White Room

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For other uses, see The White Room (disambiguation).
"White Room"
"White Room" cover
Single by Cream
from the album Wheels of Fire
Released January 1969 (single)
Format Vinyl album
Recorded Atlantic Studios, New York, January 1968
Genre Rock music
Length 4:58 (album) ([1])
Label Polydor (album)
Producer(s) Felix Pappalardi
Chart positions
  1. 6 U.S., #28UK
Cream singles chronology
"Sunshine of Your Love"/"Swlabr"
(1967)
"White Room"/"Those Were The Days"
(1969)

"White Room", written by Jack Bruce and Pete Brown, is a single by Cream from their 1968 album Wheels of Fire.

After bassist Jack Bruce wrote the guitar pieces, Cream's lyricist, poet Pete Brown, grouped colorful four-syllable phrases, loosely organised around images of waiting in an English train station influenced by the drugs he was taking. The combination is often considered one of the shining moments in British psychedelia. "White Room" is further noted for its unusual time signature of 5/4 in the introduction and bridge, with triplets played on tympani by Ginger Baker, his thunderous bass drum part also lacing the verses. Finally, "White Room" is notable for showcasing guitarist Eric Clapton's best known use of the wah-wah pedal (possibly aside from "Tales of Brave Ulysses") in the bridge and extended solo.

Along with "Sunshine of Your Love" and "Crossroads", White Room is one of Cream's most notable songs, reaching number 6 on the U.S. pop charts.

"White Room" was placed at #367 on the 2004 List of Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

Cream's White Room replaced Joe Cocker's Woman To Woman in the Xbox and PC Versions of popular videogame Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, which first appeared on the Playstation 2.

"White Room" has been covered by the following artists:

[edit] External links