In April 1967, during their first trip to New York, at the beginning of the sessions for what would become the
Disraeli Gears album, Cream recorded a song called "
Lawdy Mama" at Atlantic Studios. The band cut two versions of the song, the first a typical blues shuffle, and the second converted to straight time in a more rock 'n' roll style (both versions can be heard on the
Those Were the Days collection). Producer
Felix Pappalardi took the tape of the second version of "Lawdy Mama" and, with help from his wife
Gail Collins, transformed the song into "Strange Brew", which, according to Eric Clapton, "created a pop song without completely destroying the original groove." One journalist noted that Clapton at this stage was employing
Albert King guitar stylings; and that both "Strange Brew" and another Cream track, "
Born Under a Bad Sign", "were practically Albert King parodies". Clapton's guitar solo on "Strange Brew" is taken nearly note for note from Albert King's solo on "Oh Pretty Woman" (from King's
Born Under a Bad Sign album) Clapton performs lead vocals on the song mostly in
falsetto. It was the first Cream single on which he sang lead. Unlike the group's previous single, "
I Feel Free", no promotional video was made for the song, but the band mimed to it on television on the German program
Beat Club on 19 May 1967. The song later appeared on the soundtrack of the 1979 feature film,
More American Graffiti. ==Reception==