He’s travelled many thousands of kilometres, is over 70 years old,
released his thirtieth studio album entitled “Ride” back in May and is now
coming to the Dudelange cultural centre for the second time: Walter Trout.
Trout is often mentioned in the same breath as Hendrix and Clapton. The blues rock
legend had a tough time before he launched his celebrated solo career back in
the late 1980s. There were self-destructive years as a stand-in lead guitarist
for legendary blues musicians of the likes of John Lee Hooker, Big Mama
Thornton and the Hells Angels-controlled formation Canned Heat. Phases in his
life overshadowed by dark events and excesses. Trout explains the latter with
his difficult childhood and the terrifying presence of his stepfather. And it
is just these experiences that influenced his music for his latest studio
album. Though these memories are from long ago, their echo is seemingly endless.
With “Ride” as an emotional outlet, he seeks to reconcile with his past,
embrace his future and arrive in the ever-evolving present. A tempestuous album
that in part serves to process trauma. Angry, anguished, yearnful and
emotional. But also topical and differentiated when Trout denounces the many
lies in social media in songs like “High is Low”.
With Trout, not only is a blues great coming to Dudelange, but also an excellent
storyteller and a bon vivant who has experienced life in all its facets. An
evening dedicated to the blues and to grand metaphors.
For more details:opderschmelz.lu/en/agenda/1857_1729
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