Eric Clapton heard Jim Gordon beautifully messing around 
on the piano and found the coda he didn’t know his song 
of unrequited love was missing, a story I had heard 
many times though Wikipedia tells me Layla has 
its roots in a Persian love poem that touched a purple nerve 
in the man who fell in love with his friend George Harrison’s wife 
and I’d also never heard that Gordon later killed his mother 
in a psychotic fit—you could go on and on
about the heartache rippling from this staple of air guitar, 
Duane Allman, for example, who dreamed the opening lick 
and died in a motorcycle crash a couple of years later 
or the horrifying death of Clapton’s toddler son 
who plummeted from a high-rise window or my mother at 
eighty-seven telling us out of the blue the night 
we scattered my father’s ashes on the beach how much she loves 
Layla when they play it on her oldies station and 
if the song’s not over when she parks her car, she sits 
and listens until she hears the final bird-song notes, 
“Not on the instrument,” producer Tom Dowd said.
















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