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Eric Clapton - Wonderful Tonight - Guitar Lesson

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Key G major
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Classic Rock

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About Wonderful Tonight


At 82 BPM in G major, "Wonderful Tonight" sits at a relaxed tempo that can fool you into thinking it is easy to nail. The real work is in the feel: the notes need to breathe, and rushing even slightly collapses the gentle, late-evening groove that makes the song what it is. The opening guitar melody is the heart of the piece, a simple repeating figure that doubles as both the intro and the verse hook, so getting its phrasing exactly right matters more than any flashy technique. Eric Clapton plays it clean in E Standard tuning, which means your tone and touch are fully exposed with nowhere to hide behind distortion. If the melodic phrasing is slipping, use the Practice Toolbar to loop just the intro figure slowed down and focus on where each note lands in the beat. Blues Rock phrasing is all about playing with intention, and this song is a precise lesson in that restraint.

  • The signature intro melody is played clean in E Standard tuning, so picking dynamics and note sustain are fully audible with no gain to cover mistakes.
  • At 82 BPM, the tempo is slow enough that rushing individual notes in the melodic hook is immediately noticeable, making steady internal pulse the key challenge.
  • The song uses a simple G, D, C, D chord progression, but smooth, quiet transitions between chords are essential to preserving its laid-back feel.

How to Play Wonderful Tonight

Tuning: E Standard · Key: G major · Tempo: 82 BPM

The song's iconic intro and verse riff is built around a small handful of notes in G major, played cleanly with a smooth, unhurried feel at 96 bpm, so the challenge is not speed but tone and phrasing. Focus first on nailing the melodic guitar riff that recurs throughout, keeping each note even and letting it breathe rather than rushing into the next phrase. The hardest part for most players is matching Clapton's subtle string bends and vibrato, which carry the emotional weight of the piece; even slight over-bending will push the riff out of its gentle character. Loop the main riff at reduced speed and concentrate on consistent pick attack and clean note separation before worrying about vibrato.

Loop each section and focus on clean, even timing rather than speed, with the metronome at 82 BPM.

Fender Stratocaster
Guitar

Fender Stratocaster

Clapton's primary instrument from the 1970s onward, his signature Strat features Vintage Noiseless pickups and an active mid-boost circuit that pushes clean Fender amps into controlled breakup, delivering his trademark smooth yet slightly gritty tone.

Gibson Les Paul Standard
Guitar

Gibson Les Paul Standard

The 'Beano' Les Paul with original PAF humbuckers paired with a cranked Marshall JTM45 created Clapton's legendary creamy, sustaining overdrive that defined the Bluesbreakers era and established his blues-rock foundation.

Gibson Les Paul Custom
Guitar

Gibson Les Paul Custom

While less documented than the Standard, Clapton's occasional use of this model maintained the thick PAF humbucker character essential to his early power-blues tone during his transitional years.

Gibson SG Standard
Guitar

Gibson SG Standard

Clapton's SG with PAF humbuckers and a cranked Marshall during Cream produced his searing, sustain-rich lead tone that became iconic for psychedelic blues-rock soloing and feedback exploration.

Gibson ES-335
Guitar

Gibson ES-335

The semi-hollow ES-335 with Derek and the Dominos gave Clapton a warmer, more articulate midrange response ideal for the soulful, slightly compressed tone heard on 'Layla' and bluesy slide work.

Fender Twin Reverb
Amp

Fender Twin Reverb

From the mid-1970s onward, Clapton's shift to the Twin Reverb running relatively clean allowed his Strat's mid-boost circuit to drive natural amp breakup, creating his refined blues tone without heavy overdrive pedals.