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Paul Sexton
· posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
Cream Disraeli Gears album cover

At first, to some, it was just the B-side of a new single by the most happening power rock trio of the day. Soon, we were realizing that Cream’s “Tales of Brave Ulysses” was quite a strange brew of its own. Described by Eric Clapton as the first song he ever wrote, the track unexpectedly took Greek mythology to record players around the world.


After a first appearance on 45 with “Wrapping Paper,” Cream ended 1966 with the double punch of a second Jack Bruce/Pete Brown composition, the dynamic “I Feel Free,” and its debut album Fresh Cream. Incessant touring throughout 1967 left little time for recording, and it would almost be the year-end before Bruce, Clapton, and Ginger Baker unveiled their second LP, Disraeli Gears.

But in June, they bridged the gap with another indelible single: “Strange Brew,” featuring Clapton’s best Albert King-style blues groove, was backed by the dark, mysterious “Tales of Brave Ulysses.” For the B-side track, Clapton teamed up with Martin Sharp, a subtly influential Australian poet, writer, and visual artist. It was, wrote Clapton in his 2007 autobiography, “the start of a long friendship and a very fruitful collaboration.” They went on to share a studio in King’s Road, Chelsea. “Martin was a very gentle man,” he reflected, “with an insatiable appetite for life and new experiences.”

Listen to Disraeli Gears on Apple Music and Spotify.

The pair had been introduced one night at the Speakeasy Club in London, where Sharp told Clapton he had written a poem that he thought might be suitable for a song. “I asked him to show me the words,” recalled Clapton. “He wrote them down on a napkin and gave them to me. They began: ‘You thought the leaden winter would bring you down forever…’ ”

Clapton had been working on a melody inspired by one of the most enduring hits of 1966, The Lovin’ Spoonful’s “Summer in the City,” and a recent trip to the Greek islands. He married it to Sharp’s lyrics and, aided by his adventurous and early use of the wah-wah pedal, created one of the era’s great moments in psych-blues. “It’s funny actually,” Clapton said in a 1968 interview with Hit Parader, “because I’ve been playing guitar and working in groups for about five years and that’s the first song I ever wrote in my life.”

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Whether Cream fans knew it or not, “Tales of Brave Ulysses” told the story of a key figure from Greek mythology: Odysseus, also known by his Latin name Ulysses. A hero of the Trojan War and of Homer’s epic poem The Odyssey, his story was also reimagined by James Joyce in his novel Ulysses. “At the time we wrote the song, there was a novel by James Joyce which was made into a film,” Clapton told Hit Parader. “It was getting a lot of publicity and the whole thing clicked. People were connecting our song with the film.”

Listen to Disraeli Gears on Apple Music and Spotify.

In the same interview, Clapton revealed that the wah-wah sound was something of an accident, by way of his encounter with a Vox pedal. “The day that we cut that recording, I was walking through 48th Street in New York and there’s this shop called Manny’s and they gave me this thing,” Clapton recalled. “They said try it out. I’ve never in my life used any kind of modification or gimmicks. I’ve never used a fuzz box, for instance. I just thought what a drag but it’s worth a try. I used it on the record and it worked.”

The New Musical Express review of the single duly raved about “Strange Brew,” but it also reserved a paragraph of praise for “Ulysses.” “A complex enigmatic lyric combines with a pounding walloping beat,” wrote Derek Johnson. “Bit more psychedelic than the topside, but not nauseatingly so. Very interesting item.”

Early in the two-month UK chart run of “Strange Brew” and its unusually literary flipside, which peaked at No. 17, Cream (or The Cream, as they were still often referred to) were part of a dazzling bill at London’s Saville Theatre with the Jeff Beck Group and John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers. Nick Jones’ Melody Maker review noted that “Tales Of Brave Ulysses” arrived “swooping from the sky” into the impressive set.

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When the Disraeli Gears album arrived in November 1967, featuring both “Strange Brew” and “Tales of Brave Ulysses Ulysses,” who should be the designer of its memorably day-glo cover art but Martin Sharp? He used a publicity shot of Cream and adorned it in lurid shades of red, orange, and green, some of them borrowed from Victorian decorative engravings.

“Tales of Brave Ulysses” inspired an interesting cover version in 1969 when it was remade by Rotary Connection, the group featuring a young Minnie Riperton, for the Songs album, released on the jazz subsidiary of Chess Records, Cadet. The Disraeli Gears LP had clearly made its mark on the Chicago group, as Songs included two other Disraeli Gears tracks: “Sunshine Of Your Love” and “We’re Going Wrong.” It was a fitting acknowledgement of a mythological rock landmark.

Buy Disraeli Gears on vinyl and CD here.

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0 Replies · 16 views
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Last reply · posted in 🎼 Music Production
seriously though, it’s like every time there’s a slow piano and some soft rain sound effects in the background, the lyrics are all ‘oh the pain of existence’ or whatever. rain is just... rain. lowkey sometimes it ruins your shoes, sometimes it’s nice for napping, but it doesn’t need to symbolize heartbreak every time. i get that it’s atmospheric but come on, can we have a rain song that’s just about how inconvenient it is to carry an umbrella or how it makes traffic worse? idk, maybe i’m overthinking this but it feels like there’s a missed opportunity for some dry humor (pun not intended... ok maybe a little intended). also, while we’re here, why does thunder always sound so fake in these tracks? like, you can tell it’s just some stock sound effect. cant we get some realism here? 🤦
1 Replies · 0 views
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· posted in ☕ General Discussion
ok so i was just thinking about this because i passed one of those big dinosaur statue places on a drive last weekend and didnt stop even though i always say i will like WHY do they exist and WHO is keeping them alive do people actually go or is it just for instagram now. ive only ever stopped at one, this place with a massive ball of twine (yeah i know, dad joke incoming: "it was a real twist") and it was so underwhelming but also kinda great? theres something about these weird crumbling spots that just feels like theyre holding onto a past no one cares about anymore. anyway share yours did it live up to the hype or was it just a letdown wrapped in novelty. or do you just drive by like me and think "next time, for sure"
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i swear i just bought this new case supposedly with "ultra quiet cooling" and the fans sound like a damn airplane taking off but my cpu temps are still creeping up halfway through a game. like what is the point of all this airflow design if it doesnt actually cool anything?? is it just for show or something? i get that you need good cooling for high end builds but it feels like theyre prioritizing looks over function at this point my last build from like 5 years ago was quieter and kept temps lower with way less fuss sometimes i think about switching to passive cooling just to avoid the noise but then i remember how bad that was back in the day too. idk man it just feels like we shouldve figured this out by now. ...
4 Replies · 2 views
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Last reply · posted in 🌐 Websites & Content Creation
its like every site wants to look edgy or something but honestly its just harder to read sometimes i get that its supposed to save battery on oled screens and all that but if im squinting to see text at 2pm then whats the point. also why is there always some tiny setting buried in a menu to switch it back instead of just asking when you first visit. half the time it feels like theyre trying to force a 'mood' instead of just letting people read their content.
8 Replies · 4 views
Kennysplash
Last reply · posted in 🐾 Pets & Animals
I wonder how pet lovers actually make the decision to choose what they want to go for. It was not an easy decision for me trying to choose between a cat and a dog.
I like cats because they require less care, but I also like dogs because of how close they can get to me.

I eventually got a dog.
Which one would you go for?
7 Replies · 5 views
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Last reply · posted in 🎤 DJ Booth
like ‘vaporwave nomad’ or ‘neon horizon’ or whatever. i get it, you want to stand out, but it feels like theyre all pulling from the same hat of edgy buzzwords. whats wrong with just being ‘steve’ or something normal. anyway i dont even know if this is a real complaint or if im just annoyed because i saw a flyer for a show with a dj called ‘quantum drift’ and it made me roll my eyes so hard i almost sprained something.
3 Replies · 0 views
S
Last reply · posted in 🤘 Rock & Alternative
ngl idk if its the reverb or the lyrics but it hits different. like that one track by *silver wave revival* (anyone else listen to them?? theyre so underrated) where the chorus just screams “we’re sinking slow” over and over... i cant help but think of tidal waves and rogue planets crashing into earth... maybe its just me being dramatic but i love how rock can tap into that weird mix of anger and melancholy and scale?? like the music is somehow both personal and cosmic at the same time. (side note: did yall know a lot of early alt bands were inspired by the voyager golden record?? theres this whole backstory about how they wanted their music to feel like messages to the universe lol)

anyway whats a song that makes you feel like youre part of something bigger than yourself??
2 Replies · 0 views
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Last reply · posted in ☕ General Discussion
rainy weekends are THE mood... do you go full cozy mode, tackle chores, or dive into something creative?? curious how everyone else leans!
What's the best way to spend a rainy weekend?
6 votes total
9 Replies · 51 views
S
· posted in 🎼 Music Production
like yeah the waves and seagulls are nice or whatever but have these people never seen a storm? or sharks? or literally any documentary about how deep and terrifying teh ocean is? it's not some chill vacation spot, it's where things go to get eaten or lost forever. like, maybe i just think too much about this but it bugs me. also dont even get me started on songs that use whale sounds, thats a whole other rant
0 Replies · 0 views
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Last reply · posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
its pouring out, youre stuck indoors how do you make the most of it? lazy day? productive spree? go on, pick your rain vibe
whats the best way to spend a rainy weekend?
0 votes total
8 Replies · 4 views
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