This year has seen the departure of some great musicians: Little Richard, Charlie Daniels, Neil Peart from Rush, Frankie Banali of Quiet Riot and W.A.S.P., Fleetwood Mac cofounder Peter Green, Power Trip lead singer Riley Gale, the list goes on.
Walter Lure’s passing is a loss that hits home for music fans, especially punk
rock fans. Lure was one of the founders of The Heartbreakers, the band led by former New York Dolls Guitarist Johnny
Thunders. The Heartbreakers were immensely influential in shaping punk rock. Lure
helped write many of the band’s most famous songs and was part of the vanguard
that brought punk rock to the world. After the Heartbreakers, he continued to play
and record music with his own band, The Waldos. His musical
virtuosity extended beyond his own groups as well. If you ever hear a guitar
solo on a Ramones record, chances are Walter Lure is playing it. He was the one
holding things down and singing lead vocals oftentimes when Johnny Thunders,
addled by drug use, would nod off on stage.
Lure struggled with his own addiction, and recounted in an
interview that an arrest for buying drugs on his lunch break and almost losing his job
was what finally drove him to beat his habit. He worked in the financial world,
running large clearing operations, and eventually retiring in 2015 from
Neuberger Berman.
“The funny bit was that back in the 90s when I was in
charge of all those people on the job, a lot of them would come to my shows and
laugh at the fact that their boss was playing punk rock music onstage. My
clothes closet had all my work suits and ties on one side and the other side
had all the beat-up stage clothes. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde here you are!”
And here is another way in which Walter Lure continues to
inspire so many musicians. The rock stars you see on the covers of magazines
are an exceedingly small percentage of the people who are out there playing
music every night. Most musicians who make music don’t make money at it and
have to hold down day jobs to keep a roof over their head. Walter Lure was a
big enough musician that if this were a just world, he would have had mansions
all over the world, but he held down a day job and continued to make great
music.
My band Blackout Shoppers got to play with The Waldos in the basement of CBGB’s 13,
which was part of CBGB’s but not the more famous main stage. Walter Lure had
played that main stage plenty of times and would later be one of the last acts
to play when CB’s shut down a few years later.
He would have had every right to carry a massive rock star
ego or bristle at the idea playing on a small stage in a basement with a bunch
of unknown bands, but there was none of that from him. He showed up with his
band and rocked, playing lots of the famous punk rock songs he helped write. He
gladly took pictures with people who wanted to and hung around and chatted with
everyone afterwards. He stayed true to the punk ethos to his dying day.
One of my friends whose band was on that same show commented,
“We all got to play with Walter Lure, how lucky were we all??”
The world was lucky to have Walter Lure making music for so
long. RIP and thank you Waldo.
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