Friday, 1 December 2023

Traffic - John Barleycorn Must Die [Japan Ed. 5 bonus tracks] (1970)

Year: July 1970 (CD Sep 24, 2008)
Label: Island Records (Japan), UICY-93644
Style: Art Rock
Country: Birmingham, England
Time: 59:56
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 369 Mb

Charts: UK #11, AUS #14, CAN #6, NLD #5, NO #15, US #5. US: Gold.
Everything gets started with “Glad", an instrumental which at first sounds like an aptly named celebration with Winwood’s upbeat jazz piano riff. The middle jam section includes a free-form like approach, starting with a saxophone solo by Wood on top of great rhythms by Winwood and Capaldi. The long, slow outro contains a mesmerizing mix of piano, organ, and percussion, and slowly meanders towards a segue into “Freedom Rider". The album’s first proper song subtly starts with a rocking piano and baritone saxophone phrase but employs a more upbeat and funky approach when the verse breaks in. Winwood may shine brighter on bass than keys, while Wood adds some sweeping flute passages and a potent lead on this track with poetic lyrics by Capaldi.
Side one concludes with the beat-driven rocker “Empty Pages", which has Wood moving over to Hammond organ and, while Capaldi co-wrote four of the six tracks on this album, he never shines brighter than on this one. His drumming excels from start to finish, while the optimistic lyrics speak of a “clean slate" in a new romantic life. Winwood adds his own highlight with a fine, extended electric piano lead on this track which was the sole single released from John Barleycorn Must Die.
While no tracks on the original first side contain any guitars, each of the three songs on side two feature Winwood playing electric and/or acoustic guitar. In fact, the side opener “Stranger to Himself" features both, with an acoustic in the opening and main riff and an electric slightly within the verses and fully during the blistering lead section. The first song written for this album, it is close to being a full Winwood solo effort (he even plays drums), with only some backing vocals provided by Capaldi. “John Barleycorn" is a traditional, anti-whiskey, folk song which is primarily acoustic with slight further arrangements. Through its several verses, instrumentation is built every so subtly. The album concludes with “Every Mother’s Son", another early track that features only Winwood and Capaldi. A fine droning lead guitar riff drives the slow intro, which most sounds like tunes from the Blind Faith album. The beat completely stops for two measures near the beginning of a Hammond organ lead, reflecting the loose production that is part of the overall charm of this album.
John Barleycorn Must Die peaked at number 5 on the album charts, Traffic’s highest charting album ever in the US.
(classicrockreview.com/2015/05/1970-traffic-john-barleycorn/) May 29, 2015

01. Glad (06:59)
02. Freedom Rider (05:30)
03. Empty Pages (04:34)
04. I Just Want You To Know (Bonus Track) (01:30)
05. Stranger To Himself (03:57)
06. John Barleycorn (Must Die) (06:27)
07. Every Mothers Son (07:08)
08. Sittin' Here Thinkin' Of My Love (Bonus Track) (03:33)
09. Backstage & Introduction (Live - Bonus Track) (01:50)
10. Who Knows What Tomorrow Will Bring (Live - Bonus Track) (06:56)
11. Glad (Live - Bonus Track) (11:29)

Traffic70-John-Barleycorn-front Traffic70-John-Barleycorn-in

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