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    Clapton Chronicles - The Best of Eric Clapton
    Clapton Chronicles - The Best of Eric Clapton

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    Artist: Eric Clapton
    Label: Reprise / Wea
    Category: Music

    List Price: $18.98
    Buy Used: $0.20
    You Save: $18.78 (99%)



    New (51) Used (72) Collectible (2) from $0.20

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 103 reviews
    Sales Rank: 5587

    Media: Audio CD
    Discs: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

    MPN: 47553
    UPC: 093624755326
    EAN: 0093624755326
    ASIN: B00001U03Q

    Release Date: October 12, 1999
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Tracks:

      • Blue Eyes Blue - Eric Clapton, Warren, Diane
      • Change the World - Eric Clapton, Sims, Tommy
      • My Father's Eyes
      • Tears in Heaven
      • Layla
      • Pretending - Eric Clapton, Williams, Jerry Lyn
      • Bad Love
      • Before You Accuse Me (Take a Look at Yourself) - Eric Clapton, McDaniel, Elias
      • It's in the Way That You Use It
      • Forever Man - Eric Clapton, Williams, Jerry Lyn
      • Running on Faith - Eric Clapton, Williams, Jerry Lyn
      • She's Waiting
      • River of Tears
      • (I) Get Lost

    Similar Items:

      • The Cream of Clapton
      • Unplugged
      • Complete Clapton
      • Slowhand
      • The Road to Escondido

    Editorial Reviews:

    Amazon.com
    If this were your first exposure to Eric Clapton, a bit of bewilderment would be in order. This is the legendary guitar icon? This is (as his early apostles once proclaimed) God? Ranging from the mid-'80s through the late '90s, The Clapton Chronicles owes less to the groundbreaking blues-rock of Clapton's '60s and '70s classics than to the polished-to-a-glare pop of Phil Collins, who produced one of the tracks included in this 14-song anthology. His reinterpretation of his greatest recording--the once-gripping, now-placid "Layla"--perhaps best illustrates Clapton at middle-age: Who wants to bask in his darkest period? Not Clapton, who converts his surging, purging charge into a soothing stroll. And perhaps not fans of such docile MOR fare as "My Father's Eyes," "Tears in Heaven," and the two new tracks, "Blue Eyes Blue" and "Get Lost." --Steven Stolder

    Amazon.com

    Eric Clapton Merchandise




    Customer Reviews:   Read 98 more reviews...

    2 out of 5 stars Clapton as mainstream pop artist. BORING!!!!   July 25, 2003
     68 out of 83 found this review helpful

    Yikes! It's sad to think that this is what most people think of Eric Clapton as, a poppy Top-40 balladeer. Listen to this album, and you'll be befuddled as to why Clapton is considered an esteemed guitar god. Most people who buy this album probably don't even realize that Clapton is a guitarist! Sure, he's holding a guitar on the cover of Unplugged, but he probably just uses it as a prop like Elvis did. Right?

    That's the impression that many people are probably getting about Eric Clapton nowadays. Very sad considering how great he once was. This is a guy that was once one of the greatest guitarists in the world, second only to Jimi Hendrix. A man whose playing launched a thousand hard rock and heavy metal bands. And thirty years later, THIS is the kind of drivel that people know him by??

    In my humble opinion, the only great material on this CD are the songs from Unplugged. It would make much more sense just to buy the Unplugged album. On that CD, Clapton's playing (even on acoustic guitar) is stunning and firmly rooted in the blues. The Clapton Chronicles, however, manages the feature only the least bluesy and most pop-oriented songs on Unplugged. Go figure. The songs from Journeyman are pretty good too, but missing the excellent "Old Love" featuring Robert Cray on guitar. Journeyman was an oasis of quality in a desert of slick 80's pop. That album presents us with the closest thing that The Clapton Chronicles has to a blues song: the cover of Bo Diddley's "Before You Accuse Me.

    There's no way around it: Clapton's contemporary material lacks the passion and excitement of his 60's and 70's work. Someone who loves and appreciates Clapton's best work will be bored to death by this CD, and rightly so. If you want to hear the best of Eric Clapton's 80's and 90's output, then you need to toss "The Clapton Chronicles" in the garbage can and buy three CDs: Unplugged (1992), From The Cradle (1994) and Riding With The King (2000). These three albums are really the only latter-day examples of Clapton's virtuosity. From The Cradle (Clapton's best and most intense album since the early 70's) has not even a single track on this collection! It's a glaring omission that suggests that the makers of this compilation sought to ignore Clapton's status as a blues player in favor of his more radio and mainstream-friendly fare. Consequently, they have turned him into a boring AOR hack. Clapton is still capable of great things, but when he panders to pop radio like this it's easy to forget the heights that he once soared to.

    If you're one of the poor souls who has fallen victim to this one-sided portrayal of Eric Clapton, then here are the albums that you need to hear immediately:

    "Five Live Yardbirds" - The Yardbirds (1964)
    "Bluesbreakers With Eric Clapton" - John Mayall's Bluesbreakers (1966)
    "Fresh Cream" - Cream (1966)
    "Disraeli Gears" - Cream (1967)
    "Wheels of Fire" - Cream (1968)
    "Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs" - Derek and the Dominos (1970)
    "Eric Clapton's Rainbow Concert" - Eric Clapton(1973)
    "Just One Night" - Eric Clapton (1980)
    "From The Cradle" - Eric Clapton (1994)
    "Riding With The King" - B.B. King/Eric Clapton (2000)

    Those albums will give you a glimpse of what The Clapton Chronicles is sorely lacking. You will see what he is capable of when he is truly inspired, and you will never want to listen to an album like Pilgrim or August again.


    5 out of 5 stars The triumphs and tragedies of Clapton presented   June 18, 2005
     18 out of 18 found this review helpful

    As the 1980's opened, Clapton seemed more tuned into the mainstream without sacrificing any of his vital bluesy guitar and his throaty vocals. The Clapton Chronicles pick up where Cream of Clapton leaves off.

    The engaging radio-friendly "Forever Man" from the Phil Collins-produced Behind The Sun continued Clapton's run on the pop charts, with his signature wailing blues guitar in full form. However, it turned out to be his last Top 40 hit for a while. Also from that album was "She's Waiting" with its pounded out synths in the chorus. It ends interestingly with frenzied accompaniment by some female backing singers, snare drum and piccolo.

    "It's In The Way that You Use It," from the Color of Money soundtrack and also on his August album, was the first solo song I heard from him thanks to MTV, still with the full sound of guitars, synths, saxes, and brass. Other tracks from August not on here that I enjoyed were "Run," the ballad "Holy Mother," and his duet with Tina Turner, "Tearing Us Apart," so 1986 wasn't a bad year for him.

    Next he released Journeyman (1989), which critics showed as a return to form, and even his best album since Slowhand, as seen with Bo Diddley's righteous "Before You Accuse Me," which is simply marvelous pure blues, and where he gets help from Robert Cray. This album was produced by Russ Titleman, who had revitalized Steve Winwood's career with Back In The High Life and Roll With It and indeed, "Pretending" could've fit on Roll With It. Chaka Khan helps with backing vocals here, ironic as she did the same for Winwood's "Higher Love." "Bad Love" gets a boost from Phil Collins on drums and backing vocals. There's less of the synths and more traditional rock instrumentation, which explains Journeyman's reputation as Clapton's best 80's album.

    Then came 20 March 1991, when his four-year old son Conor was killed in a fall. Following an extended absence, he came out with the heart-wrenching "Tears of Heaven," sung in a delicate falsetto, from the Rush soundtrack. With "Would you know my name if I saw you in heaven" and the resolve of "I must be strong and carry on/'cause i know i don't belong here in heaven" the reference is more than clear. This gave him the first of two Grammies for Best Record. The version here is the original studio version.

    From the Grammy-winning Unplugged, there is the considerably slowed down version of "Layla." Its tempo is indeed a reminder of its blues roots. This peaked at #12, two positions below of its studio counterpart peak. The live version of "Running On Faith" originally from Journeyman, is also included.

    His second Grammy came with the Babyface-produced "Change The World" from the Phenomenon soundtrack. This Top Five ballad had a notably more romantic and theme, albeit mellowed, and with a more with a nice pop-soul backing vocal troupe.

    A handful of the songs here denote how much Clapton was sobered by his tragedy, reminded perhaps of mortality in general. "Blue Eyes Blue" from the Runaway Bride soundtrack, shows a more subdued Clapton: "it was you who put the clouds around me/It was you who made the tears fall down." "River of Tears" with its funereal airy synths by Simon Climie of Climie Fisher fame who co-produced the album Pilgrim, of a man trying to start over after a split-up, and the #16 single "My Father's Eyes," also from that album attest to that. On hearing "how could I lose him?" and "Through the distant clouds of tears/I'm like a bridge that was washed away" there is a sign that Clapton was still mourning and pouring it into these songs.

    Where the 80's showed him holding steady, the 90s showed him winning more music recognition and glory, but at such a heavy price. Small wonder he was drowning in a river of tears.



    5 out of 5 stars Clapton   May 22, 2000
     15 out of 17 found this review helpful

    From about 1985 until 1999, Clapton Chronicles is actually (Despite what the critics may say) a very good Clapton CD... If you like his newer stuff.

    Starting with Blue Eyes Blue which appears on the Runaway Bride Motion Picture Soundtrack, and is a typical soundtrack song... Mostly just fluff, but, nevertheless, still Clapton. Next is his Grammy-winning Change The World, followed by My Father's Eyes, Tears In Heaven, and the reworked, unplugged version of Layla. So, to start off with, it's pretty good. All recent songs... Then comes Pretending, which is off his masterpiece, 1980s Journeyman; from here (6) to song number 13, it's all off of his albums from the 80s. Then we go back to Pilgrim, with the beautiful River Of Tears, and last, (I) Get Lost, another Motion Picture Soundtrack song, but it's arguably better than Blue Eyes Blue.

    An odd assortment of songs at best, and it serves as somewhat of a chart as to how Clapton has mellowed out over the years.... Too bad his fans don't. A lot of his fans weren't even alive when he wrote Layla,(I wasn't even alive when Money And Cigarettes came out)and still expect him to play the same kind of music. No one ever asked Rembrandt to paint the same picture twice. Clapton has aged very gracefully and is one of the few stars who has kept his popularity at the same level through so many decades. At least he isn't trying to stay young, like some other unfortunate aging stars are. A great CD, although it could do with some brand new songs... But it's still convenient to have all these wonderful songs on one disk.


    1 out of 5 stars Should be banned   April 7, 2006
     11 out of 16 found this review helpful

    How dare the record company call this "The Best Of" without qualifying it with the label 1985-1999? I'm surprised Clapton himself didn't put up a stink when they released this as it is clearly only a representation of Clapton's songs from the 80's onwards of which 90% were awful and showed the wrong direction Clapton headed. There is no sign of the magic he recorded in the 60's and 70's. The missing magic songs include: After Midnight; I shot the sherif; Let it Grow; Cocaine; Promises; Lay down sally; and of course the original rock version of Layla. To find all these classics, look for the far superior compilation "Cream of Clapton".

    And remember, after midnight we're gonna let it all hang out.



    5 out of 5 stars Clapton is...Maybe not God, but he sure is great!   December 19, 1999
     9 out of 14 found this review helpful

    From hard-slamming guitar God, to synthesizer-backed 80s rocker, to mourning father, to acoustic bluesman, Clapton has done it all. This compliation gathers up many of his hits from the 80s and 90s. I feel the best tracks on here are "Bad Love" (with its wistful synthesizer opening) and "Forever Man" (A song that takes you out-of-this-world for 3 glorious minutes). If you want more 80s Clapton, I recommend "August"! Many people think it is his worst album, but (Perhaps because I'm 16 years old and turning 17 soon), I love it! In fact, songs from that album have inspired me to write a movie! When it gets to the screen, you're all going to love it! Of course, I have to type it up in a professional format, and get an agent, but I'm expecting big things from it!


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