Blind Faith

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (49 ratings)
Blind Faith album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 6   Total Length: 42:03

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Blind Faith

Runaround

Im my opinion some of the greatest songest ever recorded, pity ego's got in the way but whatever. Im sure their are many others who will disagree with me but an Eric Clapton fan im not. Oh I will be the first to give him his due, his early years, but this album in my opinion clearly shows steve winwood's abilities. With out him there would be no Blind Faith, a once in a life time recording.

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Classic!

Microbe

This is truly a classic. I have to disagree with a previous review though, Do What You Like is probably my favorite song on here. But not worth $3.50.

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Clapton & Winwood

ReyCriollo

Eric Clapton & Steve Winwood "Live At Madison Square Garden" recorded in '08 or '09 have great versions of the first four tracks of this record. If your'e thinking of downloading this you'll want to check out the live one at e music It's really good.

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GREAT "one sided" album

martuccij

Buy the 1st five cuts and leave the rest alone. BTW: the "Biography" of Blind Faith on the band page is a doggone good read.

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They Say All Music Guide

Blind Faith’s first and last album, more than 30 years old and counting, remains one of the jewels of the Eric Clapton, Steve Winwood, and Ginger Baker catalogs, despite the crash-and-burn history of the band itself, which scarcely lasted six months. As much a follow-up to Traffic’s self-titled second album as it is to Cream’s final output, it merges the soulful blues of the former with the heavy riffing and outsized song lengths of the latter for a very compelling sound unique to this band. Not all of it works — between the virtuoso electric blues of “Had to Cry Today,” the acoustic-textured “Can’t Find My Way Home,” the soaring “Presence of the Lord” (Eric Clapton’s one contribution here as a songwriter, and the first great song he ever authored) and “Sea of Joy,” the band doesn’t do much with the Buddy Holly song “Well All Right”; and Ginger Baker’s “Do What You Like” was a little weak to take up 15 minutes of space on an LP that might have been better used for a shorter drum solo and more songs. Unfortunately, the group was never that together as a band and evidently had just the 42 minutes of new music here ready to tour behind. – Bruce Eder

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