My Father's Eyes | |
Cover: | My fathers eyes eric clapton.jpg |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Eric Clapton |
Album: | Pilgrim |
B-Side: | "Theme from a Movie That Never Happened", "Inside of Me" |
Length: | 5:24 |
Label: | Reprise, Duck |
Producer: | Eric Clapton, Simon Climie |
Prev Title: | Change the World |
Prev Year: | 1996 |
Next Title: | Circus |
Next Year: | 1998 |
"My Father's Eyes" is a song written and performed by British musician Eric Clapton and produced by Clapton and Simon Climie. It was released as a single in 1998 and was featured on Clapton's thirteenth solo studio album, Pilgrim (1998). The song reached the top 40 on the US Billboard Hot 100 Airplay chart, peaking at number 16, which remains his last top-40 hit in said country as of . It also spent five weeks at number two on the Billboard Hot Adult Contemporary chart. It became a top-five hit in Canada, where it peaked at number two, and reached the top 20 in Austria, Iceland, and Norway. In 1999, it won a Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance.
Clapton performed this track for the first time in 1992 and again in 1996, in both electric and unplugged versions. These versions of the song were completely different from the official single release in 1998. He would later retire the song in 2004, along with "Tears in Heaven", until the 50 Years Further On Up the Road world tour in 2013.
Clapton wrote "My Father's Eyes" whilst living in Antigua and Barbuda in 1991.[1] The song was inspired by the fact that Clapton never met his father, Edward Fryer, who died of leukemia in 1985.[2] Describing how he wishes he knew his father, the song also refers to his own son Conor, who died in 1991 at age four after falling from an apartment window. In Eric Clapton: The Autobiography (2010), Clapton wrote: "In [the song] I tried to describe the parallel between looking in the eyes of my son, and the eyes of the father that I never met, through the chain of our blood."[3]
British magazine Music Week named "My Father's Eyes" one of the album's "most satisfying moments" and "most radio-friendly offerings", "with Clapton's usual restrained vocalising given a strong lift on the memorable chorus by the more optimistically-sounding backing singers. This is unlikely to hang around the chart for long, but will serve its main purpose of lifting album sales."[4]
Year | Ceremony | Award | Result | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1999 | BMI Awards | Song of the Year | [5] | |
Grammy Awards | Best Pop Vocal Performance Male | [6] |
Chart (1998) | Peak position |
---|---|
Australia (ARIA)[7] | 74 |
Iceland (Íslenski Listinn Topp 40)[8] | 12 |
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40 Tipparade)[9] | 20 |
Chart (1998) | Position | |
---|---|---|
Canada Top Singles (RPM)[10] | 42 | |
Canada Adult Contemporary (RPM)[11] | 5 | |
US Adult Contemporary (Billboard)[12] | 4 | |
US Adult Top 40 (Billboard)[13] | 28 | |
US Mainstream Top 40 (Billboard)[14] | 80 | |
US Triple-A (Billboard)[15] | 22 |
Region | Date | Format(s) | Label(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
United States | 10 February 1998 | Contemporary hit radio | Reprise | [16] |
Japan | 10 March 1998 | CD | [17] | |
United Kingdom | 23 March 1998 | [18] |