Upon its release, the album was poorly received by many critics but sold quite well.
Guitar World critic Bruce Malamut wrote that the album is "the apologia of a strictly raised mid-western episcopalian after living in
rock and roll sin for 'Fifteen Years' on the road," and that "The balance … is a
sober retrospective from rock’s own
Harpo Marx."
Rolling Stone said that "Walsh is trying to make the kind of record he used to make a decade ago, and the result is, well, out of date, sound
[sic] like something out of a 1975 time capsule." Writing retrospectively for
AllMusic, critic James Chrispell highly complimented the title track, but wrote of the album "Joe Walsh just hasn't been able to produce a complete album of great material, and
The Confessor is no exception. The first half is dreck... Worthwhile for the title track alone." == Live performances and Tour ==