Back Home
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- So Tired
- Say What You Will
- I’m Going Left
- Love Don’t Love Nobody
- Revolution
- Love Comes To Everyone
- Lost And Found
- Piece Of My Heart
- One Day
- One Track Mind
- Run Home To Me
- Back Home
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #57084 in Music
- Brand: Clapton,Eric
- Released on: 2005-08-30
- Number of discs: 1
- Dimensions: .21 pounds
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Back Home, Eric Clapton's first album of original material in several years, follows this summer's historic and heralded Cream reunion and 2004's gold, Top 10 Me and Mr. Johnson covers disc (and it's audio/video companion, Sessions for Robert J). With Back Home, three-time Rock and Roll Hall of Famer and 16-time Grammy winner Clapton finds his way home with another modern classic.
Amazon.com
Back Home is Eric Clapton in a good mood, filled with upbeat toe-tappers about hearth and home (a young child even puts in a cameo on "So Tired"). Blues-rock ("Lost and Found"), reggae ("Revolution"), and R&B (the Spinners' "Love Don't Love Nobody") mingle comfortably with laid-back pop (George Harrison's "Love Comes to Everyone"). Recorded around the same time as Me and Mr. Johnson, his bestselling collection of Robert Johnson songs, Clapton's first recording of (mostly) original material since 2001's Reptile is a combination of solo compositions, covers, and collaborations with writing partner Simon Climie. Backing musicians include John Mayer (guitar), Blind Faith mate Steve Winwood (synthesizer), and longtime associate Billy Preston (keyboards), whose expertise with the Hammond B3 shines brightest on the Vince Gill cowritten "One Day". There are no real surprises on Back Home, just Clapton doing what he does best--with an extra spring in his step. --Kathleen C. Fennessy
Customer Reviews
A happy Eric is not Eric...
I am torn here. In the review I posted for the last Mark Knopfler CD, I defended the lower prominence of lead guitar, based on the fact that this is 20-something years later than "Sultans of Swing", and an artist grows, as they should.
I tried to apply this same standard to this Clapton album, but it just doesn't work for me. Knopfler might have cut back on the guitar gymnastics, but the tone and subject matter of the songs remain that same Knopfler that made me buy all of those albums. A happy Clapton is not Clapton. I'm glad his life is going well, but this also might prove that art comes from suffering.
I am not a casual fan. I have every Clapton release (some on old vinyl), and tracked every vintage of his career. I can throw an old disc on that I have heard a thousand times, and experience it like new every time. I'm afraid "Back Home" will soon be relegated to the back of my CD shelf next to the dusty Pilgrim and Reptile discs. Thanks for the decades of great music Eric, but it looks like the days of buying every new album sight unseen has reached the end.
I wanted to like this disc, I really did. 3 stars because this is technically a fine recording. The two missing stars are for the missing desire for me to listen to this disc after the first couple of tries.
Eric's Good Mood
Ok, I admit, I had some misgivings when I first heard some song samples from this album. I wondered, "where's the guitar?" and "Has Eric gone soft?" But after buying the album and listening to it more fully my answer would be definitely not!
Now I'll admit, it's not 'Layla' or '461' or 'From the Cradle'. But you know what? It isn't supposed to be!! Mr. Clapton is not an artist who rests on his laruels. I'm sick of reading negative reviews from people who expect him to do nothing but play recycled blues standards or solo until his fingers fall off.
This album has a warm, relaxed feeling to it. Some mistake this for being bland or lazy. I dispute this on several songs:
1) So Tired-a toe tapping humorous look at family life
2) Love Don't Love Nobody-his singing on this song is ridiculous-the Spinners would be proud
3) One Day-have you heard the solos on this?
4) Run Home To Me-a powerful moving performance
5) Lost and Found-for the people who need the bluesy/guitar fix, great riffs
6) I'm Going Left-again, very upbeat, I got this one stuck in my head
7) Revolution-great groove, EC knows his way around a raggae beat
Has everything EC has tried worked? No, but while the blues may be his base, he shows his versitility on this record. He isn't stuck to playing 'Crossroads' or 'Hoochie Coochie Man' 900 times.
Eric Clapton is one of music's greatest contributions. He continues to do what he feels, regardless of 'popular' opinion. Stop sometime and listen
Uneven throwback
Clapton's return to the middle of the road finds that the road he remembers from his '80s career as a radio hitmaker has pretty much dissapeared. Sounding like a relic of the late-'80s (right down to the Steve Gadd drums and Steve Winwood-sounding lead synths), this is teflon music - so slick that it won't stick to anything, particularly your ears.
Something of a minor concept album, centered around the themes of family and, well, home, the disc does have moments when the production backs off and real feeling shines through, particularly in the acoustic title track and the bittersweet kids-grow-up ballad "Run Home to Me". There are also plenty of misses and a few real embarassments here - particularly the stilted faux reggae of "Revolution" -- this is the guy who hit with "I Shot the Sherriff"? -- and the tired call-and-response of "I'm Going Left".
Fans of Clapton the singer more than Clapton the player may want to give it a try, as he is in fine voice throughout, though his guitar playing is often subdued and noodly. Several tracks benefit greatly from the warm presence of Billy Preston's Hammond organ (in one of Preston's last studio credits).




