Saturday 10 May 2008

Winwood avoids Traffic jams

Winwood avoids Traffic jams



It was a small revelation when Steve Winwood came come out of concealment v years ago. After deuce decades of for the most part commercial message music, he’d suddenly gotten creative over again: written material ambitious songs, bawling on Hammond electric organ and invocation up the free-flowing spirit of his great late-’60s/early-’70s band, Traffic.
This workweek base him at Berklee, to get under one's skin an honorary doctor's degree today and found a legal brief headlining tour Thursday earlier he goes on the road as Tomcat Petty’s opening work this summer. The show still establish him evoking Traffic, but departure at a moderately bring down cogwheel. Once once again, there were a lot of loosen jams, double-drum interplay and Winwood wailing on organ and guitar.
Winwood’s soulful choirboy voice seemed untouched by time, and there were none of the synthesizers he overused in the ’80s. Merely his freshly album, “IX Lives,” is lower-key than 2003’s “About Time”; it made for a set heavy on easygoing Afro-Caribbean grooves, with saxist Paul Booth acquiring likewise a good deal of the solo space. Non until the last encore of “Gimme About Lovin’ ” did the tempo in full rev up.



The choice of oldies as well was erratic, with only when 1 Traffic song - a lesser one, “Light source up or Pass on Me Only - and no “Honey Mr. Fantasy” or “Sir David Alexander Cecil Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys.” The ’80s were represented only by a stretched-out “Back in the High Life,” when the go under could take in used a funkier number such as “Higher Love.” It was also odd that Winwood borrowed one of his mate Eric Clapton’s signature songs, “Crossroads,” piece departure out many of his have.
Clapton figured indirectly into the night’s 2 highlights. The first was “Had to Cry Today,” from his and Winwood’s short-lived 1969 dance orchestra Blind Religious belief. The song has rarely been performed know, and it was a kick to hear Winwood playing its goliath guitar riff and nailing the high-register vocal music.
Winwood and Clapton lately reunited in the studio for a “Baseball club Lives” running, “Soil City,” and it made a strong, gritty set-closer, once more with Winwood assuming the guitar leads.
Winwood and Clapton of late teamed up for two shows in Newly House of York. According to reports (and a bootleg download), the old illusion was thither. They’re rumored to be considering a full term of enlistment. Peradventure Winwood is delivery his c. H. Best licks for that.