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An Appell Center Debut Performance!

CAPLIVE: WALTER TROUT – Sign Of The Times

VIP Member Presale
Date:
April 25, 2026
Time:
7:30 pm
Series:
  • Event Tags:, , , , ,
  • Venue: Capitol Theatre

    Other

    Concert Genre
    Jazz/Blues
    Series
    CapLive

    VIP Member Presale on now
    Member Presale 2/11
    Public Onsale 2/13

    Price: All Tickets $39

    Blues guitar icon Walter Trout is bringing his Sign Of The Times Tour to the Appell Center this Spring. Known for his fiery guitar work and raw, soulful vocals, Trout continues to push his sound forward while honoring the roots that shaped him. His CapLive debut promises an electric mix of new material and fan favorites, all delivered with the intensity and heart he’s known for. It’s a rare chance to experience a modern blues legend up close in the intimate Capitol Theatre.

    More about WALTER TROUT

    Great artists take the pulse of their times. In his half-century as a street-level social observer and scaldingly honest songwriter, blues-rock’s resilient icon Walter Trout has never told his fans what to think, how to feel, where to stand politically, or what to scrawl on their protest placards. But in an era when his home nation—and the wider world—is ripping at the seams over the battlelines of modern life, the iconic US bluesman’s hard-rocking new album, Sign Of The Times, is the primal scream and pressure valve we all desperately need.

    “I wanted to convey the anger and angst going on in the world,” explains the 74-year-old. “For me, writing these songs is therapy. They’re not just about what’s happening out there, but how it affects you in your head. Sign Of The Times just became the obvious title…”

    Right now, it feels like the amps have barely cooled from 2024’s Broken, which debuted on Billboard at #1. But the era-chronicling songs from Sign Of The Times wouldn’t wait; these urgent riffs flying off the guitarist’s fingers, assisted once again by Dr. Marie Trout, Walter’s wife, manager and latterly co-writer, whose eloquent lyrics struck each subject on the head.

    “This album flowed pretty easily,” he reflects of the writing process. “I had so many song ideas and pages of lyrics from Marie. We could have kept going and made a triple album.”

    With ten new songs written and arranged, Trout was ready to call up his studio band—longtime drummer Michael Leasure, bassist John Avila and keys man Teddy ‘Zig Zag’ Andreadis— for sessions at producer Thomas Ross Johansen’s Strawhorse Studios in Los Angeles. Immediately, the tinderbox subject matter sparked one of the toughest-sounding records in his catalogue. “Let me put it this way,” considers Trout, “after we finished recording the title track, my keys player Teddy said, ‘Well, you won’t be winning a blues award this year’. But I really felt like rocking on this album. We had heavy things to talk about, and we went for it musically too.”