Beginnings and Stax contract Delaney Bramlett and Leon Russell had many connections in the music business through their work in the Shindogs and formed a band of solid, if transient, musicians around Delaney & Bonnie. The band became known as "Delaney & Bonnie and Friends", because of its regular changes of personnel. They secured a recording contract with
Stax Records and completed work on their first album,
Home, in 1968. In his 2007 autobiography, Eric Clapton erroneously states that Delaney & Bonnie and Friends were the first white group to sign a contract with Stax. Despite production and session assistance from
Donald "Duck" Dunn,
Isaac Hayes, and other Stax mainstays of the era, the album was not successful—perhaps because of poor promotion, as it was one of 27 albums simultaneously released by Stax in that label's initial attempt to establish itself in the album market.
Elektra and Apple contracts Delaney and Bonnie moved to
Elektra Records for their second album,
The Original Delaney & Bonnie & Friends (Accept No Substitute) (1969). While not a big seller either, it created a buzz in music industry circles when, upon hearing pre-release mixes of the album,
George Harrison offered Delaney and Bonnie a contract with
the Beatles'
Apple Records label—which Delaney and Bonnie signed despite their prior contractual commitment to Elektra. The Apple contract was subsequently voided, but this incident began a falling-out between Delaney and Elektra. Delaney and Bonnie were released from their Elektra contract in late 1969, after Delaney threatened to kill Elektra founder
Jac Holzman because their album wasn't on sale in the town where his father lived.
Atco contract and chart success On the strength of
Accept No Substitute, and at his friend Harrison's suggestion,
Eric Clapton took Delaney & Bonnie and Friends on the road in mid-1969 as the opening act for the supergroup he had formed,
Blind Faith. Clapton quickly became friends with Delaney, Bonnie and their band, preferring their music to Blind Faith's. Impressed by their live performances, he would often appear on stage with Delaney & Bonnie and Friends during this period, and he continued to record and tour with them following Blind Faith's August 1969 breakup. Clapton helped broker a new record deal for Delaney and Bonnie with his then-US label,
Atco (
Atlantic) Records, and performed (with Harrison,
Dave Mason, and others) on Delaney and Bonnie's third album, the live
On Tour with Eric Clapton (Atco; recorded in the UK, December 7, 1969, and released in North America in March 1970). This album would be their most successful, reaching No. 29 on the
Billboard 200, and achieving
RIAA gold record status. Clapton also recruited Delaney and Bonnie and their band to back him on his
debut solo album, recorded in late 1969 and early 1970 and produced by Delaney. Delaney and Bonnie continued to make well-regarded, if modest selling, albums over the rest of their career. "Soul Shake" (a cover of "Soulshake" by
Peggy Scott & Jo Jo Benson from 1969) from
To Bonnie from Delaney (1970) peaked at number 43 on the Hot 100 on September 19, 1970, and "
Never Ending Song of Love", from the mostly acoustic album
Motel Shot (1971), reached number 13 on the Hot 100 from July 24 to 14, 1971, and was
Billboard's number 67 single of 1971. The band's other notable activities during this period include participation (with the
Grateful Dead, the
Band and
Janis Joplin) on the 1970
Festival Express tour of
Canada, with an appearance at the
Strawberry Fields Festival; an appearance in
Richard C. Sarafian's 1971 film
Vanishing Point, contributing the song "You Got to Believe" to its soundtrack; and a July 1971 live show broadcast by New York's WABC-FM (now
WPLJ), backed by
Duane Allman,
Gregg Allman and
King Curtis. (A song from the latter set, "
Come On in My Kitchen," is included on the 1974 Duane Allman compilation album
An Anthology Vol. II.)
CBS contract and breakup By late 1971, Delaney and Bonnie's often tempestuous relationship began to show signs of strain. Bonnie described their relationship as
abusive due to their
cocaine addictions, and they fought often. and Atco/Atlantic elected to sell Delaney and Bonnie's recording contract—including this album's master tapes—to CBS Records. Columbia released this album, in a different track sequence from that submitted to Atco, as
D&B Together, in March 1972. It was Delaney and Bonnie's last album of new material. They divorced in 1972. ==Legacy==