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TROY KINGI & THE CLUTCH - 'THE GHOST OF FREDDIE CESAR' TOUR

Eccles Entertainment Presents

TROY KINGI & THE CLUTCH - 'THE GHOST OF FREDDIE CESAR' TOUR

9:00pm, Fri 23 October, 2020
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Event Details

Eccles Entertainment Presents:
 

Troy Kingi & The Clutch 🦅
 

The Ghost of Freddie Cesar - Album Release Show
 

Friday 23 October | San Fran, Wellington
 

Tickets on sale Wednesday 5 August at 10am.
 
ABOUT:
 

Multi-award-winning, multi-genre-artist Troy Kingi is now set to take us on a deeply personal discovery through an album dedicated to memories, lost souls, and 70s funk.
 
'The Ghost of Freddie Cesar' is Troy Kingi’s fourth installment in his 1O 1O 1O Series (10 albums in 10 years, in 10 genres).
 
Brought to life by Troy Kingi & The Clutch, this record is Troy’s most personal work to date; one that invites the listener to share his journey as he combs through recollections of his father who disappeared while driving from Rotorua to Auckland at Christmas time in 2005. Despite search efforts and sporadic reports of sightings, there has been no reliable trace of Troy’s biological father.
 
Troy’s journey with The Ghost of Freddie Cesar begins in 2007. While going through his missing father’s belongings, Troy found a cassette tape:
 
“It looked pretty old and had this hand-scribbled name, ‘Freddie Cesar’ on it, and on the back was just handwritten names of songs. I recognized some of the songs from my early childhood back when my parents were still together and started writing down the lyrics as a form of therapy. I must have forgotten it for a while – but sometime in 2010, I found the notebook of the songs again, but not the cassette tape, so that's when I decided to find out who Freddie Cesar was. It turns out there is very little out there about him which further compelled me to recreate something.”
 

“It’s kind of a dedication to my dad and Freddie Cesar, this album. Even though the lyrics aren't fully mine and the music’s not fully mine, I feel him when I’m singing these songs.”
 

Much of Freddie Cesar’s life remains a mystery, but listening to the lyrics, it becomes evident that Freddie Cesar may have been a Vietnam Vet, struggling with the issues of the day associated with that life: PTSD, drugs, alcohol, and his inability to settle back into civilian society. Troy’s interpretation of this time as a funk-filled landscape, paints an imagined picture of the life of Freddie Cesar – the closest to a realistic picture.