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Released: March 1981


Rating: 3.490 (average of 10 ratings)


Genre: classic British blues rock


Quotable: --


Album Tracks:

  1. Something Special [2:38]
  2. Black Rose (Seals/Setser) [3:46]
  3. Blow Wind Blow (Waters) [2:59]
  4. Another Ticket [5:43]
  5. I Can’t Stand It [4:10]
  6. Hold Me Lord [3:27]
  7. Floating Bridge (Estes) [6:33]
  8. Catch Me if You Can (Brooker/Clapton) [4:26]
  9. Rita Mae [5:05]

Songs written by Eric Clapton unless noted otherwise.


Sales:

sales in U.S. only ½ million
sales in U.K. only - estimated --
sales in all of Europe as determined by IFPI – click here to go to their site. --
sales worldwide - estimated 2 million


Peak:

peak on U.S. Billboard album chart 7
peak on U.K. album chart 18


Singles:

  • I Can’t Stand It (2/28/81) #10 US, #1 AR
  • Rita Mae (3/21/81) #18 AR
  • Catch Me if You Can (3/21/81) #23 AR
  • Blow Wind Blow (4/11/81) #24 AR


Another Ticket
Eric Clapton
Review:
“Now, here's a star-crossed album. Polydor rejected the first version of it, produced by Glyn Johns, and Eric Clapton was forced to cut it all over again with Tom Dowd. Then, a few dates into a U.S. promotional tour coinciding with its release, Clapton collapsed and was found to be near death from ulcers due to his alcoholism. Finally, it turned out to be the final record of his 15-year association with Polydor, which therefore had no reason to promote it. Nevertheless, the album made the Top Ten, went gold, and spawned a Top Ten single in I Can't Stand It. And the rest of it wasn't too shabby, either. The first and last Clapton studio album to feature his all-British band of the early '80s, it gave considerable prominence to second guitarist Albert Lee and especially to keyboard player/singer Gary Brooker (formerly leader of Procol Harum), and they gave it more of a blues-rock feel than the country-funk brewed up by the Tulsa shuffle crew Clapton had used throughout the 1970s. Best of all, Clapton had taken the time to write some songs — he's credited on six of the nine selections — and tunes such as the title track and ‘I Can't Stand It’ held up well. This wasn't great Clapton, but it was good, and it deserved more recognition than conditions allowed it at the time” (Ruhlmann).


Review Source(s):


Related DMDB Links:

Previous Album: Backless (1978) Eric Clapton’s DMDB page Next Album: Money and Cigarettes (1983)


Last updated March 31, 2008.