The List

5 Classic Cream Tunes Featuring and Co-Written by Late Singer/Bassist Jack Bruce

Jack Bruce, the supremely talented bassist and singer best-known as one third of the British supergroup Cream, wouldโ€™ve celebrated his 81st birthday on May 14, 2024. The Scottish musician died of liver failure in October 2014 at age 71.

Thanks mainly to his work with Cream, Bruce was a major influential on many other respected rock bassists, including Rushโ€™s Geddy Lee, Black Sabbathโ€™s Geezer Butler, Yesโ€™ Chris Squire, and Mountainโ€™s Felix Pappalardi.

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[RELATED: Behind the Slightly Arrogant Band Name: Cream]

Prior to Cream, Bruce played in a number of respected British blues outfits, including The Graham Bond Organization and, briefly, John Mayallโ€™s Bluesbreakers. The former group also featured drummer Ginger Baker, while the latter included guitarist Eric Clapton.

In 1966, Bruce was asked to join the band Clapton and Baker were forming, although Jack and Ginger had a notoriously contentious relationship. The group was christened, a nod to the perception that its members were the cream of the U.K.โ€™s blues and jazz scene. Bruce became the bandโ€™s principal lead singer and songwriter, frequently collaborating lyricist Pete Brown.

Cream released four albums before breaking up in 1969. Bruceโ€™s contributions to the group remain some of the trioโ€™s most enduring tunes. In honor of Bruceโ€™s birthday, here are five standout Cream songs he sang and co-wrote:

โ€œWrapping Paperโ€ (1966)

โ€œWrapping Paperโ€ was Creamโ€™s debut single, released in the U.K. in October 1966. The song, which Bruce co-wrote with Brown, has an old-timey jazz feel.

โ€œWrapping Paperโ€ peaked at No. 34 on the U.K. charts. The track was never released on a Cream studio album. It later appeared on a number of compilations, including The Very Best of Cream (1995).

โ€œI Feel Freeโ€ (1966)

โ€œI Feel Freeโ€ was Creamโ€™s second single, released in December 1966 in the U.K., where it reached No. 11. The song also was included on the U.S. version of the bandโ€™s debut album, Fresh Cream, which was issued in January 1967.

Another Bruce-Brown co-write, the song features soaring, melodic verses, and a heavier, more-aggressive chorus.

โ€œSunshine of Your Loveโ€ (1967)

One of Creamโ€™s signature songs, โ€œSunshine of Your Loveโ€ was co-written by Bruce, Clapton, and Brown. The psychedelic-blues tune features memorable bass riff from Bruce, who shares lead vocals with Clapton.

The song was featured on Creamโ€™s classic second studio album, Disraeli Gears. โ€œSunshine of Your Loveโ€ was Creamโ€™s first and biggest hit in the U.S., peaking at No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100.

โ€œSWLABRโ€ (1967)

โ€œSWLABRโ€ also was featured on Disraeli Gears, and was released as the B-side of the โ€œSunshine of Your Loveโ€ single. The song was co-written by Bruce and Brown, and its title stands for โ€œShe Was Like a Bearded Rainbow.โ€ That phrase never appears in the song, though.

In a 2017 interview with Songfacts, Brown explained that he wrote the lyrics about a guy who had been dumped by his girlfriend and is defacing photos of her by drawing mustaches on them.

โ€œWhite Roomโ€ (1968)

Another of Creamโ€™s signature songs, โ€œWhite Roomโ€ was the lead track from the groupโ€™s third album, Wheels of Fire. The heavy psychedelic tune, which was co-written by Bruce and Brown, reached No. 6 on the Hot 100. Wheels of Fire, meanwhile, topped the Billboard 200 for four weeks in August 1968.

Brown told Songfacts that the lyrics were inspired by an empty apartment where he spent time contemplating the issues he was struggling with in his life.

โ€œItโ€™s a place where I stopped, I gave up all drugs and alcohol at that time in 1967 as a result of being in the white room,โ€ he explained. โ€œSo it was a kind of watershed period.โ€

Bruce recorded new versions of โ€œWhite Roomโ€ and โ€œSunshine of Your Loveโ€ for his 2001 solo album, Shadows in the Air. Clapton also contributed to both tracks.