Jim Capaldi

Jim Capaldi (2 August 194428 January 2005) was a British musician and songwriter and a founder member of Traffic. He drummed with several famous singers and musicians, including Jimi Hendrix and George Harrison.

Born Nicola James Capaldi on 2 August 1944 in Evesham, Worcestershire to musical Italian parents, Jim Capaldi's musical career lasted more than four decades. He co-founded Traffic in Birmingham with Steve Winwood and the band's psychedelic rock was influential in Britain and the United States. Capaldi and Winwood wrote many of Traffic's major hits and most of the tracks on the band's ten albums.

As a child Capaldi studied the piano and singing with his father, a music teacher, and by his teens he was playing drums with his friends. In 1961 Capaldi played drums for the Worcester band The Sapphires and in 1963 he formed The Hellions with Dave Mason on guitar and Gordon Jackson on rhythm guitar. In August 1964 Tanya Day took The Hellions to the Star Club in Hamburg, Germany as her backing group. The Spencer Davis Group were staying at the same hotel as The Hellions and it was there that Steve Winwood befriended Jim Capaldi and Dave Mason.

Back in Worcester The Hellions established themselves as busy professionals of sufficient repute to provide backing to visiting performers including Adam Faith and Dave Berry. By the end of 1964, they had a London residency at the Whisky-A-Go-Go Club. In 1965 the band released three singles but non charted and later that year John "Poli" Palmer joined the band on drums and Capaldi became the lead vocalist.

The Hellions moved back to Worcester in 1966 in an attempt to reduce their costs but local tastes had changed and the band relaunched themselves as The Revolution with a fourth single that also failed to chart. Disillusioned, Dave Mason left the band. Jim Capaldi replaced Mason with Luther Grosvenor and renamed the band Deep Feeling.

Deep Feeling played gigs in Birmingham and the surrounding Black Country area where they developed a significant fanbase. Jim Capaldi, Gordon Jackson and Poli Palmer wrote original songs for the band that were heavier than the Hellions repertoire. Although they recorded several studio tracks only Pretty Colours (Capaldi/Jackson/Palmer) has been released.

Capaldi and the band played frequently in London and Jimi Hendrix played guitar with them at Knuckles club as an unknown musician in his first UK performance. Back in Birmingham Capaldi would occasionally join his friends Dave Mason, Steve Winwood and Chris Wood for impromptu performances at The Elbow Room club on Aston High Street. Early in 1967 they formalised this arrangement by forming Traffic and the other members of Deep Feeling disbanded. In 1968 Capaldi, Winwood and Mason contributed backing music to a solo album by Gordon Jackson.

The new band were signed by Island Records and rented a quiet cottage in Aston Tirrold, Berkshire in order to write and rehearse new material. The cottage did not remain quiet and had frequent visitors including Eric Burdon, Eric Clapton and Pete Townshend as well as Trevor Burton (of The Move) amongst many others. Capaldi wrote the lyrics for Traffic's first single Paper Sun, which charted at number 5 in the summer of 1967. Two more singles were released successfully in 1967 and in December the band released the album Mr Fantasy, which demonstrated the individual talents of each member. Dave Mason left the band soon after the album's release but returned the following May before finally leaving in October. Winwood also left Traffic (to form Blind Faith) and the rest reluctantly concluded that the band was over.

Capaldi now tried to form another band with Mason and Wood but the creative tensions that had caused Mason to leave Traffic remained and Wooden Frog only lasted until March 1969. In January 1970 Capaldi and Wood joined Steve Winwood in the studio to record Winwood's solo album. These sessions were so successful that the three of them reformed Traffic (without Dave Mason) to release the album John Barleycorn Must Die. They then toured the UK and the USA with a band extended by several session musicians.

Although the next Traffic albums were successful Capaldi began to develop his solo career and released his first solo album in 1974. In October 1975 his single of Roy Orbison's Love Hurts reached number five in the UK charts and charted worldwide.

Capaldi was noted for the extent of his collaborations with other musicians. In 1973 he played drums at Eric Clapton's Rainbow Concert and on some Clapton studio sessions.

Jim Capaldi's success as a lyricist continued throughout his life. He was a five times winner of coveted BMI/Ascap Awards for the "most played compositions in America", and sales of songs written or co-written by him exceeded 25 million units. He numbered Bob Marley among his friends and they travelled together whilst Marley was writing the Catch A Fire album. Capaldi wrote the lyrics to This Is Reggae Music.

Jim Capaldi married Brazilian born Aninha in 1975 and in 1976 he toured with his band Space Cadets before moving to Brazil in 1977. His daughters Tabitha and Tallulah were born in 1977 and 1979, respectively. The Capaldis lived in the Bahia region of Brazil until the beginning of 1980 and while there he became heavily involved with environmental issues. The track Favella music on his 1999 album Let The Thunder Cry arose from his love of Brazil and he worked with several Brazilian composers.

In the 1980s he collaborated with Carlos Santana contributing songs and ideas to Santana's projects and in the 1990s he wrote the song Love Will Keep Us Alive for the Eagles' hugely successful Hell Freezes Over album. His 1983 album Some Come Running included Eric Clapton and George Harrison on the track Oh Lord, Why Lord.

In 1993 Traffic reformed (without the late Chris Wood) and recorded a new album Far From Home and in 1994 Capaldi toured the USA and UK with the band. In 1998 he paired up again with Dave Mason on an extensive American tour.

In 2001 his twelfth solo album Living On The Outside featured George Harrison, Steve Winwood, Paul Weller, Gary Moore and Ian Paice. George Harrison played guitar on the track Anna Julia, which is an English translation of a song by the Brazilian band Los Hermanos, and Capaldi played at the George Harrison tribute concert in 2003.

Outside his music and his environmental activism, Capaldi also assisted his wife in her work with Jubilee Action to help Brazilian street children. He remained professionally active until his final illness prevented him from working on plans for a 2005 reunion tour of Traffic. He died of stomach cancer at 2.30 a.m. on 28 January 2005. He is survived by his wife and two daughters.

Discography

  • Oh How We Danced (1972)
  • Whale Meat Again (1974)
  • Short Cut Draw Blood (1975)
  • Play It By Ear (1977)
  • Daughter of the Night (1978)
  • Contender (1978)
  • Electric Nights (1979)
  • Sweet Smell of ... Success (1980)
  • Let The Thunder Cry (1981)
  • Fierce Heart (1983)
  • One Man Mission (1984)
  • Some Came Running (1988)
  • Prince of Darkness (1995)
  • Let The Thunder Cry (1999)
  • Living On The Outside (2001)
  • Poor Boy Blue (2004)


External Links

fr:Jim Capaldi nl:Jim Capaldi

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