Traffic – When the Eagle Flies

Click here to download the album in mp3 format as a single zip file.

Here’s another electric present for Blind Joe Death. I have been a fan of Traffic, Blind Faith, and the Spencer Davis Group (pretty much anything with Steve Winwood prior to 1980) for as long as I can remember, but I was never able to find the final 1974 album: When the Eagle Flies until a couple of years ago, and even then, it got buried while moving some LP’s around and I never did get around to giving it a spin. Listening to Barnstorm yesterday inspired me to dig it up. Enjoy!

AMG Review by William Ruhlmann:

In its second manifestation, Traffic displayed an affection for jazz-like improvisation over shuffling rhythms, and that tendency was never more indulged than on When the Eagle Flies. Having dispensed with the trio of session musicians who had accompanied them on tour, the remaining band members, led by Steve Winwood, jammed over long-lined musical structures. Still, this was nominally a rock album, with lyrics and vocals, and Winwood often seemed to be improvising his melodies over the music, paying little heed to the meaning of the words, especially on the title track. Jim Capaldi’s lyrics touched on the ups and downs of romance and the vicissitudes of capitalism and politics, and warning of apocalypse. But he sounded most assured reflecting on his past and future in “Memories of a Rock ‘n Rolla.” The most intriguing lyric was a blank-verse effort from the Bonzo Dog Band’s Vivian Stanshall, “Dream Gerrard,” which took off from 19th-century French poet Gérard de Nerval’s speculations about the relationship between dreams and reality. But Winwood treated the words and his singing as another musical element rather than fashioning the songs to emphasize them, so that When the Eagle Flies, not unlike previous Traffic albums, was really a mostly instrumental collection that happened to have vocals. That wouldn’t have mattered if the music had been more compelling and effectively played, but rather than seeming like a fresh start for the band, the album was listless and remote. Although it became Traffic’s fourth consecutive studio album to reach the Top Ten and go gold in the U.S., the group broke up following the American promotional tour in the fall of 1974.

Steve Winwood – vocals, organ, guitar, piano, Mellotron
Chris Wood – flute, saxophone
Jim Capaldi – drums, percussion, keyboards, vocals
Rebop Kwaku Baah – percussion
Rosko Gee – bass

All songs by Steve Winwood and Jim Capaldi unless otherwise noted.

Track Listing:

1) Something New – 3:15
2) Dream Gerrard (Winwood, [[Vivian Stanshall) – 11:03
3) Graveyard People – 6:05
4) Walking in the Wind – 6:48
5) Memories of a Rock N’ Rolla – 4:50
6) Love – 3:20
7) When the Eagle Flies – 4:24

About the Author

I am the creator and site administrator at The Basement Rug. I have been collecting LP's and CD's for more than 30 years. I post themed compilations and out-of-print and otherwise hard to find albums.