National Post

Half-brother of rocker has wish

Living in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, Fast Eddie would someday like to play a session with Eric Clapton

- By John Colebourn

On a sun-baked afternoon in the heart of Canada’s poorest neighbourh­ood, o ne- t i me Vancouver musician Fast Eddie Fryer slowly crosses Hastings Street to discuss his deteriorat­ing health, his passion for guitars and his famous half-brother, rock legend Eric Clapton.

It is a death march of sorts as the severely hunched Fryer — cane in his left hand — feebly crosses the busy street to help set the record straight on having bloodlines with a rock icon and his own “end-stage” cirrhosis of the liver.

Awkwardly he climbs the stone steps at the Carnegie Centre in the epicentre of Vancouver’s infamous Downtown Eastside and sits down at a table that overlooks the homeless and hurting who shuffle like zombies around Main and Hastings.

In telling his story, Fryer asks for respect toward his multimilli­onaire Grammy-winning half-brother — and a good, hot meal.

Despite reports of his demise and substandar­d living conditions, Fryer feels his health problems are being properly addressed and he is well cared for at his rooming house.

“They have been very much responsibl­e for getting my medical condition under control,” said Fryer of his subsidized “medical” housing.

Recently, a story in the British media claimed Fryer was living in squalid conditions, something he denies.

“This writer came in and did a character assassinat­ion on the place where I live,” he said of his rooming house. “Granted it is not the Hilton. It is a shelter that has a medical team and they do a good job of looking after me.”

It was the spring of 1998 when Fryer first found out his biological father was also father to Eric Clapton.

As a Canadian soldier stationed in England during the Second World War, Edward Fryer Sr. had a wartime romance with Patricia Clapton.

She was eventually left to raise the future guitar whiz on her own, when Fryer moved into a new phase of his life after the war and began touring North America as a dinner club piano player.

Soon after discoverin­g his lineage 17 years ago, Fast Eddie remembers how he was hounded by the press and just wanted to be left alone to deal with his own musical career — and his own demons.

Fryer at the time admitted he had an addiction to heroin and his longterm goal was to get clean and sober and resurrect his music career.

For both Fast Eddie and Eric, drug addiction early in their careers was a common thread.

Clapton made a much-publicized full recovery from heroin addiction and continued with his career. Fast Eddie wasn’t so fortunate.

Hoping to meet and ultimately live his dream and jam with his famous brother, Fryer left the squalid conditions of Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside in 1999 and moved to North Carolina where his sister resided. He started a band and, as he gained control of his life, keeping in touch with Clapton through letters.

“We became popular with the college crowd,” he recalls of his fleeting musical career.

Eventually, Vancouver again beckoned and Fryer moved back. To help make some money between musical gigs, he worked constructi­on, much of it heavy concrete work.

Today, Fryer believes breathing the toxins from his constructi­on days has left him with chronic respirator­y health issues.

The last time Fast Eddie played a major gig was in July 2009, when his band, Eddie Fryer and the Lost Tribe, played at a concert in Nakusp. Ironically, he recalls that two members of the original Yardbirds played the Nakusp concert along with Steppenwol­f and Colin James.

While there, he didn’t want to make it known his half-brother was one of the original Yardbirds.

“I kept it very hush-hush,” he said. “I did not want to be known as ‘ Eddie Fryer the half-brother of Eric Clapton.’”

Working hard to rebuild his musical career, Fryer recalls one of his proudest moments: He sent Clapton a demo tape of his work, and soon received a surprising handwritte­n letter from him.

“He played it, and right away he wrote me a personal letter where he said he played the CD and it blew him away. Yes, he liked it and I sent him a letter back just to say I was glad you were able to get an opportunit­y to see what your brother’s music was like.”

Eventually, Fryer was convinced he would in time meet Clapton — even play together — but then the wheels fell off his bumpy ride to sobriety.

“I relapsed on heroin,” he points out sadly.

And while he may be living on borrowed time, he will not play the health issue as a plea for money.

“I have never asked him for money,” he said of his half-brother. “A person is not entitled to another person’s achievemen­ts.”

If he can get the tendons in his hand fixed so he can again hold a guitar, Fryer would be thrilled to live out his dream and playing with Clapton.

“I gain nothing by being defeated,” he said. “I am a fighter and want to play again, maybe even with Eric.”

I have never asked him for money. A person is not entitled

 ?? JasonPayne/ Postmedian­ews ?? After discoverin­g his lineage 17 years ago, “Fast Eddie” Fryer, now dying of cirrhosis of the liver, remembers how he was hounded by the press and just wanted to be left alone to deal with his own musical career — and his own demons.
JasonPayne/ Postmedian­ews After discoverin­g his lineage 17 years ago, “Fast Eddie” Fryer, now dying of cirrhosis of the liver, remembers how he was hounded by the press and just wanted to be left alone to deal with his own musical career — and his own demons.
 ??  ?? Eric Clapton
Eric Clapton

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