A four-disc box set spanning
Eric Clapton's entire career -- running from
the Yardbirds to his '80s solo recordings --
Crossroads not only revitalized
Clapton's commercial standing, but it established the rock & roll multi-disc box set retrospective as a commercially viable proposition.
Bob Dylan's
Biograph was successful two years before the release of
Crossroads, but
Clapton's set was a bona fide blockbuster. And it's easy to see why.
Crossroads manages to sum up
Clapton's career succinctly and thoroughly, touching upon all of his hits and adding a bevy of first-rate unreleased material (most notably selections from the scrapped second
Derek and the Dominos album). Although not all of his greatest performances are included on the set -- none of his work as a session musician or guest artist is included, for instance -- every truly essential item he recorded is present on these four discs. No other
Clapton album accurately explains why the guitarist was so influential, or demonstrates exactly what he accomplished.
–
Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi