

Clapton, cocaine, and a Nazi train: the most cursed music doc never released.
Eric Clapton and his band toured Europe by train in 1978, and a documentary called "Eric Clapton and his Rolling Hotel" was filmed, but never released. Clapton put his band in a three-carriage train, originally at the disposal of Hermann Goering during the Nazi years in Germany, and traveled from town to town on the continent, from one concert to the next. It was an easy way to transport and house the band and equipment, and it offered ample opportunity for interviews, groups interactions, and filming. Clapton talks about his music and his works and peaks the viewers interest with stories about musicians like Hendrix and George Harrison. The interviews are supplemented with performances by Muddy waters, Elton John and George Harrison, as well as Clapton and his band. Tracks featured are Cocaine, Further On Up The Road, Lay Down Sally, Tulsa Time, Worried Life Blues, Early in the Morning, Badge, Wonderful Tonight, Key to the Highway, Double Trouble, Crossroads and Layla.
Acting
Harrison and Clapton's passive-aggressive chemistry is delicious.
Production
Goering's train as tour bus is deranged production design.
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
This film was buried for decades because Clapton reportedly hated how it captured his addiction era. Bootlegs only emerged in the 2000s.
The Goering train detail was barely remarked upon in 1978; modern viewers will find it jarringly unexamined. Clapton simply calls it 'convenient.'
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