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1841 Broadway, Midtown
New York City, New York, United States
40.7614° N · -73.9776° W
Get DirectionsDisraeli Gears — Cream's second album and one of the defining documents of psychedelic rock — was recorded in May 1967 at Atlantic Recording Studios at 1841 Broadway in New York, produced by Felix Pappalardi. The album, made in just four days, contains 'Sunshine of Your Love,' 'Strange Brew,' 'Tales of Brave Ulysses,' and 'SWLABR,' and the Robert Stigwood-managed sessions were among the most productive in rock history. The cover's psychedelic design by Australian artist Martin Sharp and the album's blend of blues power with pop psychedelia made it one of 1967's landmark releases — the year Sergeant Pepper defined the era but Disraeli Gears stood apart.
Cream — Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce, and Ginger Baker — had formed in London in 1966 as a blues-based supergroup and almost immediately transcended that category. Their live performances were famous for extended improvisation that prefigured heavy metal and progressive rock; the studio albums captured a more focused, song-oriented side. Clapton's guitar tone on Disraeli Gears, achieved through a Gibson SG and a Marshall stack, became a template for a generation of rock guitarists.
Atlantic Recording Studios occupied various addresses over the years; the 1841 Broadway location where Disraeli Gears was recorded no longer operates as a studio. The building is in Midtown Manhattan near Columbus Circle. Atlantic Records itself, now part of Warner Music Group, remains one of the world's most influential record labels.
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