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Actually, in that regard, with Bruce in the band they were the equivalent of the power trio plus singer outfits like The Who (contemporaries) and the likes of the Jeff Beck Group (with Rod Stewart out the front) and Led Zeppelin and given the chronology they were operating in largely unmapped territory, and doing it before some of the features of the emerging musical landscape, including what I’ve seen described as lengthy improvisations during which mighty civilisations might rise and fall became de rigeur.

As one of the instances where blues, pop and rock elements started to coalesce and settle out as something totally new Fresh Cream delivers a certain degree of virtuosity for its own sake. Take the jazz roots (Bruce and Baker cut their teeth in that sphere) and Clapton’s wailing blues guitar and you’re probably always headed down that path, but at the same time while it might be virtuosity for its own sake you can’t deny the fact that you’re looking at three players who were widely regarded as the very best going around on the English blues circuit.

In some cases those who came after went on to greater heights (in musical terms, let’s leave minor details like chart positions and sales figures out of the equation) and had the chops to surpass one or more of Cream’s trio. There’s no denying the significance of the big names in the pantheon of late sixties guitar heroes, names who are so well known that they don’t need enumerating, but they weren’t all able to sit on top of a rhythm section as good as this one.

Whether you see Fresh Cream as the beginning of a golden age of virtuoso improvisation or the first signs of the emergence of the dinosaurs of heavy metal that needed to be swept away a decade later, there’s no doubt Fresh Cream was one of the key landmarks in the development of late sixties rock music and while what followed often sounded sharper, rocked harder and delivered innovations that may well have happened without it, those things wouldn’t, I suspect, have panned out in quite the same way if Ginger Baker hadn’t sidled up to Eric Clapton and inquired if he was interested in getting a new group together as a slightly better earner.

Fresh Cream was the result, and while it has its share of weaknesses it’s a remarkably complete and consistent effort, and a harbinger of what was lurking just over the horizon.

B© Ian Hughes 2012