Eric Clapton claimed in the press release for
Back Home, his 14th album of original material, that "One of the earliest statements I made about myself was back in the late '80s, with
Journeyman. This album completes that cycle in terms of talking about my whole journey as an itinerant musician and where I find myself now, starting a new family. That's why I chose the title. It's about coming home and staying home." With that in mind, it becomes clearer that the studio albums
Clapton released during the '90s did indeed follow some sort of thematic logic. 1989's
Journeyman did find
Clapton regrouping after a muddled '80s, returning to the bluesy arena rock and smooth pop that had been his signature sound as a solo artist. He followed that with 1994's
From the Cradle, where he explicitly returned to the roots of his music by recording an album of blues standards. Four years later, he released
Pilgrim, a slick album that had
Clapton strengthening his collaboration with producer/co-writer
Simon Climie (who first worked with
EC on his electronica side project T.D.F.). If
Pilgrim touched on father issues, 2001's
Reptile loosely returned
Clapton to his childhood (complete with a smiling boyhood shot of him on the cover) and found the guitarist struggling with a seemingly diverse selection of material, ranking from '50s R&B to
James Taylor. After a brief blues detour on 2004's
Me and Mr. Johnson,
Clapton returns to the sound and feel of
Reptile for
Back Home, but he doesn't seem to be as tentative or forced as he did there. Instead, he eases comfortably into the domesticity that isn't just the concept for the album, it's reason for being. In fact, the album doesn't need "back" in its title -- ultimately, the album is just about being home (which, if the center photo of
Clapton at home with his three young daughters and wife is to be believed, looks alarmingly similar to the set of Thomas the Tank Engine, complete with a painted rainbow shining through the window).
While it's hard to begrudge the 60-year-old guitarist for finding a happy home after all these years, what is puzzling about this calm, comfortable album is that
Clapton is equating domestic bliss with a glossy, consciously classy sound that's swept clean of dirt and grit, or even the blues. Consequently,
Back Home is pitched halfway between the lite contemporary soul of
Pilgrim and
Clapton's time as a Michelob spokesman in the late '80s. Each track rides a tight, professional groove -- sometimes a bluesy vamp, sometimes a reggae jam, usually something soulful but relaxed -- and while instruments sometimes bubble up from the mix (sometimes it's
Clapton's guitar, but just as often it's
Billy Preston's organ, or occasionally a synth straight out of 1987), the emphasis is always on the smooth, shiny surface. Unlike such peers as
Bob Dylan,
Elton John, and
the Rolling Stones who revitalized their recording careers with back-to-basics moves that stripped their music down to its essence,
Clapton seems to harbor an aversion to what he built his reputation on, whether it was the lean, sinewy blues of
the Yardbirds and
Bluesbreakers or the psychedelic freak-outs of
Cream, or even the rootsy rock he learned from
Delaney & Bonnie in the '70s. Based on
Back Home, it really does seem like he considers
Journeyman ground zero for his solo career, but instead of replicating the well-balanced mix of rock, pop, and blues that made that record one of his best solo efforts, he settles into a tasteful adult pop sound that makes this record the ideal soundtrack to a pleasant Sunday afternoon at home with the family. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine