Warners/Rhino will release, Forever Man, a new Eric Clapton ‘best of’ at the end of next month that spans three decades of Clapton’s Reprise Records years.
Forever Man takes its title from the single lifted from Clapton’s 1985 album Behind the Sun and is available as two-CD and two-LP configurations with the first disc focusing on studio cuts and the second on live material, including three tracks from 1992′s Unplugged performance.
Review
As the first compilation covering Eric Clapton's Reprise/Warner work
since 2007's Complete Clapton, 2015's Forever Man is the third collection to
focus specifically on these recordings from the '80s, '90s, and 2000s, and
it's by far the most extensive, weighing in at two CDs in its basic edition and
three in its deluxe. The difference between the two is the addition of a disc of
“Blues,” a nice addition to the “Studio” and “Live” discs of the
collection. These themes make sense on paper but they're a little odd in
practice, with the Studio selections hopscotching between eras and the live
heavy on new millennial selections. Often, the length highlights how light
Forever Man is on hits: “Tears in Heaven,” “I've Got a Rock N Roll
Heart,” “Forever Man,” “Change the World,” “My Father's Eyes,”
“Pretending,” “Bad Love,” “It's in the Way That You Use It,” and
the unplugged “Layla” are all here, but the sequencing suggests how the '70s
hits are missing (or present in new live versions). It is hardly a botched
collection – in pure consumer terms, this delivers a lot of bang for the
buck – but it winds up asking more questions than it answers.
Allmusic.com