Cream Wheels Of Fire Album Art




Artist: Cream
Title: Wheels Of Fire
Year Of Release: 1968 / 1989
Label: RSO Records / Polydor K.K. #P36W 22003/4
Genre: Blues Rock, Psychedelic Rock, Classic Rock
Quality: EAC Rip -> FLAC (Img+Cue,Log) / MP3 CBR320
Total Time: 2CD (00:36:07 + 00:44:18)
Total Size: 535 / 240 Mb (Full Scans)
WebSite: Album Preview

Wheels of Fire 1968 / Cream, August 1968, double album with gatefold cover, 2 x 33 1/3 12' LPs. Sharp's art features on the front and rear covers and within the inner gatefold section of the American release on ATCO. The cover image was printed in black ink on silver foil-coated board for the US release. If Disraeli Gears was the album where Cream came into their own, its successor, Wheels of Fire, finds the trio in full fight, capturing every side of their multi-faceted personality, even hinting at the internal pressures that soon would tear the band asunder. A dense, unwieldy double album split into an LP of new studio material and an LP of. Cream - Wheels Of Fire: The Classic Double Album. N 1968 came the band's third release, Wheels of Fire, which topped the American charts. The album was recorded in a spate of short sessions in from July 1967 to June 1968. Still a relative novelty, the double album of two LP records was well-suited to extended solos. Wheels of Fire was a two-album set, one disc recorded in the studio, the second disc recorded on stage in San Francisco. Side three contains the definitive live version of what became Eric Clapton's signature piece, Robert Johnson's 'Crossroads,' plus a version of 'Spoonful' that clocks in just short of 17 minutes.

Wheels of Fire is the third album by the British rock band Cream. It was released in August 1968 as a two-disc vinyl LP, with one disc recorded in the studio and the other recorded live. It reached number three in the United Kingdom and number one in the United States, Canada and Australia, becoming the world's first platinum-selling double album. In May 2012, Rolling Stone magazine ranked it at number 205 on its list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.

Jul 6, 2013 - Find album reviews, stream songs, credits and award information for Wheels of Fire - Cream on AllMusic - 1968 - If Disraeli Gears was the album where Cream came.


If Disraeli Gears was the album where Cream came into their own, its successor, Wheels of Fire, finds the trio in full fight, capturing every side of their multi-faceted personality, even hinting at the internal pressures that soon would tear the band asunder. A dense, unwieldy double album split into an LP of new studio material and an LP of live material, it's sprawling and scattered, at once awesome in its achievement and maddening in how it falls just short of greatness. It misses its goal not because one LP works and the other doesn't, but because both the live and studio sets suffer from strikingly similar flaws, deriving from the constant power struggle between the trio. Of the three, Ginger Baker comes up short, contributing the passable 'Passing the Time' and 'Those Were the Days,' which are overshadowed by how he extends his solo drum showcase 'Toad' to a numbing quarter of an hour and trips upon the Wind & the Willows whimsy of 'Pressed Rat and Warthog,' whose studied eccentricity pales next to Eric Clapton's nimble, eerily cheerful 'Anyone for Tennis.' In almost every regard, Wheels of Fire is a terrific showcase for Clapton as a guitarist, especially on the first side of the live album with 'Crossroads,' a mighty encapsulation of all of his strengths. Some of that is studio trickery, as producer Felix Pappalardi cut together the best bits of a winding improvisation to a tight four minutes, giving this track a relentless momentum that's exceptionally exciting, but there's no denying that Clapton is at a peak here, whether he's tearing off solos on a 17-minute 'Spoonful' or goosing 'White Room' toward the heights of madness. But it's the architect of 'White Room,' bassist Jack Bruce, who, along with his collaborator Peter Brown, reaches a peak as a songwriter. Aside from the monumental 'White Room,' he has the lovely, wistful 'As You Said,' the cinematic 'Deserted Cities of the Heart,' and the slow, cynical blues 'Politician,' all among Cream's very best work. And in many ways Wheels of Fire is indeed filled with Cream's very best work, since it also captures the fury and invention (and indulgence) of the band at its peak on the stage and in the studio, but as it tries to find a delicate balance between these three titanic egos, it doesn't quite add up to something greater than the sum of its parts. But taken alone, those individual parts are often quite tremendous.
~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music

Track List CD1:
01. White Room [4:59]
02. Sitting on Top of the World [4:59]
03. Passing the Time [4:33]

Cream Wheels Of Fire Album Art Maker

04. As You Said [4:21]
05. Pressed Rat and Warthog [3:16]
06. Politician [4:13]
07. Those Were the Days [2:58]
08. Born Under a Bad Sign [3:10]
09. Deserted Cities of the Heart [3:39]
Track List CD2:
01. Crossroads [4:16]
02. Spoonful [16:46]
03. Traintime [7:02]
04. Toad [16:15]

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Fresh Cream

Fresh Cream, Cream's debut album, was released December 9, 1966 in the UK on Robert Stigwood's Reaction Records label. It reached number 6 in the UK charts in 1967.

Side 1

I Feel Free (Jack Bruce, Pete Brown) 2:53 U.S. Release Only
N.S.U. (Non-Specific Urethritis) (Jack Bruce) 2:43 B-side of 'I Feel Free'
Sleepy Time Time (Jack Bruce, Janet Godfrey) 4:20
Dreaming (Jack Bruce) 1:58
Sweet Wine (Ginger Baker, Janet Godfrey) 3:17
Spoonful (Willie Dixon) 6:30 U.K. Release Only

Side 2
Cat's Squirrel Traditional, arr. S. Splurge instrumental 3:03
Four Until Late (Robert Johnson) 2:07 arr. Eric Clapton, Lead vocals: Eric Clapton
Rollin' and Tumblin' McKinley Morganfield 4:42
I'm So Glad (Skip James) 3:57
Toad (Ginger Baker) 5:11 Instrumental

Wheels of Fire

CREAM 1968

Disc one: Studio recording

Side 1

White Room (Jack Bruce, Pete Brown) 4:58

Cream Wheels Of Fire Album Art Images

Sitting on Top of the World (Walter Vinson, Lonnie Chatmon; arr. Chester Burnett) 4:58
Passing the Time (Ginger Baker, Mike Taylor) 4:37
As You Said (Bruce, Brown) 4:20

Side 2

Pressed Rat and Warthog (Baker, Taylor) 3:13
Politician 3 (Bruce, Brown) 4:12
Those Were the Days (Baker, Taylor) 2:53
Born Under a Bad Sign (Booker T. Jones, William Bell) 3:09
Cream Wheels Of Fire Album Art Deserted Cities of the Heart (Bruce, Brown) 3:38

Disc two: Live at the Fillmore

Side 3

Crossroads (Robert Johnson, arr. Clapton) 4:13 (recorded March 10, 1968 at Winterland, San Francisco, CA. (1st show))
Spoonful' (Willie Dixon) 16:43 (recorded March 10, 1968 at Winterland, San Francisco, CA. (1st show))

Side 4

Traintime' 3 (Bruce) 7:01 (recorded March 8, 1968 at Winterland, San Francisco, CA. (1st show))
Toad' (Baker) 16:15 (recorded March 7, 1968 at The Fillmore, San Francisco, CA. (2nd show))

How Cream made Wheels of Fire...

by Felix Pappalardi

'Wheels Of Fire” by Cream was never really a planned album. While Eric, Jack and Ginger talked about ideas in England, I discussed it with Ahmet Ertugen and Jerry Wexier at Atlantic. I wanted a double album right from the beginning and it was my job to sell that idea. Nobody was high on it. When I finally convinced everyone of the double album, Cream told me they had been wanting the same thing.

Next step was helping choose material and arranging it for the final stages. With Cream this job is particularly important because most of their songs are never played until they come into the studio.

It’s very weird. The music is never discussed. It just happens. We cut the first things for the album in December 1967. We did the instrumental tracks for “White Room,” and “Born Under A Bad Sign.” They had a couple of days off during their U.S. tour so we booked studio time to get something down. Then they came back two months later for ten days and we completed the entire studio album.

We liked the track to White Room but Jack didn’t like the vocal and Eric didn’t like his guitar playing. I did a rough mix and brought it over to England for them to hear. This is where an important turn occurred.

Cream told me that the only time they ever get together for rehearsal is when I'm around which is another strange thing. Anyway, while I was in England we met at Jacks house every night at seven o'clock. One night I was playing bass, Jack played a baritone horn, Ginger was playing these giant maracas and Eric was playing acoustic guitar. Eric was showing us a new tune he’d just written called Anyone For Tennis. What happened that night went into the ‘Tennis” single and the “Savage Seven” album. It was a new thing for Cream and it just happened.

Like Politician has a rhythm guitar and two overdubbed floating guitars. They crisscross from right to left in stereo. Eric wanted that and it worked. He wanted it on “Sitting On Top Of The World, too, but it didn't work there, so I changed it. I found it was very annoying. On “As You Said” Jack is recorded five times. On “Pressed Rat and Wart Hog” Jack plays two basses. The second bass comes in at the end and it’s a six string. Eric’s on three times. I’m on twice with trumpet and tonette. When I played tonette, Jack played recorder. There’s a lot of other examples too.

Cream Wheels Of Fire Album Art For Sale

All the songs had finished lyrics when they came into the studio except “Pressed Rat.” We changed one line In that on the spur of the moment. Ginger writes a lot of poetry and a lot of it’s like “Pressed Rat and Wart Hog,” really groovy. Ginger wanted to fly his daughter Nettie over to recite that, but we didn’t have time. She knows that whole poem by heart.

The whole studio album was completed before we did the live album. The more we got into the studio album the more necessary it became to do the live one. The studio stuff became very electric so I wanted the live Cream right there where you could get at it, Cream as a trio without the arranging and the electronics. I presented it to Atlantic in this exact way.

At first it was going to be set up so you could buy one or the other and that led to a whole bunch of things. I stayed with Jack while I was there and we were always playing things to each other. We even purchased some new instruments and Jack picked up a cello. I had a viola and we wrote some pieces for them and played a lot trying to get our chops back. That came out of the clear blue, just an exchange of musicianship and personalities.

So, the classical things you hear on the album are not all my doing. Jack has had as much classical training as I have. It’s not so much his cello playing as it is the literature he’s absorbed since his childhood. He is certainly a qualified musician and knows music thoroughly. So this classical influence was a dual effort.

I also found that Ginger was into a lot of things I never knew before. He’s very classically oriented. Rhythmically he’s very African but melodically hes very classical. He writes like Vaughn Williams. Usually he collaborates with a guy named Mike Taylor. Everybody thinks that Ginger is just a drummer, but he’s much more.

There are a lot of guys that work with Cream. Like Pete Brown collaborates on almost all of Jack Bruce’s songs. Mike Taylor is an ex-British jazz pianist with a strong classical background.Cream had done a lot of work on songs among themselves, but we made some changes in the studio too. Like on “Passing The Time,” nobody knew what instrumentation to use and it got bogged down.

One night Ginger got me out of bed with a long distance phone call from England and played me the melody on an organ. That sound stayed in my head so when I finally saw him in the studio I called up a music shop and ordered a callope. Jack, who is a fantastic keyboard player, did the song on caliope and I played organ pedals.

We got very excited over “Passing The Time” and finally completed it. It was beautiful. We had the freedom to do what we wanted without any planning. With incredible Tom Dowd running the tape, we could completely forget about the engineering and just concentrate on the music.The album got bogged down in a lot of places because Cream was working very hard on tour.

They were tired and they just wanted to get away.The last thing we did on the studio album was the vocal track for “Those Were The Days.” Jack heard the tune six weeks later and he said, “Wow, what a groovy tune. I don’t think I know that one.” That’s how tired they were, We used every single track we made. We didn’t throw anything away. We approach tunes with a great deal of enthusiasm and thought so there isn’t any waste. There’s a lot of thought behind the tunes but very little chatter.

We were thinking of putting brass on “Born Under A Bad Sign” but decided against it. Somebody at Atlantic took the Cream track when I wasn’t there and overdubbed some King Curtis horns. I didn’t like It, but I let Cream hear it and they didn’t like it either. I m glad It didn t work out because there are no studio musicians at all on this album.

I'd say we worked for a good two weeks on the studio album. Sometimes we’d work till four in the morning if It was cooking. Maybe only one guy was cooking so I’d send Jack and Eric home and just work with Ginger or percussion things. On “Deserted Cities Of The Heart” nobody was in the studio except Jack, his wife Janet, Tommy Dowd, myself and my wife, Call.

It was Jack’s tune and he knew what he wanted. We just played cello and viola that night. We did lots of overdubbing which is one of the things that makes a great deal of difference between the art of recording and the art of a live performance. They are two separate things. This is why we wanted the two album set.

Jack Bruce, Composing Himself

by Harry Shapiro (Jawbone:2010)

Being an authorised ‘biography’, this is a highly researched account of Jack Bruce’s life & gives us far more information about the album that the other two!... we know the live part of the record was recorded on the first leg of Cream’s 1968 U.S tour...

After this, they went back to Atlantic “finishing off what was originally intended to be just a studio album” ...by now the problems in the band were legendary & a split was inevitable... engineer Tom Dowd is reported as saying “that there were times during playbacks ‘when I thought they were going to kill each other’” (Shapiro,H pp111). This seems likely to have been tension between Jack Bruce & Ginger Baker, as Eric Clapton never got involved in violent confrontation.

According to Shapiro’s book it was Felix Papparlardi “who rightly believed that to ignore Cream’s live performances would mean giving only a partial view of the band, so he pushed for them to release a double album”......one that we now know was destined to become the first double-platinum LP in music history! Eric Clapton, The Autobiography by Eric Clapton with Christopher Simon-Sykes (Century:2007).

Eric Clapton’s autobiography fails even to mention the album by name... most of his recollections of his time in Cream seemed coloured by musical frustrations, worry over the personality clashes between his other two band-mates & the stress of overwork.

“Whistle stop touring America was the beginning of the end for Cream, because once we started constantly working in such an intense way, it became impossible to keep the music afloat & we began to drown.” (Clapton, E pp100) Sadly, millions of adoring & appreciative fans did not agree.

For Eric it was all about new influences he could be exposed to, without perhaps fully realising that those he Ginger & Jack had already ingested were creating a new & more powerful cultural influence than any he could find in existence!

Hellraiser, The Autobiography of the World’s Greatest Drummer by Ginger Baker with Ginette Baker (John Blake:2009). In chapter nine of his book, Ginger Baker says “In February 1968, we flew out to Atlantic Studios to record Wheels of Fire” (Baker,G. Pp117).

In true Ginger style this is immediately followed by a story about him picking up an air stewardess from his first class seat on a Pan Am jet!

Like Eric Clapton, he too believes that the music suffered from the strain of touring, with the addition of the complaint that the volume created by the enormous stacks of Marshall Amps (everyone of them turned up to eleven!) permanently damaged his hearing & also was “where all that smash, bash, drumming came about” (pp.118) Ginger cites a gig on the subsequent tour as being the one in which he & Eric decided to call it a day...