Complete Clapton

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (361 ratings)
Complete Clapton album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Eric Clapton (See All Albums by Eric Clapton)
  • Date Released: Oct 9, 2007

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Contemporary Blues, Rock

  • Label: Reprise

Total Tracks: 36   Total Length: 155:02

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Could be Better but...

Richbo1

no compilation is ever suitable to everyone so I'd give it a 4. I guess this is fine for Clapton fans of the mid 70's on but more D & the Domino's should have been included. Cocaine, Lay Down Sally included but missing Little Wing & Tell the Truth? Easily could have added 4 or 5 more from Layla double album. E C from Cream/Blind Faith time period to Eric Clapton album in 1970 far surpasses a lot of his "Pop" tunes. He's about the Blues folks!

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Another essential album

geoffreylee

All his best. You have to have this to get a great overview of his career.

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All the "must haves" are there

NEblues

Very well done -- all the must haves I can think of seem to be there. I might have swapped one or two cuts for another but that just speaks for the strength of material that he's done over the years.

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Fantastic Music

JSK72401

A great collection of Clapton's best from Cream to the present.

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Can't live without!!! Must Have

electricraven

If your a fan or just like Eric Clapton, this is a must have for your collection.Every song is a hit.

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Must have

torresjosh

As a wedding DJ, this album has become a 'must have' for me.

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Complete Clapton - completely awesome!

dshelton94501

The greatest of the greatest - if you're an avid Clapton Fan of course there is lots of stuff left out but really a great recommendation to introduce someone to the Man - - -

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Complete Clapton

g07921

This is just plain awsome for any Eric Clapton fan

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its simple the wide world of Sir. Eric Claption

jeffslong50

Got be at the top of any Clapton lovers list.

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All it needs is the Unplugged version of Layla.

dylanlennonfan

Aside from that, it's pretty much perfect.

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They Say All Music Guide

Disregard the title of this 2007 compilation: there is no way that any double-disc, 36-track set could be called The Complete Clapton, not when Eric Clapton has had a career that’s spanned over four decades. This doesn’t even attempt to cover as much ground as his landmark four-disc 1988 box set Crossroads, which began with his first band the Yardbirds and then followed his winding journeys through John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, Cream, Blind Faith, Delaney & Bonnie, and Derek & the Dominos before settling into his solo records. Of course, The Complete Clapton covers the nearly 20 years that have elapsed since the release of Crossroads, a time frame which includes the blockbuster success of his 1992 Unplugged, its all-blues 1994 follow-up From the Cradle, and many soft adult contemporary hits from the late ’90s. All these phases are touched upon on The Complete Clapton, but the set lops off all of Clapton’s earliest recordings, beginning with five Cream staples (“I Feel Free,” “Sunshine of Your Love,” “White Room,” “Crossroads,” “Badge”) and Blind Faith’s “Presence of the Lord” before delving into his solo career. This turns The Complete Clapton into a portrait of Clapton the classic rocker, as it focuses almost entirely on radio staples — including tracks like “I’ve Got a Rock & Roll Heart,” “Forever Man,” and “It’s in the Way That You Use It” that didn’t make the cut on Crossroads — that still are played frequently years after their original release. As such, this set doesn’t pack many surprises, but it does hit the obvious highlights well and serves as a good hits package for the casual and curious fan, and in that sense, it works as a good companion piece to Clapton’s autobiography, which was published the same week this was released in October 2007. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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