The Low Spark of High Heeled Boys (song)

"The Low Spark of High Heeled Boys" is the title track from the 1971 album by British rock band Traffic, written by Jim Capaldi and Steve Winwood. Despite never being released as a single due to its long duration, it became a staple of North American AOR-format FM radio stations in the 1970s and still receives airplay on classic rock radio today.

"The Low Spark of High Heeled Boys"
Song by Traffic
from the album The Low Spark of High Heeled Boys
ReleasedNovember 1971
RecordedSeptember 1971, Island Studios, London
GenreProgressive rock, jazz fusion
Length11:41
LabelIsland
Songwriter(s)Steve Winwood, Jim Capaldi
Producer(s)Steve Winwood

Lyrics and composition

The title refers to an inscription written by diminutive American actor Michael J. Pollard in Jim Capaldi's notebook while they were both in Morocco.[1] Capaldi and Pollard were planning to work on a movie that was never filmed. Capaldi said:

Pollard and I would sit around writing lyrics all day, talking about Bob Dylan and the Band, thinking up ridiculous plots for the movie. Before I left Morocco, Pollard wrote in my book 'The Low Spark of High Heeled Boys'. For me, it summed him up. He had this tremendous rebel attitude. He walked around in his cowboy boots, his leather jacket. At the time he was a heavy little dude. It seemed to sum up all the people of that generation who were just rebels. The 'Low Spark', for me, was the spirit, high-spirited. You know, standing on a street corner. The low rider. The 'Low Spark' meaning that strong undercurrent at the street level.[2]

The song begins with a gradual fade-in and ends with a slow fade-out. At 11 minutes and 41 seconds, it is the longest song on the album. The song (and the album) received wide praise, both in print and on broadcasts.[3] It uses a sparse arrangement with a slow deliberate pace alternating with a double-time densely layered pop chorus. The verses are in D minor while the choruses modulate to D major with a repeated piano riff in D Minor. The song is noted for the extended solos played by band members in the later portions of the song. David Lubin wrote in his album review that appeared in Rolling Stone in 1972, "Each member of the group lays down a track or tracks which could in parts stand alone".[4]

Capaldi had originally written only two verses of lyrics. He quickly wrote the third verse while Winwood was recording the song's vocal and slipped it in front of him in time for him to sing it.[5]

Recordings

A live rendition of the song is the opening track on Traffic's only concert video, which was recorded at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium in Santa Monica, California on 21 February 1972, with the lineup of Winwood, Capaldi, Wood, Rebop Kwaku Baah (percussion), David Hood (bass), and Roger Hawkins (drums). Another live recording with the same lineup plus extra keyboardist Barry Beckett appears on the album On the Road.

An alternate studio version of the song is available on the 2010 retrospective Revolutions – The Very Best of Steve Winwood, both on the single disc and box set releases.  The Revolutions version has a slightly longer running time of 12:26[6] as well as different solo arrangements relative to the original album recording.

In addition to being performed solo by both Capaldi and Winwood after the breakup of Traffic, the song has been covered by Rickie Lee Jones,[7] Widespread Panic,[8] The Dead,[9] Phil Lesh and Friends,[10] Brian Minshew, and EMF among others.

Personnel

References

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