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Reptile
 
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Reptile

Eric Clapton Audio CD
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)
Price: £9.31 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Guitar icon and three time Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee Eric Clapton releases his 19th solo studio album simply titled CLAPTON.

Co-produced by guitarist and long-time collaborator Doyle Bramhall II, the CD features an all star cast of musical collaborations started with the legendary JJ Cale, drummer Jim Keltner, bassist Willie Weeks, and keyboardist Walt Richmond—and the sessions later… Read more in Amazon's Eric Clapton Store

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Frequently Bought Together

Reptile + Pilgrim + From the Cradle
Price For All Three: £17.29

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  • In stock but may require up to 2 additional days to deliver.
    Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk.
    This item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions

  • Pilgrim £3.99

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  • From the Cradle £3.99

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Product details

  • Audio CD (5 Mar 2001)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Warner
  • ASIN: B000059R8Y
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Audio Cassette  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 56,063 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Samples
Song Title Time Price
Listen  1. Reptile (Album Version) 3:25£0.89
Listen  2. Got You On My Mind (Album Version) 4:30£0.89
Listen  3. Travelin' Light (Album Version) 4:17£0.69
Listen  4. Believe In Life (Album Version) 5:05£0.69
Listen  5. Come Back Baby (Album Version) 3:55£0.69
Listen  6. Broken Down (Album Version) 5:25£0.69
Listen  7. Find Myself (Album Version) 5:15£0.69
Listen  8. I Ain't Gonna Stand For It (Album Version) 4:50£0.69
Listen  9. I Want A Little Girl (Album Version) 2:58£0.89
Listen10. Second Nature (Album Version) 4:48£0.69
Listen11. Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight (Album Version) 4:48£0.69
Listen12. Modern Girl (Album Version) 4:49£0.69
Listen13. Superman Inside (Album Version) 5:06£0.89
Listen14. Son & Sylvia (Album Version) 4:44£0.69


Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Despite the signals in other recent Clapton recordings, the title track of Reptile will have some of his followers checking their CD decks. It's not blues, nor reggae, but a very plausible take on smooth bossa nova guitar, redolent of George Benson or Ronny Jordan. Clapton's voice, not always convincing in the past, is also on exceptional form, if not reinvented: it's almost always resonant, sure-footed and tuneful, particularly on his growling cover of Ray Charles's "Come Back Baby". Stylistic departures appear elsewhere too, in the samba of "Believe In Life" and the jazz balladry of "I Want A Little Girl", but the blues remains Clapton's cornerstone. It's there in whatever style he plays, especially in tunes like "Got You On My Mind" and "Broken Down". Fans of his guitar-playing might wish he'd stepped back from the mike more often, but on any terms this is one of Slowhand's strongest albums for many years. --Mark Gilbert

Product Description

ERIC CLAPTON Reptile (2001 Taiwanese exclusive limited edition 14-track CD album presented in unique card picture slipcase complete with extensive photo/discography booklet with Taiwanese text - sealed!)

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
I'd call myself a fan of clapton, i've got quite a bit of his stuff, even the Crossroads boxset. His range is very varied.. blues, reggae, rock, R&B etc.. and Reptile is what i'd call soft bluesy rock.. and i'd say flat out it's absolutely perfect driving music, listening to it i wish i was transported from here, UK, to the coastline of San Fransisco and just gently cruise in a convertible... it has it's fair share of toe tapping tunes, and some really good tunes to just relax to.

When i first got it, i'd say i was pretty taken back by the first instrumental, it's really soft and i thought it sounded like elevator music. I was expected something a bit more gutsy. So i just kept it aside for a long time, not really giving it a chance until about a month ago, when i heard "I Ain't Gonna Stand For It" on the radio.. and i thought that was so cool... and went back to this album, gave it a chance and it's completely paid off.. there isn't a single track on here which i don't appreciate. It's just great, and it makes the Clapton Collection not a mere group of songs from one man... but a representation of rock of roll in general..

what are you waiting for? want some excellent music to cruise along to.. then this is it!!

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
By rik
Format:Vinyl
No, this is not From the Cradle II. Reptile is more reminiscent of Slowhand than any other album of his. The album is a pastiche of the many styles Clapton has assumed during his long career (blues, country, latin, soul) and I think it works rather well. His singing and guitar playing are both in full effect here, neither one minimizing the other. The Impressions sound FANTASTIC...more, please! Fans who hated Pilgrim should like this album quite a bit; there is virtually no programming or other 'modern' r/b influences. As I said before, it is more like the best of his 70's work; (aka Slowhand or Backless) in that the album should be appreciated holistically for its groove and texture. For those who MUST have a guitar solo as validation for purchasing the album, Travellin' Light and Come Back Baby ought to remind you why Clapton is still one of the best hotwire blues acts today...better than Stevie Ray. And I'm FROM Texas.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
When Eric Clapton and B.B. King planned the production of the album that would eventually become "Riding With The King," they scheduled three months of studio time - much to B.B. King's team's surprise because the King of Blues usually takes much less than that to finish an album. And lo'n behold, they were done in roughly a month, recording almost exclusively live, with very little editing involved. So Clapton decided to "tag on" an album of his own and take advantage of the outstanding group of musicians they had assembled, and the magical atmosphere of the cooperation with them. He had however, he says, "underestimated" how big exactly the effect of B.B. King's presence had been, and things just didn't seem to go together anymore as they had before. Besides, there didn't seem to be a real theme and a purpose to the album. So he took a break from recording and, when meeting with relatives in Canada, was reminded of his uncle Adrian (a.k.a. "Son") who had recently passed away, and whom he hadn't seen at all during the last years before Adrian's death; although growing up, this had been one of the most influential persons in his life. Like those of many outstanding musicians, Eric Clapton's albums often reflect the stage he is in in life; and remembering his uncle, it suddenly became clear to him that his new album had to be a re-examination of his early years, and of his relationship with "Son," a "local James Dean," as Clapton recently described him to Rolling Stone Magazine, and a true "Reptile" (i.e., "one of the guys") of his native Ripley.

I think it is important to take an album for what it is and not look for things which, given the album's history and meaning to the artist who has recorded it, cannot be there. This is obviously neither "Layla" nor "Fresh Cream" nor "Journeyman." Clapton has long since made his mark on blues and rock music, with these and other albums, with and without psychedelia (and he has never really been comfortable with the God-like status to which he was elevated early on anyway). He is no longer chasing Pattie Harrison. He has overcome drug and alcohol abuse; recovery from the latter prompting the doubtlessly difficult separation from his family in Ripley, including and in particular his uncle Adrian. He has founded "Crossroads" and taken control of both his private and his business life. His personality has evolved, and he doesn't exclusively have to rely on his music any longer to express what he wants to say. ("The only personality I had was within my fingers," he told Rolling Stone Magazine about his years with Cream and Blind Faith. "I could play it, but I couldn't say it. When we didn't have a song, I'd just think, 'Let's get stoned.' Which we did when we didn't know what we were doing.")

"Reptile" reflects the joy of Eric Clapton's cooperation with outstanding musicians such as long-time friends Andy Fairweather Low, Billy Preston, Steve Gadd and Nathan East (who have also joined him for what Clapton - sadly, very sadly - maintains is his last world tour - special kudos, though, to Billy Preston who, back from the hospital bed and his fight with chronic liver disease, literally danced on the stage when I saw them) ... and, yes, the Impressions, whom Clapton values so much that he has already announced that they will be featured on his next album, too. Clapton has called "Reptile" an "electric unplugged album" (with an "unplugged" feeling, but "plugged in" instruments) and compared its production to that of "461 Ocean Boulevard," his comeback studio album of 1974, in that during the recording of both albums, he and the other musicians would jam a lot, just playing songs of other artists they liked, and a fair share of those covers eventually made it into the final cut of the album. J.J. Cale's "Travelin' Light," Ray Charles's "Come Back Baby," James Taylor's "Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight" and Stevie Wonder's "I Ain't Gonna Stand For It" are examples here, and Clapton impresses his very own mark on each of them. And although he took some time to remix the album after the initial recording, it still maintains much of the atmosphere present during its production (witness, for example, that spontaneous "Have mercy!" at the end of "Come Back Baby.")

But the album wouldn't be named for Eric Clapton's uncle (and dedicated to him and his wife Sylvia) if it wasn't, in large parts, also about the singer-guitarist's re-evaluation of the things that influenced him in his youth. Hence, songs such as the instrumental title track (which is a bossa nova because, Clapton says, he just loves Brazilian music), the closing and likewise instrumental "Son & Sylvia," "Believe in Life" and, of course, "Find Myself," written early on but finding its true purpose only when the album took its final direction. Despite all this, and its tributes to different musical styles - including those favored by Clapton's uncle - the one thing this album is not is "retro" (Clapton actually fought the record company to keep it from going down that path). It's as much a catalyst for its maker's emotions and state of mind as any of his other albums over the course of the past decades; it's also, blues and beyond, just plain good music ... and incidentally, as if this needed any emphasis at all, Clapton's powers as a guitarist are still fully in place, as not only evidenced on this album but also during his most recent live appearances (with the added benefit of a large screen, concert venue permitting, giving fans an up-and-close view of the man's fretboard wizardry). His latest album should be enjoyed on its own merits, not on those of his numerous past laurels, uniquely important as they are - and on these terms, there is plenty to enjoy indeed.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Reptile: Eric Clapton - Clapton does what is second nature to him
Recorded in the two months studio time booked but not used for his excellent BB King collaboration, 2001's Reptile finds Clapton in a reflective mood, thinking about family and... Read more
Published 8 months ago by Victor
Ragbag collection of 'nice' songs.....
He released Journeyman in 1989 which had its moments and then, as far as an original album of material goes, there was Pilgrim and then this, 2001's Reptile. Read more
Published on 9 April 2007 by street-legal
Enjoy it on its own merits!
When Eric Clapton and B.B. King planned the production of the album that would eventually become "Riding With The King," they scheduled three months of studio time -- much to B.B. Read more
Published on 4 Oct 2006 by Themis-Athena
Enjoy it on its own merits!
When Eric Clapton and B.B. King planned the production of the album that would eventually become "Riding With The King," they scheduled three months of studio time - much to B.B. Read more
Published on 4 Mar 2004 by Themis-Athena
"Pilgrim" revisited
Some people like the sensitive balladeer that Eric Clapton has become in later years. Some like his low-key 70s amalgams of rock, pop, blues, and country. Read more
Published on 21 Feb 2004 by Docendo Discimus
Laid back . . .
Yeah, there are the odd upbeat numbers, but the over-all feel of the album is relaxing and cool.

For proof try 'Reptile' itself, a wonderful instrumental with a soft and smooth,... Read more

Published on 9 Sep 2003 by David Cranson
Wonderful Lounge Lizard!
For those expecting the rock of "Layla", the variety of "Pilgrim" or the funkiness of "461 Ocean Boulevard", you might be disappointed, but "Reptile" is a masterpiece. Read more
Published on 16 Dec 2002 by Martin A Hogan
E.C.' best ?
I have listened to Eric's music for years & this album stands out as one of the best ever, a big improvement on the over produced Pilgrim & I have no problem in letting this one... Read more
Published on 1 Sep 2002 by Paul Dunwoody
Heart-warming and foot-tapping
Beautiful CD, with heart-warming and foot-tapping songs. A well-balanced blend of old favorites with new creations. Read more
Published on 29 Oct 2001 by Nina Davis
Mellowed Clapton.
Following on from 'Pilgrim' this is a more inspired and personal Eric and probably the closest thing to a 'concept' album that Clapton has ever done. Read more
Published on 9 May 2001 by Mr. Colin Rankin
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