Eric Clapton - I Still Do (2016) [HDTracks]
Artist: Eric Clapton
Title: I Still Do
Year Of Release: 2016
Label: Polydor
Genre: Blues, Classic Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [24Bit/192kHz]
Total Time: 54:13
Total Size: 2,12 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: I Still Do
Year Of Release: 2016
Label: Polydor
Genre: Blues, Classic Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [24Bit/192kHz]
Total Time: 54:13
Total Size: 2,12 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
Music legend Eric Clapton has reunited with famed producer Glyn Johns for his 23rd studio album "I Still Do". Clapton and Johns who has also produced albums for The Eagles, The Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin and The Who most famously worked together on Clapton's iconic Slowhand album, which is RIAA-certified 3x-platinum and topped charts globally. The 12-track record includes some original songs written by Clapton. This album follows his last release, the 2014 chart-topping "Eric Clapton & Friends: The Breeze, An Appreciation of JJ Cale".
Tracklist:
01 - Alabama Woman Blues
02 - Can't Let You Do It
03 - I Will Be There
04 - Spiral
05 - Catch The Blues
06 - Cypress Grove
07 - Little Man, You've Had A Busy Day
08 - Stones In My Passway
09 - I Dreamed I Saw St. Augustine
10 - I'll Be Alright
11 - Somebody's Knockin'
12 - I'll Be Seeing You
Reuniting with producer Glyn Johns, the steady hand who guided Slowhand back in 1977, doesn't provide Eric Clapton with much of a jolt for his 23rd studio album, but it does provide the veteran guitarist with no small degree of nicely weathered warmth. Such mellowed good vibes are the calling card of I Still Do, which otherwise proceeds along the same path Clapton's records follow in the 21st century: he blends covers of well-worn blues standards with a couple of J.J. Cale tunes, a few old pop standards, a Bob Dylan chestnut, and original songs that draw upon aspects of all of these. "Spiral" and "Catch the Blues," the two EC originals that anchor the middle of the album, are handsomely crafted tunes that complement the rest of the record; they don't draw attention to themselves but rather show how hard "Cypress Grove" swings and how "Alabama Woman Blues" crawls, and reveal the lightness of "I Dreamed I Saw St. Augustine" and "Little Man, You've Had a Busy Day." Although "I'll Be Seeing You" ends I Still Do on a bit of a wistful note, this album is neither melancholy nor some kind of summation. It is simply Clapton being Clapton, enjoying the company of his longtime band and songs he's loved, and here he's fortunate enough to be produced by Johns, whose expert touch gives this weight and color absent from the otherwise amiable Old Sock. That's enough to give I Still Do some resonance because Johns focuses not on the songs but the interplay: it's not a vibe record so much as it's an album about the interplay of old pros who still get a kick playing those same old changes years after they've become second nature.