D'leyenda Bar Rock

D'leyenda Bar Rock D'LEYENDA buena música, excelentes videos en pantalla gigante, comidas deliciosas y buenos precios.

D Leyenda Ibague los esperamos 7:30 PM apoyamos nuestro Deportes Tolima, con la fe intacta.
16/12/2025

D Leyenda Ibague los esperamos 7:30 PM apoyamos nuestro Deportes Tolima, con la fe intacta.

Muere Robe Iniesta, líder de Extremoduro, a los 63 años, en directo | Miles de despedidasLa muerte de Robe Iniesta ha pr...
10/12/2025

Muere Robe Iniesta, líder de Extremoduro, a los 63 años, en directo | Miles de despedidas

La muerte de Robe Iniesta ha provocado una oleada de emociones dentro y fuera de España, y numerosas figuras públicas han querido despedirse de la leyenda del rock. Entre los artistas que han compartido su pesar se encuentran Alejandro Sanz, Fito, Rozalén, Dani Martín, Leiva, Bunbury, Sidecars, Estopa, Viva Suecia y muchos más, reconociendo la influencia de Robe en varias generaciones de músicos.

También han querido rendir homenaje personalidades del ámbito político y cultural, como Pedro Sánchez y Alberto Núñez Feijóo, entre otros representantes institucionales de Extremadura y España.

Sin olvidar también a sus fans quienes han llenado las redes sociales de fotografías, vídeos y letras de sus canciones que quedarán siempre en la memoria.

D'LEYENDA abierto hoy a partir de las 4:00 pm, los esperamos.
08/12/2025

D'LEYENDA abierto hoy a partir de las 4:00 pm, los esperamos.

05/11/2025

The last thing Eric Clapton's 4-year-old son said was "See you later, Daddy." Twenty minutes later, a
janitor's mistake would change music history forever.
March 20, 1991.
By that morning, Eric Clapton had already lived several lifetimes. He'd survived he**in addiction
that should have killed him. He'd watched alcohol nearly destroy everything. He'd buried
friends—Jimi Hendrix, Duane Allman, Stevie Ray Vaughan—all lost to the chaos that seems to
follow genius.
But in 1987, something shifted. Clapton got sober. And in 1986, he'd been given a reason to stay
that way: his son Conor was born.
Conor's mother was Lori Del Santo, an Italian actress. Though they weren't together as a couple,
they shared custody. And Clapton—this man who'd survived decades of self-
destruction—discovered that being a father was the only thing that had ever truly saved him.
Conor was four years old on that March morning. He was staying at his mother's high-rise
apartment on the 53rd floor of a building on East 57th Street in Manhattan. Clapton was supposed
to pick him up soon. They were going to the Bronx Zoo—just a father and son spending a spring
day together.
The apartment was being cleaned. A janitor was washing the windows. He opened one of the large
living room windows to clean the outside glass.
Conor, excited about seeing his dad and going to the zoo, came running through the apartment the
way four-year-olds do when they're happy. He didn't know the window was open. He thought the
glass was there, like it always was.
He ran full speed.
And he fell.
Fifty-three stories.
By the time Clapton arrived at the building—just minutes later—his son was gone.
There are losses so profound that the human mind cannot process them in real-time. The death of
a child doesn't just erase the present—it erases every future. Every birthday that will never come.
Every Christmas morning. Every "I love you, Dad" that will never be spoken. Every moment, gone in
an instant that replays in your mind forever.
For Eric Clapton, the man who had always turned to music when words failed, there was only
silence. For weeks after Conor's death, he couldn't touch his guitar. The thought of playing seemed
obscene. How could there be music when Conor no longer existed?
But grief is strange. It demands expression, even when expression feels impossible. Slowly,
agonizingly, Clapton reached for his guitar—not because the pain had lessened, but because music
was the only language that could hold what words could not.
"Tears in Heaven" emerged from that darkness. Co-written with lyricist Will Jennings, it became one
of the most powerful expressions of parental grief ever recorded:
"Would you know my name if I saw you in heaven?
Would it be the same if I saw you in heaven?"
Every line trembles with a question no parent should ever have to ask: Will my child remember me
when we meet again?
Released on Clapton's 1992 Unplugged album, the song won three Grammy Awards. But more
importantly, it gave voice to millions of people carrying unbearable grief. Parents who'd lost
children finally had words for what they couldn't express. Strangers wept hearing it, feeling seen in
their own silent suffering.
Yet "Tears in Heaven" was both a gift and a wound. For years, Clapton performed it because
audiences expected it. But every performance reopened the deepest wound—forcing him to stand
on stage before thousands and relive his son's death over and over.
By the 2000s, Clapton largely stopped performing it. He later said: "I didn't feel the loss anymore,
which is so much a part of performing those songs. They're kind of gone and I really don't want
them to come back."
But Conor's death transformed Clapton in ways that went beyond a song:
His sobriety, which began in 1987, became unshakable. It was no longer about his career or
health—it was about honoring Conor. About being the father his son deserved, even in death.
In 1998, Clapton founded the Crossroads Centre in Antigua—a treatment facility for people
struggling with addiction. He's funded it through benefit concerts for decades. The center has
helped thousands find sobriety. Conor's death became both the wound and the guiding light.
Today, Eric Clapton is 79 years old. He's been sober for over 37 years. He rarely speaks publicly
about Conor, but when he does, the truth is clear: the loss never leaves.
Parents who've lost children know this: the pain doesn't fade. It changes shape, but it never
disappears. You learn to carry it. You learn to function with it. But it's always there—a weight that
never lifts.
Eric Clapton carries that weight every day.
But he transformed unbearable grief into something that has helped millions. "Tears in Heaven"
gave voice to silent suffering. It said: You are not alone. Your grief is seen. Your love is valid.
And in choosing sobriety, in founding Crossroads Centre, in continuing to create despite the
loss—Clapton chose to honor Conor by living a life worthy of his memory.
Conor Clapton lived only four years. But his brief life had an impact so profound that it changed his
father—and through his father's music, touched millions.
The brightest lights sometimes shine the shortest. But their warmth can last forever.

02/11/2025

¡Se inauguró la estatua de bronce de Jon Bon Jovi! 🤘🎶🔥

Una multitud se reunió para celebrar a la leyenda del rock, honrando no solo su innovadora carrera musical, sino también sus décadas de filantropía transformadora.

Pero la ceremonia superó todas las expectativas: durante la inauguración, se descubrió un misterioso objeto oculto dentro de la estatua. El sorprendente hallazgo ha desatado una ola de teorías en las redes sociales, desde cápsulas del tiempo hasta mensajes secretos.

Una cosa es segura: el legado de Jon Bon Jovi no solo está grabado en piedra o esculpido en bronce. Vive en los corazones que inspiró, en las vidas que transformó y ahora, en un secreto oculto en lo profundo de su propio monumento. 🎵❤️🔥

17/10/2025
11/10/2025

Dirección

Carrera 4 # 12/84 Centro
Ibagué

Horario de Apertura

Lunes 5:30pm - 1am
Martes 5:30pm - 1am
Miércoles 5:30pm - 1am
Jueves 5:30pm - 3am
Viernes 5:30pm - 3am
Sábado 5:30pm - 3am
Domingo 5:30pm - 1am

Teléfono

+573116036798

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