CREAM - "White Room"

Cream
"White Room"
Single / B-side: "Those Were the Days" (UK) / "Passing the Time" (Australia)
Released: September 1968
Album: Wheels of Fire (Released: July 1968 (US) / 9 August 1968 (UK))
Writers: Jack Bruce, Pete Brown
Label: Atco (US), Polydor (UK)

"White Room" is a song by British rock band Cream, written by Jack Bruce & Pete Brown. Drummer Ginger Baker claims to have added the distinctive 5/4 opening to what had been a 4/4 composition. It originally appeared on the US release of their double album "Wheels of Fire" in July 1968 and was released as a single in September 1968. This was released as a single after Cream had broken up. It did better in the US than in England, since Cream had caught on in the States. It is one of their most famous songs, along with "Sunshine of Your Love". This song was placed at #376 on the 2004 (and its 2010 update) list of Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.


Cream's single, "White Room", 1968

Cream - "White Room" (single, 1968)

The recording of "White Room" reportedly began in July 1967 in London at the initial session for Cream’s as-yet-unnamed third album and work continued at Atlantic Studios in New York in December and finished during three separate sessions to complete the studio part of Wheels of Fire; February, April and June 1968, all at Atlantic Studios.


The lyric of the song is about depression and hopelessness, but the setting is an empty apartment. The lyrics were written by a beat poet named Pete Brown, who was a friend of Cream bass player Jack Bruce. Brown also wrote the words for "Sunshine Of Your Love" and "I Feel Free."



Cream's single, "White Room" (1968, France cover)

Cream - "White Room" (music video)

Eric Clapton refused to play this after leaving Cream until 1985, when Paul Shaffer urged him to play it while he was sitting in with the band on Late Night With David Letterman. That same year, Clapton played it at Live Aid. Clapton also performed the song at his Royal Albert Hall concert series and with Sheryl Crow at Crow's 1999 concert in Central Park.


Bruce recorded a new, Latin-influenced version on his 2001 album Shadows In The Air. Clapton played on this as well as his new recording of "Sunshine Of Your Love."



Eric Clapton - "White Room" (live)

Line-up / Musicians:

Jack Bruce - vocal, and bass
Eric Clapton - guitars, wah-wah pedal
Ginger Baker - drums, timpani
Felix Pappalardi - violas

Link / Review:

wikipedia: White Room 
songfacts: White Room by Cream
allmusic: White Room - Cream 
nme: 100 Best Songs of the 1960s - Cream "White Room"
reasontorock: White Room - Reason to Rock
rollingstone: Cream, "White Room" - 500 Greatest Songs of All Time





GENESIS - "Firth of Fifth"

Genesis
"Firth of Fifth"
Album: Selling England By the Pound
Released: 3 August 1973
Writers: Tony Banks, Phil Collins, Peter Gabriel, Steve Hackett, Mike Rutherford
Label: Charisma

Firth of Fifth is the third track on the album Selling England by the Pound by British progressive rock band Genesis.


Genesis's album: Selling England by the Pound, 1973

Genesis - Firth of Fifth (from the album Selling England by the Pound)

The title is a pun on the estuary of the River Forth in Scotland, commonly known as the Firth of Forth.

The song starts out with a classical-style grand piano introduction played by Tony Banks. This section is rhythmically complex, with certain bars in the rare time signatures of 13/16 and 15/16, alternating with bars of 2/4. This section changes tempo and segues into the first section of lyrics, accompanied by Phil Collins on drums and a chord progression between the Hammond organ (Banks) and guitar (Steve Hackett). The song then features a flute melody played by Peter Gabriel, followed by a synth-driven instrumental section which restates the opening piano theme. Hackett then plays the flute melody using violin-like guitar tones. Peter Gabriel then sings a brief section of lyrics before Banks concludes the song on piano.

"Firth of Fifth" is featured on their second compilation album, Platinum Collection (2004). Although it is credited to the entire band, Banks would later claim that much of the music was developed from his own ideas. Banks wrote most of "Firth of Fifth" on his own, and had presented it to the group for Foxtrot, but it was rejected. He reworked some sections of the song for Selling England..., where it drew a more positive reception. .Banks' authorship has been confirmed by Mike Rutherford and Steve Hackett, who called it "one of Tony's finest." Banks and Rutherford wrote the lyrics. Banks would later state in Hugh Fielder's The Book of Genesis that it was one of the worst sets of lyrics he has been involved with.


Genesis - Selling England by the Pound, 1974

Genesis - "Firth of Fith" (Vinyl LP)

From autumn 1973 onwards, the song's piano intro was omitted during live performances. Banks felt he could not do the intro justice on the RMI electric piano he used on stage instead of a proper piano, as the RMI was not touch-sensitive.

The song appeared in instrumental form (the middle keyboard and guitar solos) as part of the 1992 We Can't Dance tour and 1998 Calling All Stations tour, as well as in 2007's Turn It On Again: The Tour. The instrumental segues directly into "I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe)" in 1992 and 2007 versions. It also appears on Steve Hackett's solo album of re-worked Genesis songs, Watcher of the Skies: Genesis Revisited(1996), with lead vocal by John Wetton, as well as on Hackett's live album "The Tokyo Tapes". The song was also included as an encore on his Genesis Revisited tour (2013-2014), featured on the live album Genesis Revisited: Live at Hammersmith.


Genesis - Firth of Fifth (Montreal. 1974)

Genesis 1974
In 2009 the DJ Absolut sampled parts from the guitar solo for the song "Flashback Memories" for the mixtape "Blood On Chef's Apron" with MC's The Game and Raekwon.

"...'Firth of Fifth', a refined piece, soft and ellegant. Piano intro provides a great moment but vocals and guitar solo part are also amazing..." 
(Progarchives review by: Atkingani)

Line-up / Musicians:
Tony Banks – acoustic & electric pianos, organ, mellotron, synthesizers, 12-string guitar
Phil Collins – drums, percussion, backing vocals
Peter Gabriel – lead vocals, flute, oboe, percussion
Steve Hackett – electric guitar, nylon guitar
Mike Rutherford – 12-string guitar, bass guitar, bass pedals,

Links / Reviews:
wikipedia: Firth of Fifth