Reptile
- Eric Clapton
- Band Name: Eric Clapton
- Record Label: Reprise
- Release Date: Mar 13, 2001
- Critic Score
- Most active
- Publication
- Most clicked
-
80Reptile shows the guitar legend continuing to explore classic blues-derived sounds with palpable sincerity and conviction.
-
80As a slice of rootsy blues, it works nicely.
-
A smooth and engaging affair, with consistently strong singing and playing from Clapton.
-
70With guitars down in the mix (when they aren't unplugged altogether), Clapton's ever-evolving voice is the real centerpiece.
-
Over the course of fourteen tracks, Clapton blends virtually every style he's worked in during the past thirty-five years. Whether it will strike your ears as something-for-everyone generosity or a patchy jumble probably depends on how much of a purist you are.
-
60It's that sense of doing just enough but no more that permeates this album, at times rendering it laid back to the point of disengaged.
-
60There's nothing intrinsically wrong with this album - just the airbrushed production of tracks like James Taylor's 'Don't Let Me Be Lonely' robs them of any true grit and soul they might have had. And that, in a nutshell, is the problem afflicting Clapton at the moment, making for yet another average album to add to the list.
-
But at heart, Reptile is yet another version of the tepid corporate rock records Clapton's been making ever since 1974's bestselling 461 Ocean Boulevard.
-
At its very best, "Superman Inside" for example, Reptile is as expressive as anything he did in the nineties. The other half of Reptile is a series of oddball genre digressions and cornball balladeering.
prev
next
Page:
- 1
User score distribution:
-
Positive: 6 out of 6
-
Mixed: 0 out of 6
-
Negative: 0 out of 6
-
peters8A bit slick, but that's Clapton since 30 years. Makes me want to play guitar myself again, which should be a plus!
-
theresao10best of the recent albums.
-
terrib10Very well done, as all others.