Album Reviews

Traffic: The Studio Albums 1967-1974 (Vinyl Box Set)

Traffic
The Studio Albums 1967-1974
(UMe/Island)
Music: 4.5 out of 5 stars
Vinyl reissue: 2 out of 5 stars

Traffic alert! Those likely to be interested in the only vinyl box set of the venerable British folk/pop/rock/world/jazz bandโ€™s six studio albums are collectors. Who else will shell out over $150 for material that has already been reissued often on CD and vinyl, just to get a few posters and a โ€œremastered from the original tapesโ€ declaration?

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To make matters more problematic, there are no new notes or booklets with unique information, pictures and memorabilia. Worse still is that not all the groupโ€™s studio material is even included. Thatโ€™s because some key Traffic songs were either non-UK album singles (โ€œPaper Sun,โ€ โ€œHole in My Shoe,โ€ โ€œSmiling Phases,โ€ โ€œYou Can All Join Inโ€), or were included as extras on Last Exit (โ€œShanghai Noodle Factory,โ€ โ€œMedicated Gooโ€), which was predominantly a live set and therefore MIA here. It would have been perfectly logical to add an extra platter covering this trove of often terrific, classic material. 

Itโ€™s impossible to argue with music that by any stretch remains some of the most timeless and influential to emerge out of the UK. Songs like โ€œDear Mr. Fantasy,โ€ โ€œFeelinโ€™ Alright?โ€ and โ€œPearly Queenโ€ are still being performed by either of the bandโ€™s two surviving members, Steve Winwood and Dave Mason, or covered by a bar band near you this weekend. And there is little better than discovering deep tracks like โ€œNo Time to Live,โ€ the soulful โ€œWho Knows What Tomorrow May Bringโ€ or the lovely โ€œEvening Blueโ€ as you spin the vinyl. At the very least those who may not have heard Steve Winwood as he found his voice both physically and as a wise-beyond-his-years young songwriter, and have somehow not already explored Trafficโ€™s heady combination of folk, jazz, rock, pop and blues released on a handful of greatest hits collections, can bask in the glow of these seminal, if occasionally spotty, albums. 

At its best, Traffic mixed genres with grace and style. From Winwoodโ€™s jazz piano propelling the powerful instrumental โ€œGladโ€ to the sitar that wove through the trippy Brit-pop of โ€œPaper Sun,โ€ the low-boil swamp funk of โ€œRock And Roll Stew,โ€ and the floating psychedelic folk of โ€œNo Face, No Name, No Number,โ€ this ever-changing confluence of musicians consistently pushed boundaries. They finally called it quits with โ€˜74โ€™s When The Eagle Flies, leaving on a note as classy and sophisticated as they entered eight years earlier.

Those with deep pockets may want to take the plunge on this bulky, overpriced, underwhelming cash-generating item. But the rest of us should use this as a reminder to dig back into Trafficโ€™s archives and experience just how moving, unpredictable and groundbreaking pop/rock at its most innovative could be.