From: Harlan L Thompson
ANYDAY- Derek and the Dominos
D D/C G Bb
Heard you talking and I thought I heard you say
D D/C G Bb
Yeah, "Please leave me alone
D D/C G Bb
Nothing in this world can make me stay
D D/C G Bb C G7 D
I'd rather go back, I'd rather go back home"
CHORUS:
G C G7 D G C G7 D
But if you believe in me
G C G7 D G C G7 D
Like I believe in you
G C G7 D G C G7 D
We could have a love so true
G C G7 D
We would go on endlessly
G C G C Am7
And I know anyday, anyday, I will see you smile
G C G C Am7 D7
Any way, any way, (if) only for a little while
Well someday baby, I know you're gonna need me
When this whole world has got you down
I'll be right here, so woman call me
And I'll never ever let you down ...CHORUS
Break the glass and twist the knife into yourself
You've got to be a fool to understand
To bring your woman back home
After she's left you for another
You've got to be a, you've got to be a man ...CHORUS
(from Layla, 1970)
(sent by Harlan at harlant@hawaii.edu)
Anyday - Eric Clapton - La Palestre 5 May 2006
This song is pretty song , from the album Layla and other assorted love songs
Eric Clapton Paris Bercy 28-05-2006
the Band:
Eric Clapton - guitar, vocals
Doyle Bramhall II - guitar
Derek Trucks - guitar
Chris Stainton - keyboards
Tim Carmon - keyboards
Willie Weeks - bass
Steve Jordan - drums
The Kick Horns (Simon Clarke, Roddy Lorimer, Tim Sanders)
Michelle John - backing vocals
Sharon White - backing vocals
Here is the playlist:
Pretending
So Tired
Got To Get Better In A Little While
Old Love (with Robert Cray)
I Shot The Sheriff
Anyday
sit down set
Back Home
I Am Yours
Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out
Running On Faith
Milkcow Blues
After Midnight
Little Queen Of Spades
Motherless Children
Wonderful Tonight
Layla
Cocaine
Encore:Crossroads
Opening Act: The Robert Cray Band
EC - Anyday (5) - Birmingham, AL. Oct-18-2006
Eric Clapton and his band: BJCC Birmingham, AL. October 18, 2006
Anyday - Derek and the Dominos
From the Layla album.
Derek Trucks Band w/Susan Tedeschi: Anyday (live 2006)
10/28/2006, New York City.
http://www.derektrucks.com/tour_info.html
Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs is a blues-rock album by Derek and the Dominos. It is now consistently regarded as one of the greatest rock and roll albums of all time, and one of the high points in Eric Clapton's career.
It was released in December of 1970; critical reception at the time was mixed, and it had mixed sales success. It peaked at #16 on Billboard's Pop Albums chart but, remarkably, in Britain it never made the charts at all.
In 2003 the TV network VH1 named Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs the 89th greatest album of all time. In 2003, the album was ranked number 115 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.
The group which created Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs grew out of Clapton's frustration with the hype associated with the supergroups Cream, and the short-lived Blind Faith. After their dissolution, he joined Delaney and Bonnie and Friends, whom he had come to know while they were the opening act for Blind Faith, for a British tour.
After that band also split up, a Delaney and Bonnie alumnus, Bobby Whitlock, joined up with Clapton; the two spent some months writing a number of songs "just to have something to play", as Whitlock put it. These songs would later make up the bulk of the material on Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs.
After a tour with Joe Cocker, some more of the personnel from Delaney and Bonnie joined up with Clapton; he attempted to avoid the limelight in a group dubbed Derek and the Dominos, and booked a British tour of small clubs. The group's name had reportedly resulted from a gaffe made by the announcer at their first concert, who mispronounced the band's provisional name -- "Eric & The Dynamos" -- as "Derek & The Dominos". In fact, Eric chose the name "Derek and the Dominos" because he did not want his name and celebrity to get in the way of maintaining a "band" context.
After the tour, they headed for Criteria Studios in Miami to record an album.
The other source for Layla was Clapton's personal life: he had fallen in love with Patti Boyd, the wife of his friend George Harrison. Not even heroin, which Clapton had then begun to use, could dull the pain. Dave Marsh, in The Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock and Roll, wrote that "there are few moments in the repertoire of recorded rock where a singer or writer has reached so deeply into himself that the effect of hearing them is akin to witnessing a murder, or a suicide... to me, 'Layla' is the greatest of them."
Clapton had long admired the work of Duane Allman, which he knew from recordings by Aretha Franklin and others, and he had long wanted to meet him. Allman, like many other musicians of the day, revered Clapton, and wanted to watch him record. Dowd, as a producer for both, was in a position to make it happen.
When Clapton heard from Dowd that the Allman Brothers Band were due to play in Miami on August 26, 1970, he insisted on going to see their show, saying "You mean that guy who plays on the back of (Wilson Pickett's) Hey Jude? You know him? .. We have to go." He was allowed to sit at the front of the stage, and made his way out while Duane had his eyes closed, playing a solo. When Duane opened his eyes and saw Clapton, he froze. Dickey Betts, the Allmans' other lead guitarist, assumed Duane had broken a string and decided to take up where Duane left off. When he saw Clapton, he turned his back, presumably to keep from freezing himself.
After the show, Duane asked if he could come by the studio to watch some recording sessions, but Clapton refused: "Bring your guitar; you got to play!" The two returned to the studio and formed a deep bond overnight; Dowd reported that they "were trading licks, they were swapping guitars, they were talking shop and information and having a ball -- no holds barred, just admiration for each other's technique and facility."
Although the original concept was that "I was just going to play on one or two", Duane said, he wound up contributing to almost all the tracks on Layla, even the ones on which work had already started -- and lifting everyone's work onto a higher plane. "He brought out the best in all of us", said Whitlock.
http://stores.musictoday.com/store/default.asp?band_id=700