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Eric Clapton - Turn Up Down -1980- - Unreleased... !!install!! -

Have you heard a copy of "Turn Up Down"? Beware of low-quality YouTube rips. The true magic is in the groove of take 4, where Clapton misses the turnaround and laughs just before the second verse. That’s the real unreleased treasure.

The sessions were fueled by tension. Clapton wanted to move away from the languid, extended blues solos of the 1970s. He was listening to The Police, Talking Heads, and even the mod revival. The goal was leaner, meaner, tighter .

: The album has lived on through high-quality unofficial releases from labels like The Godfatherecords and Casino Records Entertainment . The Tracklist Eric Clapton - Turn Up Down -1980- - Unreleased...

Listening to the official release of Another Ticket , one can hear the struggle in the music. Songs like "Black Rose" and the title track "Another Ticket" carry a dark, brooding energy. If "Turn Up Down" was a casualty of these sessions, it likely possesses that same gritty, slightly ragged character that Dowd tried so hard to capture. It represents the "lost" Clapton—not the polished pop star, but the bluesman fighting to be heard over the noise of his addiction.

The label's dissatisfaction stemmed from the album's democratic "band" feel; with Brooker and Lee taking lead vocals on several tracks, RSO felt the project didn't spotlight Clapton enough as a solo artist. This rejection led to: Have you heard a copy of "Turn Up Down"

While the full album remains officially unreleased, many tracks appeared in altered forms on Another Ticket or have circulated through high-quality bootlegs like those from The Godfather Records and MidValley .

: RSO pivoted to releasing the Tokyo live album instead to fill the gap. That’s the real unreleased treasure

But it is honest . It captures a moment in 1980 when Clapton was no longer a guitar god, no longer a blues purist, and not yet a washed-up legacy act. He was just a man turning knobs, trying to find a signal in a world that had turned down the volume on rock's old guard.

This is the crux of the Clapton mystery. According to his 2007 autobiography (where he mentions the song in passing on page 198), Clapton felt the song was "too angry" and "didn't sound like me." There are three prevailing theories: