Someone posted this clip on Facebook and it amused me . . .how good is Carl Perkins here!?
The video here is JOHNNY CASH, CARL PERKINS & ERIC CLAPTON performing MATCHBOX on The Johnny Cash Show live in 1971. Clapton's then-band, Derek and the Dominos, is joined by Cash and Perkins for a rousing cover of the tune Carl Perkins originally recorded in 1956 and released in 1957.
Carl Perkins' influence as the quintessential rockabilly artist has played a big part in the development of every generation of rockers to come down the pike since, from the Beatles' George Harrison to the Stray Cats' Brian Setzer to a myriad of others in the country field as well.
His guitar style is the other twin peak -- along with that of Elvis' lead man Scotty Moore -- of rockabilly's instrumental centre, so pervasive that modern-day players automatically gravitate toward it when called upon to deliver the style, not even realising that they're playing Perkins' licks, sometimes note for note.
As a singer, his interpretation of country ballads was every bit as fine as his better-known rockers. And within the framework of the best of his music was a strong sense of family and roots, all of which traced straight back to his humble beginnings.
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