By the time you hear that silent sound
Then your soul is in the lost and found
Forever!
[NOTE: Traffic's John Barleycorn Must Die is almost certainly the greatest guitarless classic-rock album. It's an album with a deep bench, but I've chosen "Freedom Rider" for the inaugural class of the 2 OR 3 LINES "GOLDEN DECADE" ALBUM TRACKS HALL OF FAME." Here's an updated version of my original 2010 post about that song.]
Rice University didn't offer a music major when I was a student there – they offered only a music history course and a couple of music theory and composition classes. (I was born a few years too soon. Rice's Shepherd School of Music was created the year I graduated, and now is considered once of the top 10 music schools in the United States.)
You could say that the advanced theory and composition class I took as a senior had a very good student-teacher ratio: I was the only student in the class.
Three times a week, I went to a small rehearsal room and met my professor for what were essentially private lessons in composing and arranging music.
Three times a week, I went to a small rehearsal room and met my professor for what were essentially private lessons in composing and arranging music.
A vintage McIntosh tube amplifier |
* * * * *
The tape I asked the librarian for most days was Traffic's John Barleycorn Must Die. Because it was a reel-to-reel tape, I usually started at the beginning and listened straight through to the end without skipping or repeating tracks. It was the antithesis of the way I listen to music on my iPod today.
That record, which had been released in the summer of 1970, was originally planned as a Steve Winwood solo album.
Winwood was a rock-and-roll prodigy. He became the frontman of the Spencer Davis Group when he was only 15, and was not quite 19 when Traffic was formed in 1967.
After releasing two remarkable albums, Traffic broke up in 1969, and Winwood joined forces with Eric Clapton to form Blind Faith, which was perhaps the superest of all the "super groups" of that era. Blind Faith released one album and toured for about three months before it broke up.
After releasing two remarkable albums, Traffic broke up in 1969, and Winwood joined forces with Eric Clapton to form Blind Faith, which was perhaps the superest of all the "super groups" of that era. Blind Faith released one album and toured for about three months before it broke up.
After recording a couple of tracks for his planned solo album, Winwood decided to invite two of his old Traffic mates – drummer and lyricist Jim Capaldi, and saxophone/flute player Chris Wood – to join him. Winwood took care of everything else (lead vocals, guitar, bass guitar, piano, and Hammond organ).
* * * * *
The title song of the album is an English folk song, the earliest known version of which dates back to 1568. Beer and whiskey were made from barley, and the name "John Barleycorn" was used to personify those alcoholic beverages.
The song describes the sowing and harvesting of barley and the post-harvest processing that turns barley into beer and whiskey as if it were telling the story of a man who is persecuted, tortured, and eventually killed – e.g., "They've hired men with their scythes so sharp to cut him off at the knee."
Of course, John Barleycorn has the last laugh on his enemies, who are powerless to resist the allure of drink, which has the power to lay even the strongest man low.
A lot of other British groups recorded "John Barleycorn," including Pentangle, Steeleye Span, Jethro Tull, and Fairport Convention. (The Fairport Convention version used the same tune as the well-known Thanksgiving Hymn, "We Plough the Fields and Scatter.")
* * * * *
"John Barleycorn" is my least favorite song on John Barleycorn Must Die. It's clever, and it takes some time for you to see the punch line coming. But it's not a song that's very interesting or satisfying musically – it's more of a novelty song, a one-trick pony. And it's l-o-n-g.
But I think the album's other tracks are all very good, although I can't really explain why. Most of them are relatively long, with lengthy instrumental passages dominated by Winwood's Hammond organ.
If I wasn't required by my own format to start each post off with a few lines of lyrics, I'd be tempted to feature the first track of the album, an instrumental titled "Glad." Instead, I've featured the song that "Glad" leads right into, "Freedom Rider."
The "Freedom Riders" were civil rights activists who rode Greyhound and Trailways buses through the South in defiance of local "Jim Crow" laws requiring segregation in bus station waiting rooms and cafes. Those laws had been held unconstitutional by the United States Supreme Court, at least to the extent that they applied to interstate travelers.
If I wasn't required by my own format to start each post off with a few lines of lyrics, I'd be tempted to feature the first track of the album, an instrumental titled "Glad." Instead, I've featured the song that "Glad" leads right into, "Freedom Rider."
Freedom Riders |
The lyrics of this song appear to have nothing to do with the anti-segregation "Freedom Riders." But I can't tell you what they do signify -- your guess is as good as mine.
There's nary a guitar to be found on this track. Rather, the song alternates between short, transitional saxophone-and-piano bridges and longer passages that feature Chris Wood's inspired flute playing and Winwood's dense, vibrato-heavy Hammond B-3 organ.
Hammond B-3 organ |
I'm not wild about his post-Traffic music. Like Rod Stewart and Steve Miller, he put out a lot of crap in the 80's and 90's. But John Barleycorn Must Die was the culmination of a long and remarkably productive period – and he was barely 22 when it was released.
Click here to listen to "Freedom Rider."
Click on the link below to buy the song from Amazon:
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