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  1. Money and Cigarettes is the eighth solo studio album by Eric Clapton, recorded after his first rehabilitation from alcoholism. Produced by Clapton and Tom Dowd with, apart from Albert Lee, a new backing band of veteran session musicians including Donald "Duck" Dunn, Roger Hawkins, and Ry Cooder.

  2. Money and Cigarettes ist das achte Studioalbum des britischen Gitarristen Eric Clapton. Es wurde 1983 veröffentlicht. Auf dem Cover ist er mit einer Zigarette und einer schmelzenden Fender Stratocaster zu sehen. Den Namen für dieses Album wählte Clapton, weil ihm nach seinem ersten Alkoholentzug nichts außer Geld und Zigaretten ...

  3. 3. Feb. 2016 · Prior to these sessions, Clapton had split with all but two members of his previous working group, keeping Albert Lee and Chris Stainton while adding Ry Cooder and sessions aces Donald "Duck"...

  4. 27. Aug. 2014 · Money And Cigarettes (the title alludes to what Clapton felt remained after losing alcohol) is, fittingly, a clean-sounding record featuring originals, a few blues covers and the professionally penned hit, “I’ve Got A Rock N’ Roll Heart.” The backing band is his tightest group yet, with Ry Cooder, Duck Dunn, Roger Hawkins and ...

  5. Long-time producer Tom Dowd and Clapton assemble a great bunch of musicians (including fellow guitar-greats Ry Cooder and Albert Lee) and lay down a solid, well-honed bunch of tunes. Highlights include the beautiful ballad, "Pretty Girl," the Clapton-Cooder slide workout on "Everybody Oughta Make a Change," and the powerful, chugging groove of ...

  6. 28. Feb. 2023 · The most inspired change was to bring in slide guitar maestro Ry Cooder. Clapton and Cooder clicked, especially on the album’s opening track, a version of Sleepy John Estes’ Everybody Oughta Make A Change. The pair also worked well together on The Shape You’re In, a song in which Clapton reportedly bemoans his wife Pattie Boyd ...

  7. Eric Clapton. "I've still got something left to say," Clapton sings on "Ain't Going Down," and you don't have to take his word for it: The work of an A-list blues band (that's Ry Cooder doubling on guitar), Money and Cigarettes finds Slowhand returning from a stint in rehab as charged as ever.