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In his legendary tenures in Deep Purple and Rainbow – and even through to his current exploits in Renaissance music – Ritchie Blackmore, when playing , has rarely been seen using anything other than a . But if it wasn’t for Eric Clapton, that might have never proved to be the case. Speaking in the latest issue of Blackmore details how Clapton altered his six-string trajectory in 1969 by – via a roadie – providing him with his first Strat.

“I was in Deep Purple in 1969 and I was living in Acton, London,” Blackmore remembers. “We were all in the same house, the whole band. Eric Clapton’s roadie came by the house because he knew one of my roadies, and he brought a Strat with him.



” Before then, his instrument of choice was a Gibson ES-335, which can be heard on , from Deep Purple's 1969 self-titled album. When its neck began to bow, Blackmore began looking for an upgrade. “I think [the Strat] was black,” he continues.

“So I said to him, ‘Do you want to sell that guitar? It looks interesting, and I wanted to try out a Strat.’ He said, ‘I’ll sell it to you for £60.’ I said, ‘Okay, you’re on.

’ So, for £60, I bought one of Eric Clapton’s old Strats that he obviously didn’t want because he gave it to the roadie.” It seems a bargain price, but taking inflation into account, £60 then is equivalent to about £842 (~$1,075) today. has since grown, with Stratocasters a common sight, but, as he adds in his latest interview, it was Clapton�.

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