What is the best blues-rock album of all time?

By YPB Team
0 votes

Where raw Delta blues met electric fury, creating some of the most emotionally powerful music ever recorded. Legends of the fretboard and rising heirs to the throne are both on this list. Who wins?

Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs - ranking option ranked #1

Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs

Derek and the Dominos' 1970 double album featuring Eric Clapton's tortured ode to George Harrison's wife and Duane Allman's slide guitar.

1/13
Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton - ranking option ranked #2

Blues Breakers with Eric Clapton

John Mayall's 1966 album that introduced Eric Clapton as a blues guitar god and redefined British electric blues.

2/13
At Fillmore East - ranking option ranked #3

At Fillmore East

The Allman Brothers Band's 1971 live blues-rock masterpiece, widely considered one of the greatest live rock albums ever recorded.

3/13
Texas Flood - ranking option ranked #4

Texas Flood

Stevie Ray Vaughan's 1983 debut album that introduced his ferocious Texas blues guitar style and launched a blues revival.

4/13
Disraeli Gears - ranking option ranked #5

Disraeli Gears

Cream's 1967 psychedelic blues-rock album fusing Eric Clapton's guitar mastery with pop songwriting and studio experimentation.

5/13
Electric Ladyland - ranking option ranked #6

Electric Ladyland

Jimi Hendrix's 1968 visionary double album, the apex of psychedelic blues-rock, featuring the definitive All Along the Watchtower.

6/13
Brothers - ranking option ranked #7

Brothers

The Black Keys' 2010 breakthrough blues-rock album blending lo-fi rawness with polished songcraft and soulful groove.

7/13
Tres Hombres - ranking option ranked #8

Tres Hombres

ZZ Top's 1973 breakout album of Texas-flavored hard blues, featuring La Grange and the raw power of the boogie-blues trio.

8/13
Irish Tour '74 - ranking option ranked #9

Irish Tour '74

Rory Gallagher's acclaimed 1974 live album capturing one of the greatest but most overlooked blues-rock guitarists at his peak.

9/13
Second Winter - ranking option ranked #10

Second Winter

Johnny Winter's 1969 three-sided blues-rock album showcasing the albino Texas guitarist's explosive, rawboned technique.

10/13
Blues for Greeny - ranking option ranked #11

Blues for Greeny

Gary Moore's 1995 loving tribute to Peter Green, covering early Fleetwood Mac blues material with deep emotional resonance.

11/13
De Stijl - ranking option ranked #12

De Stijl

The White Stripes' 2000 album paying tribute to Son House and Robert Johnson with stripped-back Delta blues and garage rock rawness.

12/13
Rocks - ranking option ranked #13

Rocks

Aerosmith's 1976 blues-hard rock album, considered their creative peak, bursting with riff-driven swagger and raw energy.

13/13

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