This 42-minute, eight-song live album, cut at Croydon late in 1969, is not only the peak of
Delaney & Bonnie's output, but also the nexus in the recording and performing careers of
Eric Clapton and
George Harrison.
On Tour features
Clapton performing the same blend of country, blues, and gospel that would characterize his own early solo ventures in 1970. He rises to the occasion with dazzling displays of virtuosity throughout, highlighted by a dizzying solo on "I Don't Want to Discuss It," a long, languid part on "Only You Know and I Know," and searing, soulful lead on the beautifully harmonized "Coming Home." Vocally,
Delaney & Bonnie were never better than they come off on this live set, and the 11-piece band sounds tighter musically than a lot of quartets that were working at the time, whether they're playing extended blues or ripping through a medley of
Little Richard songs. It's no accident that the band featured here would become
Clapton's own studio outfit for his debut solo LP, or that the core of this group --
Bobby Whitlock,
Carl Radle, and
Jim Gordon -- would transform itself into
Derek & the Dominoes as well; or that most of the full band here would also serve as the group that played with
George Harrison on
All Things Must Pass and at The Concert for Bangladesh, except that the playing here (not to mention the recording) is better. Half the musicians on this record achieved near-superstar status less than a year later, and although the reasons behind their fame didn't last, listening to their work decades later, it all seems justified. ~ Bruce Eder