Date unknown
ROBIN TROWER: 'at-home blues'
By Mick Brown
LONDON (KFS) - Robin Trower
might be a big noise in the United States but here, he's quick to admit,
the guitarist is a stranger in his own land.
In the four years since
he left Procol Harum to front his own trio, Trower has filled the Stadiums
on the North American side of the Atlantic and sold gold records, but here,
he had to struggle to sell out the 8,000 seat Wembley Empire Pool.
It's not hard to fathom
the reasons for his comparative lack of success in his home country.
Essentially a stage and album performer, he is rarely heard on the Top
40-oriented radio here. The taunt of being a "Jimi Hendrix imitator"
has haunted him here since the release of his first solo album.
Now he seldom plays in
England, partly because of his preference for American audiences and partly
because playing in Europe simply does not pay off well for a band.
"We're actually losing
$16,000 doing a handful of European dates ," complained his manager, Wilf
Wright.
"We can go back to America
and make $200,000 in a month. Still you can't discard England because
it's your home country, and I'm sure at the back of Robin's mind is the
desire to make it here. But when things seem to be working against
you, it's very frustrating."
HALF AGREEMENT
Trower half-agrees with
his manager. "Record-wise," Trower said, "I'd love to crack it in
England, but as far as live performances go, I really don't feel the challenge
anymore. When we started out, I felt we had something to prove because
nobody had heard of us, but now that we've been a bill-topping band in
the States, the only challenge I feel is the musician's challenge to better
myself as a player."
"I'd say that America
is much more responsive to our thing, and probably to music in general.
You have to face the fact that we aren't going to appeal to the kind of
people who buy the bulk of records in this country, which is seven-year-old
people. Whether they're actually 20 years old or not is irrelevant
- they are really seven-year-old intellects musically speaking. And
I think the main thing about the British people is that they don't hear
the main business about our music. They hear it on a very superficial
level. Funnily enough, that may be because of a lot of people like
us, because of the high-energy thing - but they're missing the main business
at hand by only hearing that. I don't think it's given to British
people to have an ear to appreciate the kind of thing I'm talking about."
What Trower's talking
about is the blues. As a guitarist, he believes himself to be in
a tradition that goes to B.B. King and back before a line in which total
musical honesty and commitment are all that matter. His idols are,
King, Buddy Guy, Lowell Fulson - and he regards most rock guitarist with
indifference.
SELF-CONFIDENT
He's not being self-consciously
arrogant when he declares himself to be one of the best guitarists working
today - it's just that he hasn't heard anybody else who's good enough to
convince him otherwise.
"I've got a great God-given
gift, that I am able to play with feeling, which not many guys have.
You've got a great many technical players and a great many intellectual
players who are good at what they do. But you don't have many feel
players, especially in rock."
Trower's affinity for
black American music has been strengthen with the addition to his band,
bass player Rustee Allen, who formerly worked for Sly and the Family Stone,
Allen gives the band a more rhythmic and "feel-conscious" edge, Trower
said, "more American and funky-sounding - but not too much so."
KEYBOARD MAYBE LATER
"I want to add that to
my personality," he said, "but not get submerged in it."
Trower also had it in
mind to further augment the band with a keyboard player - but not yet.
"At the moment we're still a working, live rock and roll band, and a keyboard
player of the calibre I have in mind would pretty much change our identity
and move us in a more jazz-oriented direction which I'm not ready to take
yet. I'm a blues player, not a jazz player. I don't have the
technical ability for that. I know I could get away with it - a lot
of players get away with it - but I'm not interested in doing that.
Just being able to get away with something isn't enough. Is it?"
FIRST SHOW GREAT
The first of Trower's
two London shows demonstrated that he doesn't need to. Nowhere is
Trower's earliest approach to music more evident than on stage. His
satin outfit seems a minor concession to showmanship in what is visually
an austere performance. He may have half-a-million dollars worth
of equipment on stage with him, but the only thing that sparkles or glitters
is the playing. And the crowd responded. It was an unusually
exuberant audience for Trower here, up out of their seats and storming
the aisles.
After three encores, Trower
was exultant, describing the show as "possibly the best English gig I've
ever done." Manager Wilf Wright talked of having finally broken the
English jinx.
The next evening, however,
the jinx was back. The audience, not quite a sell-out, was subdued,
and Trower could later describe the show only as "a job of work."
For Robin Trower, it's really a long road back home.