A Super Seventies RockSite! EXTRA!

Clapton's Unplugged Gets Amplified

A new expanded and remastered version of Eric Clapton's multi-Grammy
winning, Diamond-certified album features unreleased music

by 1888 Media

Eric Clapton
Unplugged: Expanded and Remastered
ROCK (Reprise)

Eric Claptonric Clapton was already an acknowledged master of the electric guitar in January 1992 when he traded his signature Stratocaster for an acoustic Martin to record Unplugged. The live album captured the legendary guitarist, backed by a small band, performing acoustic versions of his own songs and several blues standards. Released later that same year, the album was an unqualified blockbuster, selling more than 19 million copies worldwide and earning six Grammy Awards, sweeping the top honors, including Record of the Year, Album of the Year and Song of the Year.

Reprise Records celebrates Clapton's electrifying acoustic performances with a new 2-CD/DVD collection that includes a remastered version of the original album along with six unreleased outtakes on two CDs. The DVD features a newly restored version of the concert, as well as more than an hour of previously unseen footage from the rehearsal. Unplugged: Expanded and Remastered will be available October 15 for $15.88.

For the original album's 14 performances, Clapton reinterpreted songs from his rich catalog, including "Layla" -- completely reimagined as a shuffle -- from his time with Derek and the Dominos, "Running On Faith" and "Old Love" from 1989's Journeyman, and the hit single "Tears In Heaven," a song he wrote after the passing of his young son Conor the previous year. Much of the album showcases blues songs Clapton grew up listening to, like Bo Diddley's "Before You Accuse Me," Big Bill Broonzy's "Hey Hey," Leadbelly's "Alberta" and Robert Johnson's "Malted Milk."

The second disc of Unplugged: Expanded and Remastered includes several songs not on the original album, such as a cover of "Big Maceo" Merriweather's "Worried Life Blues," an alternate take of "Walkin' Blues" and early versions of "Circus" and "My Father's Eyes" -- songs that would surface six years later on Clapton's album Pilgrim.

The DVD included in this collection contains a newly restored version of the original broadcast, which aired August 25, 1992 on MTV. For the first time ever, fans will also have the opportunity to see more than an hour of unreleased footage recorded during the pre-show rehearsal. Filmed from multiple camera angles, it features an intimate look at Clapton and the band working on arrangements and running through 14 songs, including "Circus" and "My Father's Eyes," which were not featured in the final broadcast.

'Unplugged - Expanded and Remastered' - Eric Clapton UNPLUGGED: EXPANDED AND REMASTERED
CD & DVD Track Listing

1. "Signe"
2. "Before You Accuse Me"
3. "Hey Hey"
4. "Tears In Heaven"
5. "Lonely Stranger"
6. "Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out"
7. "Layla"
8. "Running On Faith"
9. "Walkin' Blues"
10. "Alberta"
11. "San Francisco Bay Blues"
12. "Malted Milk"
13. "Old Love"
14. "Rollin' & Tumblin'"

CD Disc Two - Outtakes & Alternates (All Tracks Previously Unreleased)
1. "Circus"
2. "My Father's Eyes" (Take 1)
3. "Running On Faith" (Take 1)
4. "Walkin' Blues" (Take 1)
5. "My Father's Eyes" (Take 2)
6. "Worried Life Blues"

DVD Rehearsal Track List
1. "Signe"
2. "Before You Accuse Me"
3. "Hey Hey"
4. "Tears In Heaven"
5. "Circus"
6. "Lonely Stranger"
7. "Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out"
8. "Layla"
9. "My Father's Eyes"
10. "Running On Faith"
11. "Walkin' Blues"
12. "Alberta"
13. "San Francisco Bay Blues"
14. "Malted Milk"

AMAZON - Unplugged: Expanded and Remastered
ITUNES - Unplugged: Expanded and Remastered

YOUTUBE VIDEO
30-second Infomercial 6-minute Unplugged EPK
"San Francisco Bay Blues" Rehearsal

ONLINE
Eric Clapton Official Store - Unplugged: Expanded and Remastered
EricClapton.com
Facebook
WheresEric.com




Something 'New'

With 'New', Paul calls in marquee producers and puts
a modern spin on sounds that made him famous.

Paul McCartney
New
ROCK (Hear Music/Concord Music Group)

By Kyle Anderson in Entertainment Weekly

Paul McCartneyaul McCartney has nothing to gain from working. Having already lorded over one of rock & roll's most definitive catalogs, the 71-year-old icon could have simply spent his autumn years rearranging jazz standards (as he did on 2012's Kisses on the Bottom ), or worse, cranking out an endless stream of tired Beatles simulacra. Instead, he's jamming with the surviving members of Nirvana (which happened earlier this year) and recruiting a small army of visionaries to help craft his 16th solo album.

That willingness to dabble apparently appeals to producer Mark Ronson, who lends both the title track and the loping "Alligator" a past-is-future swagger. Other partners leave their mark as well: Adele knob-twiddler Paul Epworth adds stately cinematic swoop to opener "Save Us," Ethan Johns (Kings of Leon) brings a clean minimalism to the humming "Hosanna," and Giles Martin, son of Beatles producer Sir George, gives muscular heft to the fuzzy "Appreciate."

'New' - Paul McCartney
Released on Oct. 13 via Hear Music, New is Paul McCartney's 16th solo album and his first album of new solo material in six years. Produced by Marc Ronson, Paul Epworth, Giles Martin and Ethan Johns, New 's best tracks include the sweetly psychedelic "On My Way to Work" and "Early Days," a chiming blast of acoustic nostalgia.
McCartney earns points just for seeking out new ideas, but New hangs on the strength of the songs. He's got formidable storytelling chops (which especially inform the dreamy "On My Way to Work"), but he is also smart enough to get out of the way of a bombastic hook, as on the punch "I Can Bet." New is as apt an album title as you'll find: Not only does it announce McCartney's first batch of original songs in six years, it also celebrates the idea that pop music can still invigorate, inspire, and surprise -- even if you had a hand in inventing it.  A-

McCartney Gets Back

By Will Hermes in Rolling Stone

Sure, last year's set of pre-rock pop standards ( Kisses on the Bottom ) was charming. But at 71, Paul McCartney has thankfuly returned to the music of eternal youth. Recorded with a round robin of top-flight producers, including retro-modernist Mark Ronson, U.K. pop supersizer Paul Epworth and Giles (son of George) Martin, New feels energized and full of joyous rock & roll invention. More than a sentimental journey, it's an album that wants to be part of the 21st-century pop dialogue.

The most Beatles-ish track is the Martin-produced "On My Way to Work," whose daydream-y commuter narrative recalls "A Day in the Life"; the boldest is "Queenie Eye," a glam-rockish stadium singalong. But the head turner is "Early Days," a wistful, mostly acoustic memoir-reverie echoing George Harrison's "All Those Years Ago," albeit with some genteel bitchiness, presumably about Paul's Fab Four past: "Everybody seems to have their own opinions/Of who did this and who did that," he sings, "but as for me, I don't see how they can remember/When they weren't where it was at."

The Ronson collaborations are the best moments, spitting the difference between then and now: the Sgt. Pepper -y "New" and "Alligator," which shuffles White Album guitar grit with stoner synth-pop ambience. "I need a place where I can rest my weary bones and have a conversation not too deep," McCartney sings in the latter, which sounds par for the course. But, hell, if it's this catchy, we're in. * * * *

Reader's Comments

No comments so far, be the first to comment .




Nixon Icon Best of EXTRA! | EXTRA! | Main Page | Seventies Single Spotlight | Search The RockSite/The Web


Mobilize your Site
View Site in Mobile | Classic
Share by: