When Clapton and Crow Took Flight With Little Wing
It was the late 1990s, and a quiet charity concert turned into something unforgettable. Under the stage lights, Eric Clapton — the bluesman whose guitar had carried decades of heartbreak and triumph — chose not one of his own hits, but a song that belonged to another legend: Jimi Hendrix’s Little Wing. Beside him stood Sheryl Crow, her voice soft yet commanding, ready to take on a song soaked in history.
From the first shimmering notes, it was clear this was no ordinary cover. Clapton’s guitar didn’t just play Hendrix’s chords; it caressed them, as if in conversation with a ghost. Every bend and slide carried reverence, yet also his own unmistakable voice — tender, aching, human. Then Crow entered, her vocals not overpowering, but weaving through Clapton’s playing like a thread of light. Where Clapton offered raw sorrow, she gave warmth and balance, turning the performance into a duet of grief and grace.
The audience was transfixed. Many had heard Little Wing before — Hendrix made sure of that — but never like this. Clapton, scarred yet steady, seemed to pour his soul into every note, while Crow elevated the moment, embodying the spirit of the song’s “angel with little wings.” It was as if the two were holding a candle to Hendrix’s memory, their music flickering and glowing with each phrase.
What made the night remarkable wasn’t spectacle. There were no pyrotechnics, no flashy solos to steal attention. Instead, it was the simplicity — a guitar, a voice, and a song that had outlived its creator. Together, Clapton and Crow breathed new life into it, showing that a great song doesn’t just endure, it transforms, revealing new layers with each generation that dares to play it.
Even today, watching the performance feels like stepping into a sacred space. Goosebumps rise unbidden, not from volume or speed, but from honesty. Clapton honors the man who once inspired him, while Crow reminds us that music’s true power lies in connection — in the shared humanity between performer and listener.
On that night, Little Wing wasn’t just Hendrix’s anymore. It belonged to Clapton, to Crow, and to everyone who listened with their hearts open. A song about fragility, resilience, and fleeting beauty found new wings — and soared again.