<p><strong>Traffic was the most enigmatic British band of their day.</strong> Formed in early 1967 by Chris Wood Steve Winwood Jim Capaldi and Dave Mason they rejected the bright lights of London in favor of a run-down supposedly haunted cottage in the country - a place to live communally and write music.</p><p>With Chris especially intent on channeling the vibes of England&#39;s landscape into their sound days would be spent getting high exploring playing and working in varying proportions. Against all odds this eccentric model paid off - songs such as &quot;Dear Mr. Fantasy&quot; and &quot;John Barleycorn Must Die&quot; would lift Traffic into the upper echelons of the rock world.</p><p>As they brushed shoulders with Jimi Hendrix The Beatles and the Grateful Dead and with Dave dropping in and out of the band Traffic&#39;s music evolved from a synthesis of Steve&#39;s innate musicality Jim&#39;s atmospheric lyrics and Chris&#39;s special brand of congenial mysticism. Record sales boomed and tours carried them back and forth across the Atlantic everything seemed to be going to plan - a dreamlike fairy tale come true.</p><p>But for Chris a toll would be exacted.</p><p>Amid the clashing egos wearing road trips stressful break ups and a complex personal life he vacillated precariously between bursts of exquisite creativity and torrents of self-destruction; a paradoxical dance which continued until his death in 1983. For a man who found artistic expression everything and for whom suffering for it was an expectation Chris would stare fully into the Medusa&#39;s face of the music industry paying a higher price than perhaps any of his contemporaries.</p><p>Researched and written over a ten-year period &quot;Tragic Magic&quot; offers the only definitive account of Traffic&#39;s story and Chris Wood&#39;s quietly extraordinary life.</p>
Piracy-free
Assured Quality
Secure Transactions
Delivery Options
Please enter pincode to check delivery time.
*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.