Traffic: Heaven is in Your Mind

Traffic: Heaven is in Your Mind

Album #87 -December 1967

Episode date - September 23, 2015

The Alternative Top 40
    0:00
    0:00

    For years I underrated the excellence of this album, and I can only muster a papier-mâché excuse.

    As was common at the time, the American and British versions differed significantly from one another, but unlike the typical scenario, the American album actually improved on the British original. It contained twelve tracks to the British ten (a complete reversal of historical patterns there), and the added tracks were originally British singles, resulting in a much more satisfying product. I came late to Traffic and when I did, I first became familiar with the inferior British arrangement. For decades, I didn’t even know that the difference existed, so I presumed that Traffic’s first album was a spotty, overtly hippie-fied bore.

    Oops. Now I feel the need to apologize for decades of ignorance, and I wonder why I even developed this prejudice in the first place. Generally speaking, I have a soft spot for psychedelic music, so why was I so harsh? In truth, I believe I was simply being dismissive because the details regarding the history of Traffic has always confused me. The debut album was entitled “Mr. Fantasy” in Europe, but changed to “Heaven Is in Your Mind” in America. It was soon reissued with the English title, but it retained a cover photo that showed only Steve Winwood, Jim Capaldi and Chris Wood because guitarist and songwriter Dave Mason left the band before the American album was printed. A re-release campaign in the late ‘70s deleted this version of the album entirely, opting for the British cover art and track layout (which explains how I later got duped). If that isn’t confusing enough, the band’s history continued to grow even more opaque.

    Traffic came together with a typical hippie idealism of the times, with the intention of living communally while making music together (much like the Monkees, except for real). The pacifist image of a band cohabitating in the English countryside for the purpose of writing and recording as a unit seemed ideal, but reality intervened. As a band member, Mason came and went so often that it seemed like he might be fired before you flipped the record. It all seemed a bit contentious from the outside, which ran against the intended spirit of the project. A glance at the writing credits inadvertently tells much of the story, as Capaldi, Winwood and Wood generally shared songwriting, while Mason’s songs are his and his alone. Also, Mason wrote both of the songs omitted from the American album. He obviously stood apart from his bandmates and the rift ultimately came to head. Unfortunately, the remaining trio realized that they didn’t function well for live shows, so Mason was asked to return which lasted until the end of side two of their second record. Traffic would go on to become one of the better progenitors of rock/jazz (as opposed to jazz-rock) but the debut shows a band stretching for an experimental purity of expression that proved to be unattainable.

    December 1967 - Billboard Charted #88

    Related Shows

    The Monks: Black Monk Time

    The Monks: Black Monk Time

    Album #57 - March 1966

      0:00
      0:00
      Junior Wells w/Buddy Guy: Hoodoo Man Blues

      Junior Wells w/Buddy Guy: Hoodoo Man Blues

      Album #56 - December 1965

        0:00
        0:00
        The Who: Sings My Generation

        The Who: Sings My Generation

        Album #55 - December 1965

          0:00
          0:00
          The Paul Butterfield Blues Band

          The Paul Butterfield Blues Band

          Album #54 - October 1965

            0:00
            0:00
            Otis Redding: Otis Blue

            Otis Redding: Otis Blue

            Album #53 - September 1965

              0:00
              0:00
              Them

              Them

              Album #52 -  June 1965

                0:00
                0:00
                The Sonics: Here are the Sonics

                The Sonics: Here Are The Sonics

                Album #51 - May 1965

                  0:00
                  0:00
                  John Coltrane: A Love Supreme

                  John Coltrane – A Love Supreme

                  Album #50 - February 1965

                    0:00
                    0:00
                    B.B. King – Live at the Regal

                    B.B. King: Live at the Regal

                    Album #49 - January 1965

                      0:00
                      0:00

                      Solomon Burke: Rock ‘n Soul

                      Album #48 - November 1964

                        0:00
                        0:00
                        Presenting the Fabulous Ronettes

                        The Ronettes: Presenting the Fabulous Ronettes

                        Album #47 - December 1964

                          0:00
                          0:00
                          Nina Simone - In Concert

                          Nine Simone: In Concert

                          Album #46 - October 1964

                            0:00
                            0:00