TRAFFIC — Last Exit

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TRAFFIC - Last Exit cover
1.98 | 9 ratings | 3 reviews
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Album · 1969

Filed under Jazz Related Rock
By TRAFFIC

Tracklist

A1 Just For You 2:24
A2 Shanghai Noodle Factory 5:04
A3 Something's Got A Hold Of My Toe 2:14
A4 Withering Tree 3:10
A5 Medicated Goo 3:36
Recorded Live At The Fillmore West
B1 Feelin' Good 10:50
B2 Blind Man 7:10

Total Time: 34:18

Line-up/Musicians

Steve Winwood – guitar, bass, keyboards, vocals
Dave Mason – guitar, vocals
Jim Capaldi – drums, percussion, vocals
Chris Wood – woodwind, keyboards

About this release

Island Records – ILPS 9097 (UK)

Thanks to snobb for the updates

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TRAFFIC LAST EXIT reviews

Specialists/collaborators reviews

Chicapah
They were all guilty of being a little quick on the trigger when they decided to call this "Last Exit" because there would be many more Traffic albums to come before it was all over. But at the time things looked pretty hopeless and the record label, in an attempt to recoup some of the funds they had invested in the band, emptied the vault and assembled enough recordings to call it an album. There's not even a list of musicians to accompany the photos on the original LP cover, just a note that it was produced by Jimmy Miller and the Traffic logo with one of its sides breaking away. Surprisingly, though, there are a few really good songs included. Dave Mason's "Just For You" could easily pass for a Moody Blues song from the same era with its tablas and Indian styled orchestration but it's nothing to write home about. "Shanghai Noodle Factory," on the other hand, is a rockin' R&B number that I've always enjoyed. It's got an interesting mix of acoustic guitar, organ and flute layered on top of drummer Jim Capaldi's steady groove. Steve Winwood delivers his usual great vocals (not just here but on every song) and the extended interplay between the guitar and flute is excellent. "Something's Got a Hold of My Toe" is no more than an uninspired electric guitar-driven jam that would never have seen the light of day if they hadn't been scraping for filler. "Withering Tree" is a Winwood/Capaldi tune dominated by the piano that lyric-wise could be an allegory for the group's sad status. It shifts between a waltz and a straight 4/4 but it, too, is quite forgettable. "Medicated Goo" is funky fun and a highlight of the record. Chris Wood's punchy saxophone lines help to drive the song and the guitar leads are tastefully done. The tight, soulful harmony vocals are a treat. The last two tunes were recorded live at the Fillmore West with just Steve, Jim and Chris alone on stage (Winwood supplies the bass on the pedals). "Feelin' Good" is actually an adaptation of a song from a Broadway musical that I guess seemed appropriate as far as looking ahead with the chorus of "It's a new dawn/it's a new day/it's a new life for me/and I'm feelin' good." Despite Wood playing some well-intentioned sax licks and Winwood knocking out a piercing organ solo you can tell they were doing their best to just get through the gig. "Blind Man" has a blues feel to it and they manage to throw in enough twists and accents to keep it interesting but you can tell by the audience's half-hearted response that they weren't getting what they'd shown up to hear.

It's hard to recommend this to anyone but a true Traffic aficionado even though it has two of their best songs from the Dave Mason years. At least it didn't tarnish their legacy completely and, as we all know, they eventually reformed further down the road and more than made up for "Last Exit" by creating some truly memorable albums.

Members reviews

seyo
"Last Exit" is very uneven album that reflects the period of crisis and dissolution of the group. Apart from excellent progressively inclined "Shanghai Noodle Factory" filled with "proto- symphonic" acoustic guitar, organ and flute, and slightly less interesting R'n'B track "Medicated Goo", all other songs are semi-developed, uninspired and sub-produced. Two extended live tracks are nothing more than improvisational jams, nice for fans of this type of music but not in any way essential to TRAFFIC's career, much less for jazz-rock in general. It is a listenable album, surely interesting for TRAFFIC collectors, but objectively does not stand to be recommended.
Sean Trane
(third in a serie of ten)

I am rather severe with this album but, at that time, Traffic's third album was almost posthumous and man, does it ever sound like it. Mason had gone for the second (or is it third) time, leaving the band in total distress with moral forces very low and down to a trio.

Not everything is bad on this album, though: the first side is full of almost usual Traffic tracks in the line of the first two albums (very psychey) but gradually slightly more progressive. Side 2 is two long tracks recorded live with IMO a poor sound and generally over-indulging solos. As to make you know that this was almost throw away stuff and the title tells you that the band was gone.

In such , while relatively poor by Traffic standards , this album is not bad at all , but should only please confirmed fans. Start elsewhere if you want to investigate them.

Ratings only

  • stefanbedna
  • Fant0mas
  • Lynx33
  • Vano
  • PinkFloydManiac1973
  • Jazzmaster

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