Tuesday, March 05, 2024

Derek and the Dominos - One More Chance (1971)


Derek and the Dominos released their first album, Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs, in November 1970 through Polydor Records. The band had formed after lead guitarist, vocalist and main composer Eric Clapton met keyboardist and vocalist Bobby Whitlock, bassist Carl Radle, and drummer Jim Gordon while on tour with Delanie and Bonnie, and decided to form a group with those three, having just quit his last group, Blind Faith. The group's first recordings were made in May 1970, as a backing band to George Harrison in his triple All Things Must Pass album, with Phil Spector as the producer. From there, the band recorded their first single, with Spector as the producer (the single, "Tell the Truth" b/w "Roll it Over", ended up being canceled before release), played their first gigs, and stayed at Clapton's house to write the material for their first record. Once they'd gathered up some material, the band went to Miami's Criteria Studios, met guitarist Duane Allman, and well, the rest is history. What we got was one of the best double albums in the history of rock and roll, and probably Clapton's finest hour as a singer, guitarist, and composer. Following a tour (without Allman, who decided to stay with the Allman Brothers) that dragged on until December 1970, the band was looking forward to recording a follow-up to the Layla album, and cementing their reputation as one of the best live acts around.

However, not everything was roses within the band. All four of them were dealing with substance abuse issues and addiction, while drummer Jim Gordon was especially hard to deal with, mostly due to his then-undiagnosed schizophrenia in addition to his drug issues. There were also some creative issues at stake, more notably because Gordon wanted to write some of the band's repertoire, an idea that wasn't well-received by Whitlock and Clapton. It was with such tension and fracture that they entered Olympic Studios in London, in March of 1971, to record what would be the follow-up to Layla, and what we know now as the band's final recording sessions. They managed to record some 14 backing tracks, some of them with promise, others just meandering jams, and six more-or-less finished songs: "One More Chance", "Snake Lake Blues", "High", "Evil" (a Willie Dixon cover), "Mean Old Frisco" (also a cover, by Arthur Crudup) and the best of the bunch, "Got to Get Better in a Little While", which they'd also debuted live back in October 1970. However, the band's issues got the best of them, leaving all of this material unfinished and breaking up the band by that July. After the sessions inevitably broke down, the band splintered, with Gordon going on to tour with Traffic, Radle going back to being a session musician, Whitlock releasing solo albums, and Eric more or less going into hiding until 1974.

But what if Derek and the Dominos had finished their second album? Luckily for us, the Crossroads box set of 1988 already features a side's worth of material that comes from the 1971 Olympic sessions, five songs that give us a blueprint as to what that album would sound like. With that, all we have left to do is to assemble a second side, giving us a roughly ten-song-long album. When it comes to what can be included, it's ok to include solo Clapton or Whitlock songs, but they have to have a clear connection to the band and not simply feature other members of the Dominos, as many solo Bobby Whitlock songs did. Layla outtakes are fair game as well, so long as they too have a clear connection to the second album or were still performed live after the album was released. "Devil Road", a Renée Armand song with the foursome as her backing band, will not be included here, as it wouldn't really make sense to have a solo spot by someone outside the band on their album, even though this is quite a riveting performance of the song. Also, none of the very unfinished instrumentals from the sessions that can be found in bootlegs such as Substance will be considered, as they're nowhere near the level we'd expect from a Derek and the Dominos album, sounding much more like meandering jams than the finished songs we found on Layla. With that out of the way, here's what our album looks like:

Got to Get Better in a Little While (Crossroads)
Evil (Crossroads)
One More Chance (Crossroads)
Mean Old Frisco (Crossroads)
Snake Lake Blues (Crossroads)
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High (There's One in Every Crowd)
Mean Old World (Crossroads)
Country Life (Bobby Whitlock)
Roll it Over (Crossroads)
Motherless Children (Crossroads)

Download link:

Clapton during rehearsals for the Concert for Bangladesh, August 1971.

Side one, as presented here, was issued in that very same order in the Crossroads box set in 1988, comprising the only five completed masters from the March/April 1971 Olympic Studios sessions. With two blues covers, an instrumental, and two new songs, it's certainly not much to write home about, but it has its moments. With this side of music already put together for us, we are halfway there to getting a second Derek and the Dominos record. But the second half will be a lot more difficult, as we've just about run out of completed studio tracks. Our first inclusion for side two will be one of the easiest, "High" from There's One in Every Crowd. It was first recorded during the '71 Olympic sessions as an instrumental backing track, and resurrected by Clapton for his third solo album in a version with vocals. Since we already have an instrumental on the album, I'll be including the vocal version of the song, even though it only features Clapton and Radle of the Dominos. Another song that later made a Clapton solo album, but had its origins within the Dominos was his cover of the Blind Willie Johnson song "Motherless Children", a staple of the Dominos' late 1970 gigs. Unfortunately, no good quality live recordings exist of the band performing the song, so we will have to substitute the solo Clapton version, which uses the exact same arrangement but again only features him and bassist Radle of the band.

Since keyboard player Bobby Whitlock co-wrote more than half of the Layla album, and had a solo lead vocal on "Thorn Tree in the Garden", it's only fair that he be awarded the same opportunity here. So filling his lead vocal quota is "Country Life", a song he recorded for his first solo album in early 1971 with Domino Carl Radle on bass. It was one of the few new songs the Dominos played live in their final tours of late 1970, which makes me think it would have been a contender for their second album, given the little material they had. The same opportunity will not be extended to drummer Jim Gordon, who recorded several demos in 1971 with songs such as "It's Hard to Find a Friend" and "Till I See You Again". Even though he contributed the famous piano coda to "Layla", none of that material comes even remotely close to the level of that piano part, and since he didn't write any songs on their first album, I doubt he'd get any on this second album as well. By now, we're scraping the bottom of the barrel, and we'll take Layla outtakes "Roll it Over" and "Mean Old World", and make them part of the record as well. Our reasoning is again taken from their live repertoire, as by late 1970 they were still strongly featured in their setlists, which leads me to believe Clapton hadn't given up on the two yet.

Clocking in at 41 minutes with two roughly twenty-minute long sides, One More Chance is a clear step down from the heights of the Layla album, but is nonetheless a strong record that actually points the way quite clearly to Clapton's solo career in its mix of laid back originals and choice cover cuts. And given that Eric spent 1972 and 1973 as a recluse who barely even touched a guitar, getting this album instead would have been a great thing, its actual quality notwithstanding. As for a lead single, the obvious and easy choice is "Got to Get Better in a Little While", by far the greatest of the finished songs, and already a live staple by the time it made it to the studio. I can see it getting quite a lot of airplay on FM radio in the 1970s, and pushing the album towards some pretty respectable sales. The artwork is another painting by the same artist who provided the Layla artwork, painter Fradsen de Shomberg. Instead of a lovely blonde girl, the artwork here has some darker undertones, to reflect Clapton's downward spiral toward heroin addiction and the intra-band conflicts that had become commonplace by then. It's a shame Clapton's greatest band only lasted for an album and a half before collapsing in a haze of drugs and in-fighting, as given the level of their live performance and the greatness of the Layla album, the Dominos certainly deserved at least one more chance.

Sources:
- Eric Clapton - Crossroads [Box Set]
- Eric Clapton - There's One in Every Crowd
- Bobby Whitlock - Bobby Whitlock

8 comments:

  1. There are lot of attempts at this reconstruction, but most have live tracks, which kind of defeats the purpose. I like your idea but I would add the three "Derek" songs from Clapton's first album, Blues Power, Bottle Of Red Wine and Let It Rain, and the One In Every Crowd outtake It Hurts Me Too, which is a heavy blues with dual guitars like Have You Ever Loved A Woman. Maybe get rid of the average Bobby Whitlock song and the instrumental for length. Just a thought. Love your work.

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    1. Hey, thanks!

      I always saw the first Clapton album as the debut-in-disguise by the Dominos, so I figured I wouldn't mess with it. The foursome (plus guests) do play on the whole album.

      About the Bobby Whitlock song, while I agree you could swap it out for something else, I really don't see band politics allowing that. Whitlock co-wrote nearly every original on Layla and had a lead vocal in "Thorn Tree in the Garden", so given the decline of his collaboration with Eric, I doubt he'd be willing to give up his lead spot....

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    2. Fair enough. It might be worth swapping the unfinished Gotta Get Better the 2020 mix which adds Bobby Whitlock's vocals. I really like It Hurts me too (although it needs a trim). It sounds more like the Dominos than most of Clapton's solo stuff. The other One In Every Crowd heavy blues outtake Fool Like Me is also worth considering.

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    3. I like the cover. You can tell it was by the same artist. Following your comments, I went and had another listen to the Clapton album. It is very uneven and the 'Derek" songs are the best of the bunch. They fit better on your compilation than on the spotty Clapton album IMHO.

      Here's my mix:
      Got To Get Better (2020 remix with Bobby Whitlock overdub)
      Roll It Over
      Blues Power (crossfade into Fool Like Me, edited after solo)
      Bottle Of Red Wine
      One More Chance
      Mean Old World (Albums Forgotten Reconstruction 2.0 short mix) crossfade into It Hurts Me Too (edited after second solo)
      High
      Motherless Children
      Let It Rain with about a minute of Moody Jam (Albums That Don't Exist) as a coda like Layla

      Runs about 48 minutes. Too bad if Bobby's feeling are hurt by dropping his song! Keep up the good work.

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  2. This was on my to-do list so you've saved me a lot of time! By the way what is the reason you used that painting as the cover?

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    1. I know, it's really ugly!

      But I posted the other cover I made for this (still titled Can't Sleep at Night) elsewhere back in 2020 and somebody else used it for their blog, so I decided to come up with something new.

      That's when I found this painting by the same guy who painted the Layla cover. And since having two paintings by the same artist would really convey the sense that this is Layla, Part Two, I went with it even though it's kind of unsettling looking.

      I was even thinking of calling this One More Chance and Other Assorted Breakup Songs! :D

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    2. Thanks - you inspired me to look him up - very interesting style.

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  3. Have you thought about having a go at Clapton's One In Every Crowd? it's very uneven and has horrible sequencing (the first two songs are very weak) but has a great blues album buried inside it.
    Give Me Strength '74--'75 and The Lost Polydor Tapes are great sources for the material. I included a couple of blues from Ocean Boulevard that seem to fit nicely with album's tone.

    Here's my mix:
    Side 1
    Better Make it Through Today (Lost Polydor alternate)
    Little Rachel
    The Sky Is Crying
    Steady Rollin' Man (Ocean Boulevard)
    Fool Like Me (Give Me Strength)

    Side 2
    I Can't Hold Out (Ocean Boulevard)
    I Found A Love #2 (Lost Polydor)
    Don't Blame Me (Extended, Lost Polydor)
    High
    It Hurts Me Too (Give Me Strength)

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