“HE STOPPED PLAYING GUITAR — BECAUSE IT HURT TOO MUCH TO TOUCH IT.” When Eric Clapton lost his four-year-old son in 1991, music didn’t feel like music anymore. For months, he couldn’t pick up a guitar. Not because he forgot how — but because every note reminded him of what was gone. “Tears in Heaven” was never meant to be a hit. It wasn’t written for radio. It wasn’t written for an audience. It was written… just to survive the silence. When he finally recorded it, he kept the arrangement simple. No grand production. No hiding. Just a father, asking a question he already knew had no answer. And somehow, that’s what made the world listen. Because for the first time, it didn’t sound like Eric Clapton playing guitar. It sounded like a man… learning how to live again.
“Scroll down to the end of the article to listen to music.” The Silence Before the Song When Eric Clapton…