.. TO CONQUER
In een solocarriere die al meer dan 50 jaar duurt zou je denken dat de titel van Trowers album de lading wel dekt. Maar ook op dit album bewijst Trower nog even inventief als tijdloos te zijn. Trowers Stratocaster klinkt als vanouds prachtig. Mooie ballads als Birdsong en uptempo-songs zoals de opener Ball of Fire. Op een leeftijd waarop hij zichzelf niet meer hoeft te bewijzen, verovert hij toch nog de wereld.
Door Ron Bulters - Mania
Few would dispute that the title of Trower’s latest album – No More
Worlds To Conquer – is a fair summary of the thumbprint he has left on
the musical universe. But as he reminds us, it should not be
misinterpreted as his mission being accomplished. “I definitely feel
like I’m still reaching,” he considers, “with the guitar, and the songs,
and everything else.”
For more than six decades, Robin Trower’s career has known no bounds.
At the age of 76, the British guitarist can reflect on a journey in
which he has planted flags across the musical sphere and played every
role imaginable. He’s been the driving force behind Sixties icons Procol
Harum. The transatlantic solo star who filled US stadiums with 1974’s
Bridge Of Sighs. The collaborator and occasional supergroup member. The
elder-statesman songwriter whose late period still crackles with
invention.
Featuring vocals and bass from the late Jim Dewar – along with
jaw-dropping guitar work from Trower that has influenced everyone from
Steve Lukather to Opeth – the US-gold-selling Bridge Of Sighs is perhaps
his flagship album.
“With every album, it’s the best I can do at that particular time. I
think that’s what it’s about. I set myself goals and each song has to
live up to them,” he reflects .
“What usually happens is that I’m playing the guitar for fun and an
idea will suddenly appear,” he continues. “Then you’re looking for a
lyric that grows out of the music and enhances the mood. it’s lovely
when you’ve gone right the way through from the beginning of the first
little guitar idea that grows into a song and eventually you get a track
down and finished – and it’s something like how you heard it in your
head.”
Turning once again to his trusty toolkit of Fender Stratocaster and
Marshall amp, Trower’s guitar work is ageless, whether that’s the tough
chop of Ball Of Fire, Losing You and Cloud Across The Sun, or the
slower-burn wah squalls of the title track and Deadly Kiss. “Each track
has to work as a sound,” he says, “as well as music and everything else.
I’m very particular over guitar tones. I drive people mad, but in the
end, it’s worth all the aggravation.”
On Waiting For The Rain To Fall, Trower’s playing is crystalline as a
dew drop, while the aching finale, I Will Always Be Your Shelter, offers
a solo whose masterful touch is compelling as anything in his
catalogue. “That’s a real high point for the playing,” he nods. “And
Waiting For The Rain To Fall, I think is influenced by Tamla Motown.
It’s a bit left-of-centre for me to do a song like that. But I think
it’s potent stuff. I’m hoping this album will surprise people.”
Once again, Trower also handles bass duties, but as a lifelong servant
of the song over his own ego, he didn’t hesitate to enlist other
musicians. “Chris Taggart is on drums,” he explains. “He’s a wonderful
drummer, and he’s done the last three or four albums. And I started to
realise, after I’d tried to sing these songs myself, that I wasn’t
vocally up to it. Richard Watts has done a great job on vocals. He’s got
a fantastic instrument – such a soulful singer – and he’s willing to
get it exactly how I’m hearing it in my head. The other great thing
about having Richard is that there’s quite a few songs on this album
that I wouldn’t be able to play and sing live at the same time.”
Yet Trower also addresses the contemporary problems in front of him.
“There’s three or four songs there that cover what I’m thinking about.
The Razor’s Edge and Cloud Across The Sun, those are definitely about my
dissatisfaction with the politicians of the day, pointing the finger at
the ones that don’t keep their promises. But then, with Deadly Kiss,
the lyric is someone talking to a friend who has become a junkie.
There’s broken-hearted songs. There’s love songs. “
“It was difficult, but I’m glad I did it,” he considers. “This album is
an evolution. I’m hoping that’s what is always happening with my music.
There’s a huge step between Bridge Of Sighs and now. It’s like
anything. The more you work on it, in theory, the better you should be
at it. And I definitely feel like this album is one of the best things
I’ve ever done.”