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J.J. Cale & Eric Clapton - The Road To Escondido (2006) [2LP, Vinyl Rip 16/44 & mp3-320 + DVD] Re-up

Posted By: v3122
J.J. Cale & Eric Clapton - The Road To Escondido (2006) [2LP, Vinyl Rip 16/44 & mp3-320 + DVD] Re-up

J.J. Cale & Eric Clapton - The Road To Escondido (2006)
Vinyl Rip 16/44 | Flac(Image + Cue) > 362 Mb
MP3 CBR 320Kbps > 135 Mb | Artwork(jpg) > 98 Mb
DVD-5: NTSC 4:3 (720x480) VBR | LPCM, 2 ch, 24 bit, 96 kHz > 1.99 Gb
Reprise / Duck Records, 44418-1 | Blues Rock, Classic Rock

Two artists had an enormous impact on Eric Clapton's music in the '70s: Delaney & Bonnie and J.J. Cale. Clapton joined Delaney & Bonnie's backing band after Cream dissolved, an experience that helped him ease away from the bombast of the power trio and into the blend of soul, blues, pop, and rock that defined his solo sound. Delaney Bramlett helped steer Clapton's eponymous 1970 solo debut, which not only came very close to replicating the sound of Delaney & Bonnie's records from that time, but also had a rollicking version of J.J. Cale's "After Midnight" that was Clapton's first solo hit. Cale's influence surfaced again a few years later on Clapton's 1978 album Slowhand, which not only had J.J.'s sardonic "Cocaine" as its centerpiece but also drew heavily from Cale's laconic groove. Although Clapton progressively polished his sound over the course of the '80s, dabbling in pop along the way, he never quite strayed from the blueprint that he wrote based on his love of Cale's music, so his decision to team up with Cale for a full-fledged duet album called The Road to Escondido in 2006 felt natural, perhaps even overdue. After all, Clapton's work has borne the imprint of Cale's sound for over three decades now, so a duet record 36 years after Eric had a hit with "After Midnight" feels right. Initially, Clapton planned to cut a record with Cale functioning as a producer, but the project morphed into a duet album where Cale has a stronger presence than Clapton: the superstar might have brought in his longtime producer/collaborator Simon Climie, who has helmed every one of his records since 1998's Pilgrim, but Cale brought in members of his backing band and wound up writing 11 of the album's 14 tracks, effectively dominating The Road to Escondido. Even if Cale is the driving force behind the album, it's easy to listen to the album and think otherwise, since Climie gives this a precise, polished production that's entirely too slick for the rootsy music the duo plays, which in turn makes it sonically similar to all Clapton albums of the past ten years. Also, there are a lot of cameos from familiar pros (drummer Steve Jordan; bassist Pino Palladino; guitarists Albert Lee, Derek Trucks, and John Mayer; the late Billy Preston in some of his last sessions), giving this a crisp, professional vibe more in line with Clapton than Cale.

But the real reason that it would be easy to mistake The Road to Escondido as a solo Eric Clapton effort is that it's nearly impossible to distinguish him from J.J. Cale throughout the entire record. Sure, there aren't nearly as many synths as there were on Reptile or the stilted adult pop of Back Home, but the laid-back groove – even when the music starts jumping, it never breaks a sweat – sounds like a Clapton record through and through. More than that, The Road to Escondido reveals exactly how much Clapton learned from Cale's singing; their timbre and phrasing is nearly identical, to the point that it's frequently hard to discern who is singing when. Disconcerting this may be, but it's hardly bad, since it never feels like Clapton is copying Cale; instead, it shows their connection, that they're kindred spirits. And if Clapton popularized Cale's sound, he's paying him back with this record, which will bring him to a wider audience – and Cale, in turn, has given Clapton his best record in a long time by focusing Clapton on this soulful, mellow groove and giving him a solid set of songs. While it is hard not to wish that there was a little less NPR slickness and a little more grit to the record – this is roots music after all, so it should have some dirt to it – this is still a very appealing record, capturing the duo working the same territory that's served them both well over the years but still finding something new there, largely because they're doing it together and clearly enjoying each other's company. It's relaxed and casual in the best possible sense: it doesn't sound lazy, it sounds lived-in, even with Climie's too-clean production, and that vibe – coupled with Cale's sturdy songs – makes this is an understated winner. This CD was nominated for a Grammy award in 2007 for Best Contemporary Blues Album.

by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, allmusic
J.J. Cale & Eric Clapton - The Road To Escondido (2006):

J.J. Cale & Eric Clapton - The Road To Escondido (2006) [2LP, Vinyl Rip 16/44 & mp3-320 + DVD] Re-up

Tracklist:

Side1

A1 - Danger - 5:36
A2 - Heads In Georgia - 4:14
A3 - Missing Person - 4:28

Side 2

B1 - When This War Is Over - 3:51
B2 - Sporting Life Blues - 3:33
B3 - Dead End Road - 3:32
B4 - It's Easy - 4:21

Side 3

C1 - Hard To Thrill - 5:13
C2 - Anyway The Wind Blows - 3:58
C3 - Three Little Girls - 2:46
C4 - Don't Cry Sister - 3:12

Side 4

D1 - Last Will And Testament - 3:59
D2 - Who Am I Telling You? - 4:10
D3 - Ride The River - 4:35

foobar2000 1.4 / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1
log date: 2018-09-29 17:14:35

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Analyzed: J.J. Cale & Eric Clapton / The Road To Escondido
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

DR Peak RMS Duration Track
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
DR11 -0.28 dB -13.30 dB 5:33 01-Danger
DR10 -2.12 dB -14.42 dB 4:11 02-Heads In Georgia
DR11 -1.22 dB -13.54 dB 4:29 03-Missing Person
DR11 -0.19 dB -12.86 dB 3:49 04-When This War Is Over
DR12 -1.97 dB -16.65 dB 3:31 05-Sporting Life Blues
DR11 -0.37 dB -12.68 dB 3:29 06-Dead End Road
DR11 -1.50 dB -14.50 dB 4:19 07-It's Easy
DR11 -1.46 dB -14.86 dB 5:11 08-Hard To Thrill
DR10 -0.21 dB -11.79 dB 3:55 09-Anyway The Wind Blows
DR12 -1.67 dB -15.93 dB 2:44 10-Three Little Girls
DR10 -1.19 dB -12.95 dB 3:10 11-Don't Cry Sister
DR11 -0.21 dB -13.49 dB 3:56 12-Last Will And Testament
DR10 -1.04 dB -14.00 dB 4:08 13-Who Am I Telling You
DR11 -0.44 dB -13.02 dB 4:38 14-Ride The River
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Number of tracks: 14
Official DR value: DR11

Samplerate: 44100 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 16
Bitrate: 861 kbps
Codec: FLAC
================================================================================



Title: J.J. Cale & Eric Clapton 2006 - The Road To Escondido - DVD
Size: 1.89 Gb ( 1 983 798,00 KBytes ) - DVD-5
Enabled regions: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8

VTS_01 :
Play Length: 00:56:59
Video: NTSC 4:3 (720x480) VBR
Audio:
Not specified (LinearPCM, 2 ch)



Original ripper: ?
Original format: 24/96
Vinyl Condition: Mint
Cleaning:
Direct Drive Turntable: Music Hall MMF-5.1
Cartridge: Goldring 2500 MM
Amplifier: Pro-ject Tube Box SE II
ADC: Tascam US-144 USB 2.0
Postprocessing: ClickRepair & iZotopeRX for de-click (manual mode)

Downsampled to 16/44

J.J. Cale & Eric Clapton - The Road To Escondido (2006) [2LP, Vinyl Rip 16/44 & mp3-320 + DVD] Re-up

J.J. Cale & Eric Clapton - The Road To Escondido (2006) [2LP, Vinyl Rip 16/44 & mp3-320 + DVD] Re-up

J.J. Cale & Eric Clapton - The Road To Escondido (2006) [2LP, Vinyl Rip 16/44 & mp3-320 + DVD] Re-up

Eric Clapton in my Blog

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