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No matter the song, from the stumbling Me And The Devil Blues to the murmuring Come On In My Kitchen, Me And Mr. Johnson sounds rehearsed and controlled.
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BlenderHis guitar reinvigorates age-old lines on neat and tidy arrangements, but he's even busier exploring the limited expressive range of his singing voice. [May 2004, p.119]
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In its reverential tone and the sheer joy expressed by Clapton and the all-star collection of session men joining him, the album proves utterly incongruous with the form it champions.
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It comes across as unnecessarily tame.
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Q MagazineInstead of the darkness and foreboding that infects Johnson's original '30s recordings, we get a thoroughly gentrified version of the blues. [May 2004, p.100]
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Instead of the traditional bluesman, we're given the much less exciting elder statesman. Instead of worrying about his soul, his next drink, or his next lay, Clapton sounds like he's wondering if his Lexus is parked in an okay area.
User score distribution:
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Positive: 5 out of 9
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Mixed: 0 out of 9
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Negative: 4 out of 9
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Aug 31, 2012
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JonHJun 5, 2004I'm so tired of these blues tributes that take out all the soul of the originals, pass on this.
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DonSJun 3, 2004