Some thermally correct travelin’ music for y’all Jun 20, 2009
Reality mentioned Traffic earlier. Here s another good Traffic tune ... On a Traffic vein, I like this little ditty. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution -- Opinion)
Keeping The Faith Feb 27, 2008
Winwood may have gotten bigger cheers for other songs (such as a cover of "Dear Mr. Fantasy" and "Pearly Queen," both originally recorded by his other band, Traffic), but "Presence of the Lord" was his best work of the show. Tunes such as "After Midnight" and "Crossroads" engaged the house, and sent frustrated pickers into air-guitar spasms. (New York Post -- Entertainment)
Clapton, Winwood finally find their way home Feb 26, 2008
Up first: The musicians, who formed Blind Faith after Cream and Traffic dissolved, opened the show with Had to Cry Today, from the 1969 supergroup's sole, self-titled album ... Interesting instrumental: Traffic's Pearly Queen ... Winding down: Near the end, two big crowd-pleasers Blind Faith's Can't Find My Way Home and Traffic's Dear Mr. Fantasy, which became both a showcase for Winwood's virtuosity and a friendly guitar skirmish, with the two axemen swapping riffs. (USA Today)
Amy Winehouse Feb 9, 2008
Ostensibly a tribute to the music of the late Sixties, Mutations includes harmonica work borrowed from Dylan, creepy guitars that suggest the Doors, and dreamy numbers like Nobody's Fault But My Own that sound like the Kinks channeling both Donovan and Traffic, no easy feat. But in the end, Mutations is neither a rip-off nor an impersonation. (Guardian Unlimited)
Petty adds new Valley date Jan 25, 2008
Joining the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame group on the tour, which will stop at Jobing,com Arena in the Valley, will be Traffic alumnus Steve Winwood. Petty's most recent album is a solo effort, 2006's Highway Companion. (AZCentral -- Entertainment)
Answers to credit woes are not in black and white Nov 7, 2007
Traffic, with Stevie Winwood doing vocals. By Boxer. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution -- Opinion)
This Week in Entertainment History: 1/16/16 - 1/22/06 Jun 27, 2007
In 1996, Jamaican authorities opened fire on Jimmy Buffett's seaplane, mistaking it for a drug trafficker's plane ... On January 19th, 1974, a nine-mile traffic jam kept fans from attending performances by Bob Dylan and The Band in Miami. (KWTX.com, TX)