| by Stephen Thomas Erlewine 461 Ocean Boulevard is Eric Clapton's second studio solo album, arriving 
        after his side project of Derek & the Dominos and a long struggle 
        with heroin addiction. Although there are some new reggae influences, 
        the album doesn't sound all that different from the rock, pop, blues, 
        country, and R&B amalgam of Eric Clapton. However, 461 Ocean Boulevard 
        is a tighter, more focused outing that enables Clapton to stretch out 
        instrumentally. Furthermore, the pop concessions on the album -- the sleek 
        production, the concise running times -- don't detract from the rootsy 
        origins of the material, whether it's Johnny Otis' "Willie and the 
        Hand Jive," the traditional blues "Motherless Children," 
        Bob Marley's "I Shot the Sheriff," or Clapton's emotional originals, 
        "Let It Grow" and "Better Make It Through Today" (the 
        latter included only on several reissues of the album). With its relaxed, 
        friendly atmosphere and strong bluesy roots, 461 Ocean Boulevard set the 
        template for Clapton's '70s albums. Though he tried hard to make an album 
        exactly like it, he never quite managed to replicate its charms.  |