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Traffic (Band) (Music)

 Traffic (Band) (Music)
type
TVTItem
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
label
Traffic (Band) (Music)
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
page
TrafficBand
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
comment
Traffic is a rock band formed in 1967 in Birmingham, UK, with their initial membership consisting of Steve Winwood (formerly of the Spencer Davis Group), Jim Capaldi, Chris Wood, and Dave Mason. Starting out as a Psychedelic Rock band first and foremost, they had eventually diversified their sounds, incorporating elements of Soul, Folk, Jazz, and Progressive Rock. They had briefly disbanded in 1969, with Steve Winwood forming the supergroup Blind Faith which only lasted a year. In 1970, the band regrouped and released their biggest album John Barleycorn Must Die. This incarnation of the band lasted to 1974, releasing three more studio albums and two live albums. The stress of touring had gotten to Steve Winwood, prompting him to quit the band and pursue a successful solo career, and the rest of the band decided that they cannot carry on without him.In 1994, Winwood and Capaldi reformed the group for a one-off touring group, with Wood having died of pneumonia in 1983. The footage from the tours has been recorded in the live compilation Last Great Traffic Jam in 2005. Winwood and Capaldi also recorded a final studio album in the band's name around the time of their tour. The band (more specifically, the four founding members) was inducted in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2004.
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
fetched
2024-03-14T19:02:32Z
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
parsed
2024-03-14T19:02:32Z
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
processingComment
Dropped link to Can: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
processingComment
Dropped link to DerekAndTheDominos: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
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Dropped link to StepUpToTheMic: Not a Feature - UNKNOWN
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
processingComment
Dropped link to SteveWinwood: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
processingUnknown
StepUpToTheMic
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_14beeefd
type
Darker and Edgier
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_14beeefd
comment
Darker and Edgier: In comparison to Low Spark, Shoot Out at the Fantasy Factory has both a darker cover and concerns darker themes such as addiction, isolation, and creative burnout. When The Eagle Flies counts too.
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_14beeefd
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_14beeefd
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_14beeefd
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_22093e9b
type
New Sound Album
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_22093e9b
comment
New Sound Album: John Barleycorn Must Die started the eclectic, jazz-infused sound compared to their folk/psychedelia-based beginnings.
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_22093e9b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_22093e9b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_22093e9b
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_23b0d78
type
Title Track
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_23b0d78
comment
Title Track: Low Spark and Shoot Out both have one. "Dear Mr. Fantasy" counts for Mr. Fantasy.
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_23b0d78
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_23b0d78
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_23b0d78
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_2bf54826
type
Longest Song Goes Last
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_2bf54826
comment
Longest Song Goes Last: John Barleycorn Must Die ends with "Every Mother's Son," which runs at 7:05. None of the other tracks on the album pass the six-minute mark.
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_2bf54826
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_2bf54826
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_2bf54826
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_38da8916
type
Uncommon Time
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_38da8916
comment
Uncommon Time: parts of Roll Right Stones go to 11/8.
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_38da8916
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_38da8916
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_38da8916
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_6053dc28
type
Record Producer
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_6053dc28
comment
Record Producer: Jimmy Miller, also known for producing The Rolling Stones' best albums (Beggars Banquet, Let It Bleed, Sticky Fingers, and Exile on Main St.), produced the band's early work through Last Exit. John Barleycorn Must Die was produced by Winwood along with Chris Blackwell (founder of Island Records) and Guy Stevens (co-producer of The Clash's London Calling and also responsible for naming both Mott the Hoople and Procol Harum). Blackwell and Winwood seemingly traded off producing the band's later material from album to album; Capaldi and Winwood co-produced the band's final record, Far from Home.
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_6053dc28
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_6053dc28
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_6053dc28
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_6d4ac1f1
type
Officially Shortened Title
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_6d4ac1f1
comment
Officially Shortened Title: One of their songs is also called "Roamin' Thru' the Gloamin' with 40,000 Headmen", although the original release on Traffic just called it "Forty Thousand Headmen".
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_6d4ac1f1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_6d4ac1f1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_6d4ac1f1
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_74149c93
type
Epic Rocking
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_74149c93
comment
Epic Rocking: Many of their tracks from John Barleycorn Must Die onwards have exceeded six minutes, and even before then they would easily make ten in live concerts. Their longest studio cuts are "Roll Right Stones" (13:40), "The Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys" (11:41), and "Dream Gerrard" (11:03). Studio tracks breaking six minutes: John Barleycorn Must Die: "Glad" (6:59), "Freedom Rider" (6:20), "John Barleycorn (Must Die)" (6:20), "Every Mother's Son" (7:05) - in short, four of the six tracks on the album. The Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys: "The Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys" (11:41), "Many a Mile to Freedom" (7:16), "Rainmaker" (7:52). The bonus track "Rock & Roll Stew Parts 1 & 2" also runs for 6:07. Shoot Out at the Fantasy Factory: "Shoot Out at the Fantasy Factory" (6:05), "Roll Right Stones" (13:40), "Tragic Magic" (6:43), "(Sometimes) I Feel So Uninspired" (7:31) - four of the five tracks on the album. When the Eagle Flies: "Dream Gerrard" (11:03), "Graveyard People" (6:05), "Walking in the Wind" (6:48) Far from Home: "Far from Home" (8:33), "Nowhere Is Their Freedom" (6:57), "Holy Ground" (7:48), "State of Grace" (7:16)
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_74149c93
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_74149c93
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_74149c93
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_74b7629c
type
Instrumentals
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_74b7629c
comment
Instrumentals: "Glad" and "Tragic Magic"
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_74b7629c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_74b7629c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_74b7629c
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_7d276626
type
Siamese Twin Songs
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_7d276626
comment
Siamese Twin Songs: "Glad" -> "Freedom Rider" is such a song.
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_7d276626
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_7d276626
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_7d276626
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_7d89315b
type
"The Reason You Suck" Speech
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_7d89315b
comment
Light Up or Leave Me Alone is an upbeat and kinda funky song that takes shape as a sort of "The Reason You Suck" Speech to an unknown woman negligent to the singer.
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_7d89315b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_7d89315b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_7d89315b
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_8b606a51
type
There Is No Kill Like Overkill
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_8b606a51
comment
There Is No Kill Like Overkill: "John Barleycorn"
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_8b606a51
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_8b606a51
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_8b606a51
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_8c00118f
type
Spoken Word in Music
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_8c00118f
comment
Spoken Word in Music: "Hole in my Shoe" has a spoken word section by the producer's stepdaughter, where she describes traveling on the back of an albatross to a magical land.
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_8c00118f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_8c00118f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_8c00118f
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_99699561
type
Questioning Title?
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_99699561
comment
Questioning Title?: "Feelin' Alright?"
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_99699561
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_99699561
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_99699561
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_a0a572ff
type
Addiction Song
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_a0a572ff
comment
Addiction Song: While it doesn't contain any lyrics, "Tragic Magic" off Shoot Out was Chris Wood's nickname for heroin.
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_a0a572ff
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_a0a572ff
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_a0a572ff
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_b53077b3
type
Take That!
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_b53077b3
comment
Take That!: The "plastic princess" mentioned in "Walking in the Wind" (off When The Eagle Flies) is most likely a dig at all the Glam Rock topping the charts at the time of the album's conception.
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_b53077b3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_b53077b3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_b53077b3
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_b9c673a6
type
Market-Based Title
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_b9c673a6
comment
Market-Based Title: The first US release of their first album was called Heaven Is in Your Mind rather than Mr Fantasy, and it had a substantially different track listing, incorporating "Paper Sun", "Hole in My Shoe", "Smiling Phases", and "We're a Fade, You Missed This" and deleting "Hope I Never Find Me There" and "Utterly Simple". It also incorporates snippets of the band's single "Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush" in between some songs. It was renamed to Mr. Fantasy for the second pressing, but it kept the Heaven Is in Your Mind track listing until United Artists Records went out of business in 1980, at which point Island Records released the UK stereo version in the US. Recent CD releases combine all the tracks from both versions onto one disc. As a result, there are several different versions of the album now.
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_b9c673a6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_b9c673a6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_b9c673a6
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_c237b6b8
type
Folk Music
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_c237b6b8
comment
Folk Music: A lot of their material is influenced by or falls outright into this genre, most notably the title track of John Barleycorn Must Die, an arrangement of a Scottish/English drinking song which could've easily passed for a Fairport Convention song.
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_c237b6b8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_c237b6b8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_c237b6b8
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_ca14fa2b
type
Music Is Politics
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_ca14fa2b
comment
Music Is Politics: "The Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys" is in part about the band's disillusionment with the record industry.
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_ca14fa2b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_ca14fa2b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_ca14fa2b
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_ca834552
type
Self-Titled Album
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_ca834552
comment
1968 - Traffic
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_ca834552
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_ca834552
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_ca834552
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_dbfd6b8
type
Lyrical Dissonance
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_dbfd6b8
comment
Lyrical Dissonance Light Up or Leave Me Alone is an upbeat and kinda funky song that takes shape as a sort of "The Reason You Suck" Speech to an unknown woman negligent to the singer. Rock and Roll Stew kind of zig-zags - it's a funk song about how exhausting it is to be on tour performing live, but acceptance of the lifestyle on the road at the same time. Roll Right Stones is about death and the hereafter, set to a pleasant song that could otherwise wind up as a closing credit to a movie with a happy ending. Go figure.
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_dbfd6b8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_dbfd6b8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_dbfd6b8
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_dcd97395
type
Anthropomorphic Vice
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_dcd97395
comment
Anthropomorphic Vice: "John Barleycorn (Must Die)" is a traditional English folk song of which Traffic's version is particularly well known. John Barleycorn himself represents the cereal grains, especially barley, used to malt alcoholic beverages.
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_dcd97395
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_dcd97395
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_dcd97395
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_f602d540
type
Jazz Fusion
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_f602d540
comment
Jazz Fusion: They have several tracks that fall into this territory, such as "Glad", the opening track of John Barleycorn Must Die.
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_f602d540
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_f602d540
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_f602d540
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_name
type
ItemName
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_name
comment
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_name
 Traffic (Band) (Music) / int_name
itemName
Traffic (Band) (Music)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Anthropomorphic Vice / int_bd0677
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
British Music / int_bd0677
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Epic Rocking / int_bd0677
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Longest Song Goes Last / int_bd0677
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Progressive Rock / int_bd0677
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Sad Clown / int_bd0677
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Spoken Word in Music / int_bd0677
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Truck Driver's Gear Change / int_bd0677
 Traffic (Band) (Music)
hasFeature
Uncommon Time / int_bd0677