Wheels of Fire
Wheels of Fire is the third studio album by the British rock supergroup Cream, released as a double LP in 1968 with one disc of studio recordings and one of live performances.[1] The album features the power trio of guitarist Eric Clapton, bassist/vocalist Jack Bruce, and drummer Ginger Baker, blending blues-rock, psychedelia, and hard rock elements in extended improvisations and original compositions.[2] The studio portion was recorded primarily at Atlantic Studios in New York and IBC Studios in London from late 1967 to early 1968, while the live tracks were captured during shows at the Fillmore Auditorium and Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco on March 7–10, 1968.[1][3] Notable tracks include the psychedelic hit "White Room," the blues cover "Born Under a Bad Sign," and the extended live rendition of Robert Johnson's "Crossroads," which showcased Cream's improvisational prowess.[4][5] Commercially, Wheels of Fire achieved massive success, topping the Billboard 200 in the United States for four weeks and reaching number three in the UK, eventually becoming the world's first platinum-selling double album with over one million copies sold.[3][5] Critically acclaimed for its innovative blend of studio precision and live energy, the album is often regarded as Cream's magnum opus and a pivotal work in the development of heavy metal and progressive rock.[6]Background
Conception
The conception of Wheels of Fire emerged in late 1967 as Cream's third studio album, following the commercial success of their previous release, Disraeli Gears, which had established the band as a leading force in psychedelic blues-rock and provided the momentum for an ambitious project. The band, consisting of Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce, and Ginger Baker, sought to capture their evolving sound by combining newly composed studio material with extended live improvisations, reflecting their growth as a power trio during an intense period of creativity.[7] Producer Felix Pappalardi played a pivotal role in shaping the album's format, advocating early for a double LP to juxtapose the precision of structured studio recordings against the unfiltered energy of live performances. Pappalardi, often referred to as the "fourth member" of Cream due to his close collaboration, pitched this concept to Atlantic Records executives, aligning it with the band's own desire for a comprehensive showcase that went beyond a standard single-disc release. As Pappalardi later reflected, while the album "was never really a planned album" in a rigid sense, initial ideas were exchanged among the members in England, with him selecting and arranging material to highlight these contrasts.[7] The band's exhaustive 1967 touring schedule, including their inaugural U.S. dates starting in August at venues like the Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco, directly influenced the inclusion of live tracks to document their improvisational prowess on stage. This heavy roadwork, which exposed Cream to American audiences and psychedelic scenes, inspired the decision to feature raw, extended jams that embodied the trio's dynamic interplay. Ultimately, the album was structured as two distinct discs—"In the Studio" for polished compositions and "Live at Fillmore" for venue-captured energy—emphasizing the power trio's ability to blend composition with spontaneous exploration.[7][8]Band tensions
The longstanding rivalry between Cream's bassist Jack Bruce and drummer Ginger Baker, dating back to their earlier collaboration in the Graham Bond Organisation, began to severely strain the band's dynamics during the 1967-1968 sessions leading up to Wheels of Fire. Their personal and musical clashes escalated, creating a volatile atmosphere that often required intervention to prevent physical confrontations, as the two musicians frequently argued over creative control and contributions to songs.[9][10] Guitarist Eric Clapton frequently assumed a mediating role amid these disputes, but the band's grueling schedule of extensive touring and recording left him increasingly exhausted and disillusioned with the group's direction. The heightened expectations following the commercial success of prior albums like Disraeli Gears only amplified the pressure on Clapton, who by mid-1968 had reached a breaking point in trying to balance the dominant personalities of Bruce and Baker.[9][11] Manager Robert Stigwood's relentless push for commercial viability further intensified the conflicts, as his demands for high-output touring and album production clashed with the band's creative visions, particularly regarding song selection and arrangements. These internal frictions, compounded by external pressures, directly led to the band's decision to disband in May 1968 during their US tour.[9][12] On July 10, 1968, shortly after the U.S. release of Wheels of Fire, Clapton publicly announced Cream's breakup, citing a "loss of direction" and the unsustainable toll of the ongoing tensions, marking the end of the supergroup after less than three years together, though they planned a farewell tour.[11][13][14]Recording
Studio sessions
The studio recordings for the first disc of Wheels of Fire took place primarily at IBC Studios in London during July and August 1967, with additional sessions in December 1967 and February 1968, and at Atlantic Studios in New York from September 1967 through June 1968, including overdubs completed in short bursts.[15][2] These sessions were conceived as part of a double album format to incorporate both studio and live material, allowing for expanded creative exploration.[7] Engineering duties were handled by Tom Dowd and Adrian Barber, who utilized eight-track recording technology to enable complex layering of instrumentation, such as multiple guitar tracks and orchestral elements.[16][15] Producer Felix Pappalardi served as a multi-instrumentalist, contributing viola on tracks like "White Room" and percussion elements including Swiss hand bells and tonette to amplify the album's psychedelic textures.[7][17] The production process faced logistical challenges, including the band's exhausting U.S. tour schedule, which limited studio time to brief intervals and often left members fatigued; arrangements for songs, particularly extended adaptations of blues standards into more progressive forms, were frequently finalized on the spot with minimal prior rehearsal.[7] Overdubs were essential to refine these improvisational takes, with Pappalardi and Dowd working late into the night—sometimes until 4 a.m.—to capture and polish the layered sound amid the group's interpersonal tensions.[7]Live recordings
The live recordings for Wheels of Fire were captured during Cream's performances at the Fillmore West and Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco as part of their 1968 US tour, specifically from shows held between March 7 and 10. Producer Felix Pappalardi, along with engineer Bill Halverson, utilized Wally Heider's mobile recording unit to document multiple nights, resulting in hours of tape from at least six complete performances.[1][18] From this extensive material, Pappalardi selected four extended tracks—"Sitting on Top of the World," "Spoonful," "Crossroads," and "Toad"—to showcase the band's improvisational prowess during their live sets, editing them down to highlight peak moments of instrumental interplay and energy. These choices were drawn from various nights, with "Spoonful" and "Sitting on Top of the World" from the March 10 show at Winterland, "Crossroads" from the March 10 (1st show) at Winterland, and "Toad" from the March 7 (2nd show) at Fillmore West. The editing process involved splicing to create cohesive, extended jams without adding overdubs, preserving the raw audience interaction and spontaneous dynamics of the concerts.[19][20] The technical setup employed an 8-track format via the mobile unit, allowing for live mixing that captured the full band's sound, including vocals, instruments, and ambient crowd noise, to maintain audio fidelity reflective of the era's rock concert atmosphere. This approach emphasized the high-energy peaks rather than full sets, a deliberate decision to fit the constraints of a single LP disc while focusing on the most representative examples of Cream's live intensity. No post-production enhancements like overdubs were applied, ensuring the tracks remained authentic documents of the performances.[1][21]Composition
Studio tracks
The studio recordings on Wheels of Fire mark Cream's bold progression from their blues foundations toward a more experimental, psychedelic sound infused with progressive rock sensibilities, achieved through intricate songwriting and multi-layered arrangements that transcended the power trio format.[4] The nine tracks feature four originals co-written by bassist/vocalist Jack Bruce and poet Pete Brown—"White Room," "As You Said," "Politician," and "Deserted Cities of the Heart"—alongside three compositions by drummer Ginger Baker and poet Mike Taylor—"Passing the Time," "Pressed Rat and Warthog," and "Those Were the Days"—and two blues covers, "Sitting on Top of the World" (Walter Vinson and Lonnie Chatmon) and "Born Under a Bad Sign" (William Bell and Booker T. Jones), underscoring a collaborative dynamic where guitarist Eric Clapton focused on performance rather than original writing.[22] This division in creative input allowed Bruce and Baker to explore lyrical abstraction and rhythmic complexity, while the covers paid homage to blues traditions with rock amplification.[1] Producer Felix Pappalardi, often dubbed Cream's "fourth member," enriched these compositions with exotic instruments like viola, cello, and mandolin, fostering psychedelic textures through overdubs that built dense, atmospheric soundscapes impossible in live power trio settings.[4] For instance, "White Room" exemplifies this fusion, its poetic lyrics by Brown evoking isolation in a stark, surreal environment—"In the white room with black curtains near the station"—paired with Bruce's brooding bass and Clapton's wah-wah guitar, all augmented by Pappalardi's viola and orchestral flourishes for a dramatic, hallucinatory depth.[23] Similarly, the rendition of "Born Under a Bad Sign" extends the original Albert King blues into a seven-minute exploration, incorporating jazz-inflected improvisations where Bruce's walking bass lines and Baker's polyrhythmic drumming evoke a loose, syncopated swing amid Clapton's soulful bends.[5] Other tracks further illustrate the album's stylistic evolution, blending blues-rock grit with progressive experimentation. "Passing the Time," a Baker-Taylor piece, shifts from a gentle acoustic intro with recorder (mimicking flute tones) and cello to abrupt tempo changes and heavier electric grooves, creating a whimsical yet disorienting narrative of fleeting moments that hints at the genre's boundaries.[1] "Deserted Cities of the Heart" delivers a brooding psychedelic climax through Bruce's lyrics of desolation, layered with mandolin accents and swirling guitar effects that amplify its epic, otherworldly quality.[4] Covers like "Sitting on Top of the World" retain bluesy swagger but gain psychedelic edge via echoing vocals and extended solos, while originals such as "Pressed Rat and Warthog"—a quirky fable by Baker and Taylor—employ cello for a baroque tint, underscoring Cream's innovative push into uncharted sonic territory.[1] Overall, these studio efforts solidify Wheels of Fire as a pivotal work, where blues-rock's raw energy merges with psychedelic abstraction and progressive structural daring.[5]Live performances
The live performances on Wheels of Fire capture Cream's prowess as a power trio during their March 1968 shows at San Francisco's Fillmore West and Winterland Ballroom, emphasizing extended improvisations that transformed concise blues covers and originals into epic explorations of rhythm and melody.[1] These four tracks highlight the band's unscripted energy on stage, with minimal editing to preserve authenticity, allowing Ginger Baker's polyrhythmic drumming, Jack Bruce's melodic bass lines, and Eric Clapton's searing lead guitar to interplay dynamically without a rhythm guitar or additional support.[6] "Crossroads," a cover of Robert Johnson's blues standard, exemplifies Clapton's improvisational command, stretching to 9:37 through fiery, extended guitar solos that build intensity over a driving rhythm section, contrasting any shorter studio interpretations by focusing on live spontaneity and audience-fueled momentum.[24] Similarly, "Spoonful," originally a 6:29 studio track on Fresh Cream, evolves into a 16:47 free-form jam here, where Bruce's vocal howls and bass grooves propel the piece into abstract explorations, showcasing the trio's ability to sustain tension through collective improvisation rather than adhering to the structured brevity of the recorded version.[25] "Sitting on Top of the World," a Howlin' Wolf cover that appeared in a 4:58 studio rendition on Fresh Cream, remains relatively compact at 4:58 in this live setting but gains electrifying urgency through audience interaction and the band's raw delivery, with Clapton's bluesy leads cutting sharper amid the venue's responsive crowd.[26] "Toad," Baker's composition featuring his signature drum solo, expands from its 5:11 studio form on Fresh Cream to 16:17, delving into polyrhythmic variations and tempo shifts that demonstrate the drummer's technical virtuosity while integrating Bruce and Clapton's subtle rhythmic support, underscoring Cream's innovative approach to the power trio format.[6] Overall, these performances, selected from the San Francisco dates, affirm the band's stage dominance by prioritizing improvisational depth over fidelity to originals, influencing the live album genre's emphasis on unpolished authenticity.[25]Artwork
Cover art
The cover art for Wheels of Fire was designed by Australian pop artist Martin Sharp, who sought to encapsulate the warm, joyful liveliness of Cream's music through psychedelic visuals.[27] The front and back covers present silver-grey illustrations of a central wheel and abstract figures in black ink on a metallic foil background, evoking motion and intensity in line with the album's theme.[5] Influenced by the era's psychedelia, Sharp's work reflects the psychedelic era’s zeitgeist.[27] Sharp collaborated closely with the band, including Eric Clapton, while living in London's creative Pheasantry building during the late 1960s.[27] The gatefold sleeve extends this aesthetic with vibrant Day-Glo colors in the inner spread, creating a trippy quality that enhances the album's fiery motif.[27] Photography by Jim Marshall captures the band, integrating into the design to tie the "wheels" imagery to their dynamic presence.[28] The overall artwork earned the New York Art Directors Prize for Best Album Design in 1969.[27]Packaging details
The original Wheels of Fire LP was released as a gatefold double album on thick cardboard stock, allowing the sleeve to unfold and immerse listeners in Martin Sharp's psychedelic visuals. The inner gatefold showcased vibrant Day-Glo colors—predominantly pink, orange, green, and yellow—in hallucinatory abstract drawings amid swirling patterns, extending the cover art's surreal motif for a fully enveloping experience.[5][29][30] Lyric sheets and production credits were printed directly within the gatefold, providing detailed track information and personnel notes alongside Sharp's artwork. The innovative split-disc format was emphasized through distinct labeling—"In the Studio" for the first record and "Live at the Fillmore" for the second—reflecting the album's hybrid structure of studio and live material. While standard pressings used black vinyl, select variants in certain markets featured colored options for added visual appeal.[31][32] Early 1968 releases included both mono and stereo configurations, with stereo quickly becoming the preferred format as consumer demand shifted; mono editions were phased out by late 1968. International versions, such as the UK Polydor pressing (583 031/2), retained the core gatefold design but incorporated localized printing and labeling adjustments to comply with regional standards.[31][33]Release
Promotion and formats
Wheels of Fire was released in the United States by Atco Records on June 14, 1968, followed by a United Kingdom release on Polydor Records on August 9, 1968.[4][31] The album's promotion capitalized on Cream's ongoing US tour, integrating live performances with radio airplay of key tracks such as "White Room" to build anticipation.[34] "White Room" served as the lead single, issued in September 1968 in the US where it reached number 6 on the Billboard Hot 100, and in January 1969 in the UK where it peaked at number 28.[35] Under manager Robert Stigwood's direction, promotional activities included television appearances to showcase the band's energy, notably their performance of "Sunshine of Your Love" on The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour on July 14, 1968, hosted by Glen Campbell.[36][37] Stigwood's organization also distributed posters highlighting the album's distinctive artwork, positioning Wheels of Fire as an ambitious double-album project amid the band's grueling tour schedule.[38] These efforts were intensified following the band's July 10, 1968, announcement of their breakup after a farewell tour, lending a sense of finality to the campaign.[11] The album was formatted as a gatefold double vinyl LP, with the first disc featuring new studio recordings and the second presenting live tracks captured during the band's 1967–1968 tours.[31] It was offered in both mono and stereo pressings, with no contemporaneous single-disc edition; the full package emphasized the contrast between studio experimentation and onstage intensity.[1] Internationally, Wheels of Fire saw variations in pressings to suit regional markets, including Japanese editions on Polydor with obi strips and translated liner notes, as well as European releases on labels like Deutsche Grammophon with localized packaging and occasional bilingual inserts.[31]Commercial performance
Wheels of Fire achieved significant commercial success upon its release, topping the Billboard 200 chart in the United States for four weeks beginning August 10, 1968. It also reached number one on the RPM 100 Albums chart in Canada and the Kent Music Report in Australia.[4] In the United Kingdom, the double album edition peaked at number three on the Official Charts Company's UK Albums Chart. The album became the world's first double album to receive platinum certification, awarded by Atlantic Records for one million units sold in the United States on November 2, 1968, during a Cream concert at Madison Square Garden—eight years before the RIAA formalized its platinum program.[39] The success of the single "White Room," which peaked at number six on the Billboard Hot 100, significantly boosted album sales, particularly in the US market. Following Cream's breakup in late 1968, Wheels of Fire experienced chart re-entries, sustaining its momentum through radio play and fan demand. The album performed strongly in the US, fueled by the band's intensive touring that built a dedicated audience, while its UK reception was more moderate amid growing band fatigue and internal conflicts.[3]Reception
Contemporary reviews
Upon its release in June 1968 in the United States and August in the United Kingdom, Wheels of Fire received generally positive reviews in the British music press, with critics appreciating the album's evolution of Cream's blues roots into psychedelic rock territory. Chris Welch of Melody Maker hailed it as "a record to restore the faith," noting that the double album successfully captured the band's live excitement and spirit, which previous studio efforts had failed to convey, and praised tracks like "White Room" for their innovation.[4] In the US, reception was more mixed, with some reviewers expressing fatigue over the album's length and repetitive jams. Jann Wenner of Rolling Stone critiqued the studio disc for overindulgence and poor songwriting, describing it as "indigestible" and faulting extended improvisations on tracks like "Spoonful," though he lauded the live disc's raw energy and specifically commended "White Room" as a standout for its psychedelic flair.[40] Common themes across reviews included admiration for Cream's technical prowess and shift from traditional blues to more experimental, psychedelic sounds, balanced against criticisms of excess in the longer pieces. Despite press divisions, the album garnered strong fan enthusiasm and radio support for singles such as "White Room," which helped propel its visibility.[4][40]Retrospective views
In the decades following its release, Wheels of Fire has been widely recognized for its role in defining the power trio format and bridging blues rock with emerging genres. AllMusic awarded the album a perfect five-star rating, praising its blend of studio innovation and live intensity as a cornerstone of Cream's legacy in pioneering the amplified, guitar-driven trio sound.[2] Retrospective rankings underscore its enduring impact, with Rolling Stone placing it at No. 205 on its 2012 list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, highlighting the record as "incontrovertible proof of Eric Clapton’s genius" through tracks like "White Room" and extended improvisations, though it was omitted from the magazine's revised 2020 list.[41][42] In scholarly and biographical assessments from the 1990s and 2000s, such as Chris Welch's Cream: The Legendary Sixties Supergroup (2000), the album is lauded for its influence on heavy metal's raw aggression—evident in the sludge-like riffs of "Sunshine of Your Love"—and progressive rock's exploratory jams, positioning Cream as a transitional force between 1960s blues revival and 1970s complexity.[43] While some later critiques noted the studio disc's psychedelic elements, such as the ornate arrangements in "Those Were the Days," as occasionally dated, the live disc garnered consistent praise for its unfiltered energy and improvisational prowess, with reviewers emphasizing performances like "Spoonful" as timeless displays of virtuosity.[1] Marking its 55th anniversary in 2023, Glide Magazine's retrospective hailed Wheels of Fire as a "transcendent double album" that encapsulates its era while surpassing it, crediting the combination of studio polish and live ferocity for making it the world's first platinum-selling double LP and a benchmark for rock ambition.[5]Legacy
Cultural influence
Wheels of Fire pioneered the double live/studio album format in rock music, blending polished studio recordings with raw live performances to showcase a band's versatility, and it became the first double album to achieve platinum certification in the United States.[1] This innovative structure influenced subsequent releases, such as Led Zeppelin's approach to album production and live documentation, with Jimmy Page and manager Peter Grant drawing lessons from Cream's commercial success in the U.S. market.[44] Similarly, it contributed to the evolution of live albums by bands like The Who, who were part of the mid-1960s R&B scene influenced by Cream.[44] Tracks from the album, particularly "White Room" and "Crossroads," have endured as staples on classic rock radio, with "White Room" reaching No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 and remaining a frequent airplay favorite due to its psychedelic edge and Jack Bruce's haunting lyrics.[45] "Crossroads," a live reinterpretation of Robert Johnson's blues standard, exemplifies Cream's improvisational prowess and has been covered by artists including Pearl Jam in live settings, preserving its status as a rock guitar showcase.[46] The song has also been sampled in hip-hop, notably in Bone Thugs-N-Harmony's "Tha Crossroads," which reimagined Johnson's mythos through a G-funk lens and topped the Billboard Hot 100 in 1997.[47] The album solidified the power trio archetype in rock, emphasizing the interplay of guitar, bass, and drums without additional instrumentation, which directly impacted bands like Rush, whose progressive sound echoed Cream's technical intensity, and ZZ Top, whose blues-boogie style drew from the trio's raw energy during their early tours with Jimi Hendrix.[5][48] Cream's format is often referenced in rock documentaries exploring 1960s counterculture, such as those highlighting the band's role in fusing British blues with psychedelic experimentation at venues like the Fillmore Auditorium.[3] In the blues-rock revival of the 2020s, Wheels of Fire continues to be cited in podcasts and essential album lists for its foundational role in establishing Cream as rock's first supergroup, blending virtuosic blues covers with original psychedelic compositions that influenced generations of musicians.[49] For instance, it ranked No. 204 on Rolling Stone's 2003 list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time and No. 383 on the 2020 update, underscoring its lasting conceptual impact on the genre.[50][42]Reissues and remasters
The 1995 Polydor CD remaster of Wheels of Fire utilized digital processing from the original master tapes to deliver enhanced clarity and dynamic range compared to earlier compact disc versions.[51] This edition, part of a broader effort to update Cream's catalog for the CD era, maintained the original double-disc structure with studio and live material intact, emphasizing the album's blues-rock intensity without additional tracks.[15] In 2004, Polydor released a hybrid SACD version that combined Super Audio CD layers for high-resolution playback with backward-compatible CD layers, allowing access to improved stereo and multichannel mixes derived from analog sources.[52] This format catered to audiophiles seeking greater sonic depth in tracks like "White Room" and extended live jams such as "Spoonful," highlighting the album's production nuances originally overseen by engineer Tom Dowd.[31] The 2014 Japanese Polydor 2-disc limited edition expanded the original content with four bonus tracks drawn from the Wheels of Fire sessions, including an alternate take of "White Room" and outtakes like "Anyone for Tennis" on the studio disc, plus live variants of "Sunshine of Your Love" and "Toad" on the live disc.[53] Presented in SHM-CD format for superior audio fidelity, this release preserved the gatefold artwork while adding session photos and liner notes to contextualize the additions.[54] A 2020 reissue on 180-gram heavyweight vinyl by Polydor/Universal targeted the audiophile market with a faithful reproduction of the original gatefold packaging and analog mastering, pressed at MPO facilities for reduced surface noise.[55] This edition became available through specialty outlets, including the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame shop, underscoring the album's induction status and ongoing appeal to vinyl collectors.[56] Post-2010 digital remasters appeared on streaming platforms like Spotify, offering high-resolution audio streams that captured the album's remixed clarity without physical media limitations.[57] These versions facilitated broader access to the content, maintaining the core tracklist while supporting modern playback technologies. No major physical reissue occurred in 2025, though the album's enduring commercial success—exceeding six million units sold globally—continued to be noted in commemorative discussions.[4] Bonus content evolved across editions: early 1970s compilations, such as RSO's 1976 vinyl repress, selectively featured album highlights in single-disc formats for budget markets, while later releases like the 2014 Japanese version incorporated session outtakes to provide deeper insight into the recording process at IBC Studios and the Fillmore Auditorium.[58]Track listing
Original discs
Wheels of Fire was released as a two-disc vinyl LP in 1968, with the first disc comprising studio recordings and the second featuring live performances captured at the Fillmore Auditorium and Winterland Ballroom in San Francisco during March 1968.[31]Disc one: In the Studio (36:55)
The studio disc is divided across sides A and B, presenting nine tracks that blend blues-rock with psychedelic elements.| Side | Track | Title | Duration | Writer(s) | Lead Vocals |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | 1 | White Room | 4:58 | Jack Bruce, Pete Brown | Jack Bruce |
| A | 2 | Sitting on Top of the World | 4:58 | Walter Vinson, Lonnie Chatmon (arr. Chester Burnett) | Jack Bruce |
| A | 3 | Passing the Time | 4:32 | Ginger Baker, Mike Taylor | Ginger Baker |
| A | 4 | As You Said | 4:21 | Jack Bruce, Pete Brown | Jack Bruce |
| B | 1 | Pressed Rat and Warthog | 3:14 | Ginger Baker, Mike Taylor | Ginger Baker |
| B | 2 | Politician | 4:12 | Jack Bruce, Pete Brown | Jack Bruce |
| B | 3 | Those Were the Days | 2:53 | Ginger Baker, Mike Taylor | Ginger Baker |
| B | 4 | Born Under a Bad Sign | 3:10 | William Bell, Booker T. Jones | Jack Bruce |
| B | 5 | Deserted Cities of the Heart | 4:37 | Jack Bruce, Pete Brown | Jack Bruce |
Disc two: Live at the Fillmore (44:23)
The live disc spans sides C and D, showcasing extended improvisational jams from four songs, emphasizing the band's power trio dynamics. Although labeled "Live at the Fillmore," the recordings were made at both the Fillmore Auditorium and Winterland Ballroom.| Side | Track | Title | Duration | Writer(s) | Lead Vocals |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C | 1 | Crossroads | 4:18 | Robert Johnson | Eric Clapton |
| C | 2 | Spoonful | 16:47 | Willie Dixon | Jack Bruce |
| D | 1 | Traintime | 7:01 | Jack Bruce | Jack Bruce |
| D | 2 | Toad | 16:17 | Ginger Baker | Instrumental |