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Eric Clapton - The Definitive 24 Nights- Rock 1... Site

If you own the original 24 Nights CD or VHS, throw them away (or donate them). Here is why the 2023/2024 Definitive edition supersedes everything:

By 1990, Eric Clapton was already a certified rock deity. He had survived the tumultuous highs and lows of the 1960s and 1970s, reinvented himself as a solo pop-rock icon in the 1980s, and was looking for a grand way to showcase his musical versatility. The concept was simple yet incredibly ambitious: set up a massive residency at the Royal Albert Hall and change the band format every few nights.

"The Definitive 24 Nights" box set features the "Rock" portion of Eric Clapton's 1990–1991 Royal Albert Hall residency, showcasing high-energy performances with a band including Nathan East and Phil Collins. This expanded, remastered collection offers nearly six hours of music, including 35 previously unreleased performances and a Dolby Atmos mix. For more details, visit Rhino . Eric Clapton - The Definitive 24 Nights- Rock 1...

The "Rock" portion of the collection features Clapton backed by a high-energy band, including notable musicians like Phil Collins on drums and Nathan East

For the casual fan, the 2-CD/1-Blu-ray Rock edition is the sweet spot. It removes the orchestral fluff and the blues deep cuts, giving you 90 minutes of pure electric guitar fury. If you own the original 24 Nights CD

"Eric Clapton - The Definitive 24 Nights - Rock" features Phil Collins

Royal Albert Hall, London

Detail the differences between the band and the 4-piece Band shows.

To keep the material fresh and push his artistic boundaries, Clapton divided these shows into distinct stylistic formats: blues-centric nights, orchestral collaborations, and high-octane rock sets. The Definitive 24 Nights - Rock highlights the best of those rock-oriented evenings, fully restoring heavily requested, previously unreleased audio and video from the vault. The Lineup: Rock's Ultimate Powerhouse The concept was simple yet incredibly ambitious: set

In 1990, Eric Clapton achieved something unprecedented: he played 18 consecutive nights at the Royal Albert Hall, breaking the previous record. The following year, he broke his own record by playing 24 nights. These were not merely concerts; they were a celebration of his career, featuring different band configurations to showcase different facets of his musical personality: Tight rock performances.

The disc opens not with a gentle intro, but with Clapton’s Les Paul plugged directly into a cranked Marshall. The famous riff, borrowed from Robert Johnson via Cream, is played at breakneck speed. What sets this version apart is the tension. Clapton’s vocal is snarling, almost incomprehensible—he’s not telling a story, he’s exorcising a demon. The first solo is a whirlwind of pentatonic flurries, but it’s the second solo where he quotes “Catfish Blues” and slides into harmonic overtones. It establishes the rule for the night: he is here to play, not to croon.

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