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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - April, 2008

PROVOGUE RELEASES GUITAR MASTER WALTER TROUT CD
"THE OUTSIDER" ON JUNE 24, 2008
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FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE: April 2008
"Walter
Trout isn't just a great guitar player...he works from the heart with a
flawless and fiery edge. When Walter Trout plays, he owns you." David
Wilson/The ToneQuest Report
Provogue Records proudly announces the release of guitar
master/singer/songwriter WALTER TROUT'S "THE OUTSIDER"
May 26th
in Europe and June 24th 2008 in USA.
Produced by John Porter (B.B. King, Los Lonely Boys, Ryan Adams) and
recorded at Mad Dog Studios in Burbank, CA, "The Outsider" features 13
Walter Trout originals (the title track co-written with Trout's bass player
Rick Knapp). Trout's backing band on "The Outsider" includes drummer Kenny
Aronoff (John Mellencamp), bassist Hutch Hutchinson and pianist Jon Clearly
(Bonnie Raitt), as well as Skip Edwards and Samuel Avila on the Hammond B3
and a special guest appearance by harmonica wiz Jason Ricci.
Stylistically hard to pigeonhole - - Is Trout's music too blues for rock -
or too rock for blues? -- to label Walter Trout’s music is to limit it. With
more than 35 years of touring and recording under his belt, this New Jersey
native has been "loved and hated, accused and vindicated, packaged and
presented for everyone to see," as his brand new, autobiographical song
‘Welcome To The Human Race’ details.
Being in the studio with Trout approaches temporary insanity - the
excitement, the unknown, the experimentation. Truly tantalizing sounds on
par with those infamous Eric Clapton licks and Stevie Ray Vaughan riffs, are
testament to Trout’s talent. His music speaks to your soul, warms your heart
and has your foot tapping. Trout brings the blues to life and invigorates
rock in a manner all too rare these days.
Whether an improvisational jam or a carefully arranged song, Walter Trout’s
thirst for musical satisfaction is seemingly unquenchable. Equally capable
of spontaneous serendipity as well as pre-planned perfection, this guitarist
is truly in the midst of an all-encompassing love affair with the music he
creates.
Born in 1951 and raised in a music-loving home in Ocean City, New Jersey,
WALTER TROUT felt the calling to music at a young age. His first instrument
was trumpet, playing in the school band. A chance meeting with the mighty
Duke Ellington catapulted Trout’s pursuit of a professional music career –
what Walter terms “a turning point” in his life – when Walter’s mother
orchestrated a meeting with jazz legends Ellington, Cat Anderson, Johnny
Hodges and Paul Gonsalves for Walter's tenth birthday. The seed was planted
about a career playing music.
In the mid-'60s, Trout switched to electric guitar after hearing an album
that changed his whole appreciation of music. The Paul Butterfield Blues
Band featuring Mike Bloomfield cemented Walter’s musical ambitions
towards the blues and the electric guitar. In those vinyl grooves, Walter
heard the guitar speaking to his soul, expressing what words could not. In
his late teens and early 20s, Trout played in numerous New Jersey bands,
competing at the time for rank with “Steel Mill” featuring a young Bruce
Springsteen. In 1973, he packed up his belongings and drove to Los Angeles.
In L.A., Trout developed into an ace sideman playing with Finis Tasby, Pee
Wee Crayton, Lowell Fulsom, and Percy Mayfield. Trout often teamed with
Hammond B3 wizard Deacon Jones and his apprenticeship continued in the bands
of John Lee Hooker, Big Mama Thorton and Joe Tex.
By 1981, Trout’s reputation led to the invitation to join venerable blues
rock band Canned Heat, where he remained through 1984. When the call came
to join the legendary John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, Trout jumped and found
himself sharing the spotlight with fellow guitarist Coco Montoya. Trout and
Montoya lifted the band to a new level, as Mayall’s Bluesbreakers enjoyed
unprecedented album sales and high profile tours in the US and abroad.
Trout felt that playing with Mayall was as close to his childhood dream as
he could get. Just as Trout was climbing the musical mountain, he was also
drowning in a bottle of Jack. An intoxicated performance in East Berlin
caused guitar virtuoso Carlos Santana to gently explain to Walter that he
was wasting God’s gift. Sobriety followed soon after.
Embarking upon a solo career in 1989 resulted in extensive European touring
for Trout, alongside eight albums (with over 500,000 copies sold to date)
and several radio hits. But the Atlantic is a great divide and while Trout’s
stock was soaring in Europe, very few were taking notice in America. The
self-titled WALTER TROUT, released by Ruf Records in 1998 was his first
"official" domestic U.S. release. Shortly thereafter, Walter Trout began an
extensive US tour and has since released six CDs, each of which was
supported with relentless touring - on both sides of the ocean.
Now in 2008, Trout is ready to unleash "The Outsider".
Walter Trout will tour North America and Europe in support of "The
Outsider". For more information visit www.waltertrout.com or www.myspace.com/waltertrouttheradicals
The Provogue Records label, an independent label based in The Netherlands
specializing in guitar heavy blues rock is debuting in the United States
with Walter Trout's "The Outsider" (June 24, 2008) and Pat Travers "Stick
With What You Know - Live In Europe" (July 22, 2008). Other artists on the
Provogue label include (Europe only) Joe Bonamassa , Rick Derringer, Leslie
West, Scott McKeon, Julian Sas and Eric Gales.
Provogue Records will be distributed in the U.S. by Megaforce/Sony RED
Distribution.

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