After dispensing with his services in December 1967, the remaining members of
Traffic reinstated
Dave Mason in the group in the spring of 1968 as they struggled to write enough material for their impending second album. The result was a disc evenly divided between
Mason's catchy folk-rock compositions and
Steve Winwood's compelling rock jams.
Mason's material was the most appealing both initially and eventually: The lead-off track, a jaunty effort called "You Can All Join In" became a European hit; and though it didn't succeed as a single at first, "Feelin' Alright?" (the question mark tended to disappear in later pressings) turned out to be the only real standard to emerge from the album after it started earning cover versions from
Joe Cocker and others in the 1970s. It's easy to miss the import of the lyrics, which are a complaint of betrayal leading to the dissatisfied chorus, "You feelin' alright? I'm not feelin' that good myself." Though it's possible to interpret as a romantic statement, "Feelin' Alright?" can also be viewed as
Mason's indictment of
Winwood, written while he was out of the band. That would explain the final verse, which seems to append a happy ending to an unhappy story. In any case, it remains a popular song many years later.
Winwood's efforts, with their haunting keyboard-based melodies augmented by Chris Wood's reed work and
Jim Capaldi's exotic rhythms, work better as musical efforts than lyrical ones. Primary lyricist
Capaldi's words tend to be impressionistic reveries or vague psychological reflections, his lines sometimes seeming more driven by the need for a rhyme than a coherent meaning. The most satisfying of them is the shaggy dog story "Forty Thousand Headmen," which doesn't really make any sense as anything other than a dream, though it's entertaining. But the lyrics to
Winwood/
Capaldi compositions take a back seat to the playing and
Winwood's soulful voice. As
Mason's simpler, more direct performances alternate with the more complex
Winwood tunes, the album is well-balanced. It's too bad that the musicians were not able to maintain that balance in person; for the second time in two albums,
Mason found himself dismissed from the group just as an LP to which he'd made a major contribution hit the stores. Only a few months after that, the band itself split up, but not before scoring their second consecutive Top Ten ranking in the U.K., and the album also went on to reach the top 20 in the U.S., breaking the temporarily defunct group stateside. (
Traffic was reissued on CD on December 15, 1987. A 2000 British reissue augmented the original track listing with bonus cuts drawn from the 1967 Here We Go 'Round the Mulberry Bush soundtrack and the 1969 odds-and-ends collection
Last Exit.) ~ William Ruhlmann