Eric Clapton Unpluggedâ¦Over 30 Years Later, now streaming on Paramount+, revisits the Hall of Fame singer, guitarist, and songwriterâs 1992 acoustic set for MTV, which revitalized his career for a new decade, added a few Grammys to his overall tally, and ended up becoming the biggest-selling live album of all time. Why is this re-appearing now, in 2025? Well, Claptonâs got a mostly-new solo record out, his 22nd, entitled Meanwhile. But maybe youâre itching for a Slowhand from back in the just-got-sober era of Journeyman, his 11th solo effort from 1989. You might also be interested in the interview that Unpluggedâ¦Over 30 Years Later includes, conducted with Clapton right before the show. âItâs such a joy to sing with a full band acoustically,â says the veteran of many loud rock and blues bands, âbecause youâre able to hear your own voice.â
ERIC CLAPTON UNPLUGGED … OVER 30 YEARS LATER: STREAM IT OR SKIP IT?Â
Opening Shot: In the original opening for his episode of MTV Unplugged, which first aired in August 1992, a small audience is gathered at Bray Studios outside London for the performance by Eric Clapton and his band. In a sign of the times, Claptonâs cigarette burns in an ashtray alongside.
The Gist: Back in â92, probably the biggest splash MTVâs Unplugged had made to date was with Mariah Careyâs performance that March, and with R.E.M.âs set from the year before. (Both would be released as live albums.) While Clapton won a Grammy for Journeyman, he was still known mostly for his 1960s and ’70s work with the Yardbirds, Cream, and Derek and the Dominos. âLayla,â the signature Dominos track, had recently found life beyond classic rock radio with its prominent placement in Martin Scorseseâs 1990 gangster film Goodfellas. And so maybe MTV didnât know what to expect from this acoustic booking for a legacy artist. But it was Eric Claptonâs shuffling, jazzy, octave-lowered version of âLaylaâ for Unplugged that became a breakout hit, both for Boomer-gen audiences and early â90s American culture in general.
While the studio version of âLaylaâ features electric guitar riffs for days, that wasnât gonna be possible for the acoustic demands of Unplugged. And as Clapton says in the 1992 interview that accompanies Unpluggedâ¦Over 30 Years Later, âit mystified me that Iâd done it the same all these years.â Citing Bob Dylan as an artist who âchanges everything every time he plays it,â Clapton says he was inspired to try it on the newer, softer arrangement that appears here.
Clapton also performs âTears in Heavenâ for Unplugged, written about the death of his four-year-old son Conor in 1991 â the ballad became a massive, massive hit on its own, but first appeared in Rush, the highly rewatchable cops-going-criminal film starring Jennifer Jason Leigh and Jason Patric â and a rousing version of the Bo Diddley composition âBefore You Accuse Me,â which he had included on Journeyman. The Diddley shout-out makes particular sense here, since Clapton fills out his Unplugged set with blues songs that always inspired him â from Bessie Smith, Big Bill Broonzy, Robert Johnson, and other leading lights â going all the way back to his days as a teenage guitar player in the pubs of Surrey, England.
What Shows Will It Remind You Of? Paramount+ has only a sporadic relationship with Unplugged. Currently, single episodes from four different seasons are the only things streaming, which is weird because Paramount owns MTVâs entire programming archive. (If itâs us, weâre putting all of the Unplugged stuff on the site under its own searchable tab.) In the meantime, if you caught Timmy Chalamet as Clapton contemporary Bob Dylan in A Complete Unknown, Decider has you covered on what Dylan-related stuff to watch next. Â
Our Take: Beyond âLaylaâ and âTears of Heaven,â which became inescapable in an era where everybody still listened to music on the radio, whether weâre talking about 1992 or Eric Clapton Unpluggedâ¦Over 30 Years Later, itâs the blues numbers that really define this acoustic set for MTV. Claptonâs guitar-playing was always his calling card â whether or not anyone ever actually called him âSlowhand,â itâs a super-cool nickname â and the runs he makes in Unplugged on an array of Martin guitars, alongside guitarist Andy Fairweather Low, are compact, expressive, and often downright swinging. Clapton doesnât really smile a lot, but heâs definitely having fun, like on âHey Hey,â originally by Big Bill Broonzy, or the Robert Johnson standard âWalking Blues,â which as Clapton studiously notes in his interview, he actually plays in the style of Muddy Waters. Itâs a referential nod from one of the finest guitar players of his generation, a two-way tribute to the guitar-playing bluesmen that inspired Clapton when he was just a kid.
Sex and Skin: What? No way.
Parting Shot: The band and a clapping-along audience get a little wild for set closer âRollinâ & Tumblinâ,â a rollicking old Muddy Waters song Clapton used to perform with Cream.
Sleeper Star: Naturally, the sleeper stars here are Eric Claptonâs gorgeous and gorgeous-sounding acoustic guitars. He mainly used two Martins on Unplugged â a 000-42 from 1939, and a 1966 000-28 â while for âRunning on Faith,â âWalking Blues,â and âRollinâ & Tumblinâ,â all played with a slide, he switched to an acoustic topped by an immaculate, custom-engraved metal resonator.
Most Pilot-y Line: âMost of the songs in the set,â Clapton says in the interview that accompanies Unpluggedâ¦Over 30 Years Later, âtheyâre covers of songs I heard when I was very young, that Iâve always wanted to do.â
Our Call: Eric Clapton Unpluggedâ¦30 Years Later is a Stream It, but pretty much exclusively for existing fans of the guitarist, singer, and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer. With the feature interview added, it offers a more complete package than trying to scare up old DVDs of Claptonâs original Unplugged performance, or digging for excerpts on YouTube.
Johnny Loftus (@glennganges) is an independent writer and editor living at large in Chicagoland. His work has appeared in The Village Voice, All Music Guide, Pitchfork Media, and Nicki Swift.Â
The post Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Eric Clapton Unplugged…Over 30 Years Later’ on Paramount+, Featuring The Singer-Songwriter’s Original Hit Performance, Plus An Interview appeared first on Decider.