’s name rose so fast it was dizzying. By the mid-1960s, he had become the face of British blues. Then Cream arrived, the supergroup that took him to the peak of international fame. Next came Blind Faith, Derek and the Dominos, and other chapters where every page affirmed one single truth.
Eric Clapton is one of the greatest guitarists who ever walked this earth. But fame always comes with a price. The words Clapton is God written on the walls of London were not just praise, they were a sentence, an invisible pressure placed on that man’s shoulders that was never lifted. Every performance became a trial.
Every artistic choice became a topic for debate. Every failure, no matter how small, was amplified until it was unbearable. And then, those men appeared. Five of them were rivals. One was a brother. All of them left wounds. Let us begin with the fifth one, Keith Richards. Just hearing that name, you can already picture the image, a man with a cigarette on his lips, guitar slung loosely over his shoulder, eyes like someone who does not care about anything in the world, dangerous, rebellious, free in a way no one could ever copy. That was exactly
the problem for Clapton. Understand the context. England in the 1960s was a giant stage where the great guitarists competed for every inch of spotlight. In that race, Clapton and Richards represented two completely opposite paths. Clapton pursued perfection. He studied blues with the reverence of a scholar studying sacred texts.
Every note had to be right. Every emotion had to be real. Technique and soul had to become one. Richards needed none of that. He simply plugged in, stepped onto the stage, and played, raw, instinctive, sometimes imperfect. But every note he played carried something Clapton, no matter how talented, could never learn.
It was absolute nonchalance and the audience loved it. While Clapton was worshipped for his excellence, Richards was loved for a different kind of authenticity, a kind of authenticity that needed no polish and no masterful technique, just being himself, no matter how chaotic that self was. The press loved comparing them and every comparison left Clapton in an uncomfortable position.
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He could play better than Richards in every technical detail, but Richards had something no music school could teach, primal charisma that never failed to leave its mark on Clapton. He did not hate Richards, he respected him, but that very respect was the real pain because respecting someone who unintentionally showed you your own limits is never easy.
Clapton carried that with him for the rest of his life. If Richards challenged Clapton through lifestyle, then Pete Townshend challenged him on a level that hurt even more, ideology. Pete Townshend was the architect of The Who, a musician who did not just play music, but turned music into philosophy. He wrote albums that told stories in the style of rock opera.
He created works that were manifestos like Tommy and Quadrophenia. He used music to speak about his generation, about his society, about the cracks in the soul of a world changing too fast. And on stage, he smashed guitars. For Clapton, that act was almost a sacrilege. Understand why. For Clapton, the guitar was not a prop.
It was not a performance tool. It was the soul. It was the voice of things that could not be put into words. The blues masters he worshipped had cherished every note like they cherished every breath. Smashing a guitar was not art to Clapton, it was blasphemy. But the audience saw it differently. When Townshend threw the guitar onto the stage floor and smoke billowed up, the audience went wild.
They did not see destruction, they saw liberation, liberation from everything too orderly, too disciplined, too perfect. And in a world thirsting for something broken that had its own power. The debates in the press never ended. Who was the future of British rock, Clapton with his subtlety and emotional or Townshend with his vision and unlimited boldness? Every success of The Who was a question placed straight in Clapton’s face without needing words.
Was perfection enough? That question haunted him and I believe that is exactly why Pete Townshend left one of the deepest marks in Eric Clapton’s artistic life. Not because he was bad, but because he was good in a way Clapton could never be. There are rivals who make you try harder. Townshend was that kind of rival for Clapton.
And now we come to the moment that many believe changed Eric Clapton forever. Autumn of 1966, London, Regent Street Polytechnic. A man from Seattle, America stepped onto the stage. His name was Jimi Hendrix. And in just a few minutes that night, music history split into two clear parts, before Hendrix and after Hendrix.
Clapton was there. Hendrix picked up the guitar and played Howlin’ Wolf’s Killing Floor. That song is famously difficult. Even seasoned guitarists do not easily handle it at the required speed and emotion. But under Hendrix’s fingers, that song was not played. It was reborn a second time.
It was set on fire with a flame no one had ever seen before. The room fell completely silent and Clapton walked out without saying a word. People who were there that night said they saw something rare on Clapton’s face, something rarely seen on someone who was worshipped, complete astonishment. Not astonishment from pleasure, but astonishment from seeing something that went beyond every framework he had ever known. Let us pause and truly feel this.
When you have spent your entire life trying to become the best, when the whole city calls you God, and then on one ordinary evening you stand in a small room and realize there is someone playing at a level you have never reached, what does that feel like? It is not shame. It is much deeper than that. It is the feeling of someone who has just realized their map was never big enough to hold the entire world.
What is worth noting is that Clapton did not react with anger or jealousy. He reacted with acknowledgement. He publicly praised Hendrix as a genius. He admitted Hendrix’s influence on the way he saw music. He did not try to deny or downplay what he had just witnessed. That, in my opinion, shows Clapton’s greatness more than any guitar technique ever could.
But the wound was still there. Hendrix died in 1970 at the age of 27. Clapton continued living. And every time he picked up the guitar afterward, I believe there was always a small corner inside him that remembered that night at Regent Street when a stranger stepped onto the stage and changed his entire world with just one song. Hendrix was not Clapton’s enemy.
Hendrix was the greatest unintentional teacher in his life and neither of them ever knew it. This is the part I want you to listen to very slowly because this is no longer a story about music. This is a story about human beings, George Harrison, the man the whole world knows as the quiet Beatle, the man with a soul so sensitive that every note he played sounded like a confession.
Among everyone who passed through Clapton’s life, Harrison was the one he cherished the most, the one he trusted the most, and also the one he betrayed in a way that would be unforgivable by ordinary standards. The story began in 1968. Harrison invited Clapton into the studio to play guitar on the Beatles song While My Guitar Gently Weeps.
That was not an ordinary invitation. Harrison did not invite just anyone into the Beatles studio lightly. He invited Clapton because he trusted him, because he knew only Clapton’s guitar could say what his lyrics wanted to say, and Clapton played. The guitar sound in that song still makes people choke up to this day. Not because of technique, but because of emotion.
Like someone crying but not wanting anyone to see. But behind that beautiful musical moment was a secret that was quietly burning. Clapton loved Pattie Boyd, Harrison’s wife. This was not a passing feeling. This was obsession. Clapton wrote letters to Pattie. He begged. He threatened to use heroin if she did not return his feelings.
He poured everything that was tearing his heart apart into one song, and that song was called Layla. Listen to Layla again after you know this story. Not to enjoy the melody, but to listen to the voice of a man slowly dying from a love he knew he was never allowed to have. That was not music. That was a confession. Did Harrison know? Perhaps he knew more than he ever said.
But Harrison was not the kind of man who created public scenes. He did not confront. He did not accuse. He chose something rarer in moments like this. He chose dignity. In 1979, Pattie Boyd left Harrison and married Clapton. That marriage later fell apart, too. But what remained forever was not the marriage. It was the strange space between two men who had once been best friends and had gone through something most friendships cannot survive.
In 2001, George Harrison died of lung cancer. In 2002, the Concert for George was held at Royal Albert Hall to honor him. Clapton stood on stage that night. He picked up the guitar and played for the friend who had left. No one knows what he was thinking in that moment, but I believe that in that room filled with music and memories, there were things Clapton never put into words. I am sorry.
Thank you. I remember you. Not all wounds come from enemies. Sometimes the deepest wounds come from the person you cherish the most, and you have to live with that every day. Every time you pick up the guitar. Every time you listen to Layla again. Now we come to a completely different kind of confrontation. No friendship, no love, no moments playing music together in the studio, only two philosophies standing at opposite ends of a rope stretched so tight it could snap at any moment.
Roger Waters, the brain of Pink Floyd. This is the man who created The Dark Side of the Moon, The Wall, and Animals. Albums that were not just music, but indictments sent to the world. War, power, the alienation of human beings in modern society, the loneliness no one wants to admit but everyone knows. Waters did not play music for entertainment.
He played music to change things, and that was exactly the problem for Clapton. Clapton believed in something different. He believed music did not need a political mission. It did not need to be a weapon or a flag or a manifesto. The blues he loved, the blues of B.B. King and Muddy Waters, had already expressed all human suffering without needing any extra slogans. The guitar was enough.
Emotion was enough. These two viewpoints could not be reconciled, and in the decades that followed, as the world demanded more and more that artists speak out on every social issue, as every major event brought the expectation that celebrities must state their opinions, the gap between Clapton and Waters became clearer than ever.
Waters was not afraid of controversy. He welcomed it. He saw it as his responsibility. Every Pink Floyd concert was a lecture. Every album was a call to awaken. Clapton was not like that. He stepped on stage, played the guitar, and stepped down. Music was music. Politics was politics. But simple like that does not mean it was wrong.
I think the most interesting thing about this relationship is that it never exploded into any memorable public confrontation. There were no heated exchanges in the press. There were no direct criticisms. Just two men standing on opposite sides of a debate that the whole world had opinions about. And it was that very silence that said the most.
Because in that silence hit a question that Clapton probably asked himself many times during the nights alone with his guitar. Was he avoiding something or was he staying true? Was loyalty to pure emotion cowardice or courage in its own way? No one could answer for him. And that is also why Roger Waters is one of the most special ghosts in Eric Clapton’s life.
Not because of anything he did to Clapton, but because he raised questions that Clapton never had final answers for. And now we come to the person I mentioned right from the beginning. The person Clapton truly hated more than anyone else. Not because of jealousy. Not because of ambition. But because some wounds cut deeper than pride.
Jack Bruce, bassist, vocalist, a musician trained formally in the classical tradition, and half the soul of Cream, the band that together with Clapton and drummer Ginger Baker created one of the most ferocious and magical sounds of the 1960s. Cream was formed in 1966, and from the very first day, no one pretended this would be an easy relationship.
Imagine placing three giant egos in the same small studio and telling them to create music. Ginger Baker, who many in the industry called the most difficult drummer in rock history, was always ready to explode. Jack Bruce, with his powerful voice and musical personality that refused to submit to anyone. And Eric Clapton, who needed space and quiet to truly dive deep into emotion when he played.
Three people, three directions, one band, and they created a legend. Sunshine of Your Love, White Room, Crossroads, Badge. Those songs were not created in peace and brotherhood. They were created in arguments, in tension, in recording sessions that could explode into real fights at any moment. Bruce and Clapton clashed constantly about musical direction, about songwriting rights, about who was truly the guiding voice of Cream.
Bruce wanted freedom to explore. He wanted Cream to go beyond traditional blues. He wanted to experiment with sounds no one had ever heard. Clapton wanted to preserve the pure blues emotion he had spent his youth learning. ; ; And between them was Ginger Baker, who often made everything worse instead of better.
Clapton later admitted frankly that Cream exhausted him in every way. Not just physically from the endless tours, but mentally and emotionally exhausted. He felt trapped in a music machine that kept spinning faster and faster with no off switch. In 1968, Cream disbanded, even though they were at the peak of their career, even though their albums were selling like rockets all over the world, even though every night show filled stadiums with thousands of people, they still disbanded because there were things more important than success. And one
of those things was the ability to look each other in the eye without seeing exhaustion and anger. But the story did not end there. In 2005, nearly 40 years after Cream disbanded, the three men reunited at Royal Albert Hall in London. Clapton, Bruce, Baker. Together once more. Not with the arrogance and fire of youth, but with something completely different.
Maturity, appreciation, perhaps even regret for the years lost in arguments and conflict. They played and the music was still there. Still powerful. Still alive. Still strong enough to give listeners goosebumps. There are things time cannot destroy, and Cream’s music is one of them. Jack Bruce passed away in 2014.
I wonder what Clapton thought on the night he heard that news. Did he remember those afternoons in the studio when they argued until they could barely speak to each other? Did he remember Bruce’s bassline in Sunshine of Your Love? The opening riff that millions of people around the world know by heart? Did he cry? I think he did.
Because Bruce was not just Clapton’s rival. Bruce was someone who understood Clapton in a way very few others could. Both of them knew the smell of glory and its bitter taste. Both of them knew what happens when talent meets pressure and neither knows how to yield. Some collaborations leave harmony.
Some leave scars. Jack Bruce and Eric Clapton left both. We have now gone through the six men who walked into Eric Clapton’s life and left marks that could never be erased. Keith Richards, who reminded him that freedom cannot be learned through technique alone. Pete Townshend, who forced him to face the question of his own artistic identity.
Jimi Hendrix, who in one short night made him realize that greatness has no finishing point. George Harrison, who left in him a wound named guilt and love that could not be separated. Roger Waters, who raised questions about the responsibility of the artist that Clapton never fully answered. And Jack Bruce, the brother in music, the uncompromising rival, who together with Clapton created immortal musical moments in rock history.
Each of them hurt Clapton in their own way. But each of them also made him greater. Layla was born from the pain of a man who loved his friend’s wife and did not know what else to do except turn that pain into music. Tears in Heaven was born from a loss that cannot be described in words. When his four-year-old son fell from a 49th floor window and never woke up again.
The most beautiful songs in Clapton’s career were all written in the darkness. And that is what I want to leave with you today. In life, we often do everything we can to avoid pain, to avoid conflict, to avoid complicated relationships, to avoid moments when our pride is challenged or completely defeated.
But Eric Clapton’s story reminds us that sometimes the very things that seem to be destroying us are the things shaping us into the deepest and truest version of ourselves. The wounds never disappear, but they can become something else. Something more beautiful. Something that remains long after the person who carried them has gone. Eric Clapton is not God.
He never was God. He was simply a man. A man who grew up not knowing who he was, who found himself in music, who loved and lost and made mistakes and was challenged and was hurt and was left behind and kept on living. And every time he picked up the guitar and played, he carried all of that with him. All the wounds, all the memories, all the people who passed through his life and left marks that could never be erased.
That is why his music touches us, because it is not perfect, because it hurts, because hidden inside every note is a life that was truly lived, not just performed. And that is also why we still remember him. Not because he was God, but because he was human. In a world full of performances and images edited until they are perfect, someone who dares to live truly, dares to hurt truly, and dares to turn wounds into art is the rarest thing in life.
Eric Clapton is that kind of person, and that is why we will remember him forever. Thank you for taking the time to listen to this story with me today. If this video touched you in any way, please leave a comment below and let me know which one of these six people made you think the most. I really want to hear your answer.
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