The lights dimmed gently—no fireworks, no spectacle. Just music, memory, and three men who helped carve rock’s soul: Eric Clapton, Roger Waters, and Ronnie Wood. As they launched into “White Room”, the crowd fell silent. It was more than a song—it was a salute. A farewell to Ginger Baker, the brilliant, wild drummer who once turned rhythm into revolution. Clapton sat focused, his playing still ablaze with fire. Waters lent the piece his trademark emotional gravity, while Wood’s guitar painted the pulse of rock’s golden era. No grand speeches were made. None were needed. Baker wasn’t physically there, but his presence pulsed in every beat, every riff, every pause.
Eric Clapton and Roger Waters Pay Tribute To Ginger Baker For The Legendary Drummer Eric Clapton is the only surviving member of power trio Cream – Jack Bruce died back in 2014 and last year, the world mourned the loss of monster drummer Ginger Baker. For his first show in 2020, Clapton gathered an all-star … Read more