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Smiling Phases

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Download links and information about Smiling Phases by Traffic. This album was released in 1991 and it belongs to Rock, Folk Rock, Pop, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic genres. It contains 26 tracks with total duration of 02:02:45 minutes.

Artist: Traffic
Release date: 1991
Genre: Rock, Folk Rock, Pop, Songwriter/Lyricist, Psychedelic
Tracks: 26
Duration: 02:02:45
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Paper Sun (Stereo) 4:16
2. Hole In My Shoe 3:04
3. Smiling Phases 2:42
4. Heaven Is In Your Mind 4:15
5. Coloured Rain 2:42
6. No Face, No Name, No Number 3:33
7. Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush 2:41
8. Dear Mr. Fantasy 5:39
9. You Can All Join In 3:36
10. Feelin' Alright? 4:17
11. Pearly Queen 4:18
12. (Roamin' Thro' the Gloamin' With) 40.000 Headman 3:14
13. Vagabond Virgin 5:17
14. Shanghai Noodle Factory 5:07
15. Withering Tree 3:03
16. Medicated Goo 3:35
17. Glad 7:01
18. Freedom Rider 5:27
19. Empty Pages 4:35
20. John Barleycorn (Must Die) 6:24
21. The Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys 11:33
22. Light Up or Leave Me Alone 4:46
23. Rock 'N' Roll Stew 4:22
24. Shoot Out At the Fantasy Factory 6:02
25. Walking In the Wind 6:50
26. When the Eagle Flies 4:26

Details

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During their tumultuous existence between 1967 and 1974, Traffic had two distinct phases separated by a year (January 1969 to February 1970) during which the band was temporarily dissolved. In its first phase, Traffic was heavily influenced by the pop psychedelia of its time, but were also developing a distinctive blues-rock jam style. When Steve Winwood reconvened the group in 1970 without Dave Mason, he was ready to take the spotlight more forcefully, and Traffic evolved into a band that played long, largely instrumental songs. In constructing a two-CD retrospective of Traffic, compiler Kevin Patrick has taken the obvious step of devoting disc one to the early phase of Traffic and disc two to the later one. He faces different challenges in selecting tracks for each disc. The first CD is necessarily diverse; the early singles must be included, and so must some of Dave Mason's material, though his songs tend to sound more like solo tracks. The challenge for disc two is simply that the songs from 1970-1974 tend to be so long, and it's difficult to decide which ones to include. Patrick has met both of these challenges admirably. Though both discs are a bit short by CD standards, running a little over an hour each, there are few significant tracks that are missing. On disc two, Patrick has striven to be fair to the later Traffic albums, even though they are not as good as their predecessors from this phase, but he strikes a reasonable balance. Until 1991, Traffic had had no more than a few single-disc compilations, the most readily available being The Best of Traffic, which contained nothing from the group's later period. So, Smiling Phases was a welcome addition to the catalog, with solid selection and sequencing.