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| Steve Winwood and company on Rock N' Roll Stew, title song, Light Up Or Leave Me Alone, Hidden Treasure, Many A Mile To Freedom, etc. |
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| 1 Hidden Treasure |
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| 2 The Low Spark of High Heeled Boys |
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| 3 Light Up or Leave Me Alone |
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| 4 Rock and Roll Stew |
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| 5 Many a Mile to Freedom |
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| 6 Rainmaker |
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| 7 Rock and Roll Stew, Pts. 1 & 2 |
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Album Review
"The Low Spark of High Heeled Boys" marked the commercial and artistic apex of the second coming of Traffic, which had commenced in 1970 with John Barleycorn Must Die. The trio that made that album had been augmented by three others (Rick Grech, Jim Gordon, and "Reebop" Kwaku Baah) in the interim, though apparently the "Low Spark" sessions featured varying combinations of these musicians, plus some guests. But where their previous album had grown out of sessions for a Steve Winwood solo album, "Low Spark" pointedly contained changes of pace from his usual contributions of midtempo, introspective jam tunes. "Rock & Roll Stew" was an uptempo treatise on life on the road, while Jim Capaldi's "Light Up Or Leave Me Alone" was another more aggressive number with an unusually emphatic Capaldi vocal that perked things up. The other four tracks were Winwood/Capaldi compositions more in the band's familiar style. "Hidden Treasure" and "Rainmaker" bookended the disc with acoustic treatments of nature themes that were particularly concerned with water, and "Many A Mile To Freedom" also employed water imagery. But the standout was the title track, with its distinctive piano riff and its lyrics of weary disillusionment with the music business. "The Low Spark Of High-Heeled Boys" was one of Traffic's greatest songs as well as its longest so far. The result was an album that eventually went platinum in the U.S. (In addition to offering a noticeable sonic improvement, the 2002 CD reissue re-sequenced the album, moving "Light Up Or Leave Me Alone" to third position from fifth, and adding as a bonus a combined version of the single release "Rock & Roll Stew...Part 1"/"Rock & Roll Stew...Part 2," an edit that ran close to two minutes longer than the album version, though it was the same recording.) ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
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Biography


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Other albums by: Traffic |
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