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Walter Lure
Walter Lure
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Key Information

Walter Lure (born Walter C. Luhr Jr.,[1] April 22, 1949 – August 21, 2020) was an American rock guitarist and singer. He was a member of the rock group The Heartbreakers.

Biography

[edit]

Lure was born in Queens and raised in Floral Park, Long Island. He graduated from Fordham University with a degree majoring in English literature and minoring in chemistry, and was working at the Food and Drug Administration in New York while playing in a variety of local groups. He initially met Johnny Thunders in the early 1970s while attending concerts at the Fillmore East, and later became a fan of Thunders' group the New York Dolls. When the Dolls broke up in early 1975, Lure was playing in a glam rock band called the Demons, and successfully auditioned to join Thunders' new band The Heartbreakers. Lure's first gig with the Heartbreakers was at CBGB on July 4, 1975. As he wrote in his autobiography, "My last gig with the Demons was back at CBGB on the Friday of July 4 weekend, performing in front of about twenty people at two in the morning. My first gig with the Heartbreakers was the following evening in front of several hundred screaming maniacs, with a line around the block as well. It was a madhouse."[1]

The Heartbreakers quickly became very popular in New York City, and after relocating to London, released their first album, L.A.M.F., in 1977. Although flawed by a poor mix, the album is considered a classic of early punk rock.[2] Lure wrote and co-wrote many of the songs on the album, such as "One Track Mind", "Too Much Junkie Business", "All By Myself", and "Get Off The Phone", but the band broke up shortly after the album was released.[3] The band line-up of Johnny Thunders (guitar/vocals), Lure (guitar/vocals), Jerry Nolan (drums ) and Billy Rath (bass) did continue to perform "reunion" shows in New York City throughout the 1980s, and reunited for a England/European tour in 1984. Lure played regularly with Thunders until his death in 1991.

After the Heartbreakers broke up, Lure continued to be active musically.[3] At the end of the 1970s, he formed The Waldos, who released an album titled Rent Party in 1995. The Waldos performed regularly in New York City with various line-ups throughout the 1990s and 2000s, and released a second album in 2018. In 2016, with former Planets guitarist Binky Philips, Lure formed The Last Ditches, which was rounded out by former Black Sabbath drummer Bobby Rondinelli and bassist Randy Pratt. The Last Ditches released a full-length LP entitled “Spilt Milk” in 2016. Lure also performed on two albums by the Ramones, Subterranean Jungle and Too Tough To Die.[3]

To celebrate the 40th anniversary of L.A.M.F., Lure put together a band to play the album's songs at reunion shows in 2016 and 2017. The band members included Lure, Clem Burke from Blondie, Jesse Malin, Mike Ness from Social Distortion, and former Sex Pistol Glen Matlock. The band played shows in New York City as well as a short West Coast tour. The reunion shows in New York took place at the Bowery Electric in Manhattan on November 15 and 16, 2016, and were recorded for the release on an album released on Jungle Records in December 2017 with Lure (guitar/vocals), Wayne Kramer (guitar), Tommy Stinson (bass), Clem Burke (drums), and special guests Jesse Malin (vocals), Liza Colby (vocals) and Cheetah Chrome (guitar). Glen Matlock was to have been in the band line-up but was replaced by Stinson for the 2016 Bowery Electric performances. Matlock did appear with the band for the 2017 dates in New York and California. Several more shows followed, including a small UK tour in 2019 featuring Mick Rossi (guitar & vocals), Nigel Mead (Bass), and Mark Laff (drums).

Lure had a "very unpunk second act"[4] after leaving the Heartbreakers. He took an entry-level job on Wall Street in the early 1980s, and after quitting heroin (to which he had become addicted while in the Heartbreakers), he became a successful asset manager, eventually working for Lehman Brothers until the firm went bankrupt in the 2008 crash. He spent the final part of his finance career at Neuberger Berman until retiring in 2015.

In early 2020, Lure published his memoir, To Hell And Back: My Life In Johnny Thunders’ Heartbreakers, In The Words Of The Last Man Standing.[3] He died on August 21, 2020, at the age of 71, from complications arising from liver and lung cancer.[3][5]

Discography

[edit]
  • L.A.M.F. (1977, Track)
    • L.A.M.F. Revisited (1984, Jungle)
    • L.A.M.F. The Lost '77 Mixes (1994, Jungle)
  • Live at Max's Kansas City (1979, Max's Kansas City Records)
  • D.T.K. Live At The Speakeasy (1982, Jungle)
  • Live At The Lyceum Ballroom 1984 (1985, Jungle)
  • Live At Mothers (1991, Fanclub)
  • What Goes Around (1991, Bomp!)
  • Vive La Révolution (Live In Paris - Le Bataclan - December 8th 1977) (1992, Skydog)
  • Thunderstorm in Detroit (Live At The Silverbird 21/12/80) (2002, Captain Trip Records)
  • Down To Kill (2005, Jungle)
  • Walter Lure Live in Berlin (2008, Nicotine Records/Tornado Ride Records)
  • Spilt Milk - The Last Ditches (2016, self-produced)
  • L.A.M.F. Live at The Bowery Electric (2017 Jungle Records - FREUDLP124)
  • Live in Tokyo (L.A.M.F With Mick Rossi - Slaughter And The Dogs) (2020 Secret Records)
  • Rent Party - The Waldos (Walter Lure, Joey Pinter, Tony Coiro, Jeff West) (1994, Sympathy For The Record Industry)

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Walter Lure (born Walter Charles Luhr Jr.; April 22, 1949 – August 21, 2020) was an American guitarist and singer best known as the rhythm guitarist and co-vocalist for and , a seminal band in the 1970s scene. Born in , New York, to a retail banker father and homemaker mother, Lure grew up in the borough and initially pursued music through local cover bands before joining in 1975. He contributed to the band's raw, influential sound, highlighted by their 1977 debut album L.A.M.F., which captured the gritty energy of punk clubs like and . Lure's entry into the punk world came amid the burgeoning scene in mid-1970s , where he connected with —formerly of the —after performing in earlier groups like the Demons and the Blessed. The , completed by drummer (also ex-Dolls), bassist Billy Rath, and initial bassist (who left for his own projects), became notorious for their chaotic live shows and drug-fueled lifestyle, earning a "mythical" reputation despite limited commercial success. Lure's straightforward guitar work and shared vocals provided a steady counterpoint to Thunders' erratic lead, helping define the band's blend of rock 'n' roll swagger and attitude during their primary run from 1975 to 1978. The group toured Europe and released on Track Records, an album later hailed as a punk classic for tracks like "" and "One Track Mind," though production issues initially marred its reception. Following the Heartbreakers' dissolution amid personal struggles—Thunders died in 1991, Nolan in 1992, and Rath in 2014—Lure formed the Waldos in 1978, continuing to perform material and original songs rooted in the same street-level rock style. As the last surviving original , he maintained the band's legacy through reunions, shows, recordings with the Waldos, including albums like Rent Party (1994), and his 2020 To Hell and Back. In a parallel career, Lure worked for decades on in finance, balancing his musical pursuits with professional stability until his diagnosis with in 2020. He died at Flushing Hospital Medical Center in , leaving behind an enduring influence on as a foundational figure in New York's explosive underground movement.

Early life and education

Birth and family

Walter Lure was born Walter Charles Luhr Jr. on April 22, 1949, at St. Mary Immaculate Hospital in , . He was the son of Walter Luhr, a retail banker who served as a branch manager, and Eillien Luhr (née Kealy). The family resided in a Catholic household in a middle-class neighborhood, providing a stable suburban foundation during his early years. Lure spent his childhood in Queens Village, a suburban area in known for its family-oriented communities and proximity to urban amenities. As a teenager, the family relocated to Floral Park in Nassau County, , where he continued to grow up in a similar post-war suburban setting characterized by single-family homes and local schools. This environment fostered a conventional home life, with his father's banking career offering financial security and early exposure to professional networks that would later shape career opportunities. Lure had two brothers: an older brother named William Luhr, who survived him, and a younger sibling named Ritchie, who shared interests in music. dynamics emphasized structure and support, with neighborhood influences from the close-knit suburban communities of Queens Village and Floral Park contributing to his early social interactions among peers in local schools and recreational activities.

Education and early career

Walter Lure was raised in Floral Park, , after his family moved there during his teenage years, where he attended local high school and navigated the typical experiences of suburban adolescence in the late . While specific academic or extracurricular pursuits from this period remain undocumented beyond general recollections of friendships and social activities, his time in Floral Park laid the groundwork for his transition to higher education in . Lure enrolled at in , where he majored in English and minored in chemistry during his undergraduate years, immersing himself in coursework involving laboratory work and advanced scientific principles alongside literary studies. He graduated in the early , marking a significant that aligned with his interest in regulatory and analytical fields. This education provided him with a strong foundation in scientific analysis, which he would apply in his initial professional endeavors. Following graduation, Lure secured an entry-level position at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in New York, where he conducted regulatory work testing consumer products for safety and compliance, directly leveraging his chemistry background. This role introduced him to the professional environment of New York City, involving meticulous evaluations of product standards and regulatory protocols in a government agency setting. His family's longstanding connections in banking may have subtly shaped his broader career trajectory toward structured professional paths, though his early focus remained on scientific regulation.

Music career

Formative years in music

Walter Lure's interest in music emerged during his teenage years in the early 1960s, when he began taking guitar lessons at around age 12 with a neighborhood friend, drawing inspiration from pre-Beatles era rock 'n' roll acts showcased on television programs like American Bandstand. Though he briefly paused lessons due to their rigidity, the arrival of the Beatles reignited his passion, leading him to self-teach and experiment with the instrument amid the British Invasion's surge. While attending , where he earned a degree in chemistry, Lure joined several amateur cover bands, including the , the Jackets, and , performing local gigs that honed his skills on rock standards during the late . These experiences provided a creative outlet alongside his studies, which later secured him a stable position as a technician at the . Throughout the late and early 1970s, Lure immersed himself in New York's burgeoning rock scene by attending landmark concerts, such as Woodstock in 1969, the Atlantic City Pop Festival, and shows featuring and at East, where he began forging loose connections with emerging figures in the city's underground circuit, including distant sightings of the at the Mercer Arts Center. By the mid-1970s, as glam and proto-punk aesthetics gained traction, Lure left his FDA role to focus on music, forming the glam outfit The Demons and securing initial performances at East Village spots like the 82 Club.

The Heartbreakers

Following the breakup of the , and formed in early 1975, initially recruiting on bass before inviting Walter Lure to join as the second guitarist after Lure's band The Demons opened for them at a gig. Lure, who had met Thunders years earlier at Dolls shows, auditioned in , playing songs like "" and securing the spot, with the band's debut performance occurring on July 5, 1975, at in . This lineup solidified the group's raw punk sound, blending Thunders' chaotic lead guitar with Lure's rhythmic drive. As rhythm guitarist and co-vocalist, Lure provided essential stage energy and harmonic support, often positioned stage-right to complement Thunders' freeform style while delivering barre-chord foundations that anchored the band's high-octane performances in the emerging New York punk scene. He contributed songwriting credits to tracks like "All by Myself" (co-written with Nolan), "Too Much Junkie Business," and "One Track Mind," and took lead vocals on several, including "It's Not Enough," adding his snarling delivery to the group's repertoire of gritty anthems. The Heartbreakers' debut album, L.A.M.F. (Like a Mother Fucker), released in 1977 on Track Records, captured this dynamic, though it faced criticism for its muffled production due to issues at the pressing plant; a live album, Live at Max's Kansas City, recorded in December 1977 and released the following year on RCA, preserved their explosive club energy from reunion shows at the iconic venue. The band toured extensively in the and , building a through raw, unpredictable sets that highlighted their punk roots. In 1976, they joined the infamous Anarchy Tour in the alongside the , , and The Damned, performing at venues like Polytechnic despite cancellations that limited the run to just a few dates, inadvertently fueling the transatlantic punk explosion by introducing American influences to British audiences. Back in the , they headlined clubs like and opened for acts including , while later European legs in the late 1970s and early 1980s included shows at London's and ' Bataclan, often marred by logistical chaos but celebrated for their visceral intensity. Internal band dynamics were strained by escalating drug use, with Lure recalling being introduced to shortly after joining and the group becoming deeply entangled in , which he later termed "junkie business" in a song of the same name—a reference to the heroin-fueled unreliability that disrupted rehearsals, recordings, and tours. Tensions peaked around L.A.M.F.'s mixing disputes, leading Nolan to quit days after its October 1977 release, though Thunders and Lure continued sporadically; Hell had already departed in 1976 due to creative clashes, replaced by Billy Rath on bass. These issues fragmented the original lineup by 1978, but the band effectively dissolved in 1984 following a reunion tour and the release of their final album, Live at the , recorded during European dates that year. The Heartbreakers played a series of farewell shows at Max's Kansas City in 1978. Reunions occurred intermittently in the late 1980s, including a memorial benefit at the Marquee in New York in June 1991 following Thunders' death, where Lure joined Nolan, Rath, and others for sets revisiting L.A.M.F. material. These sporadic gigs ended definitively with Thunders' death from drug-related causes on April 23, 1991, in New Orleans, after which Lure honored the band's legacy through occasional memorial performances.

The Waldos and solo work

Following the dissolution of the Heartbreakers in the late 1970s, Walter Lure formed The Waldos in 1978 as a emerging from occasional band reunions that doubled as "rent parties" to cover financial shortfalls. The group evolved into Lure's primary musical outlet by the mid-1980s, with multiple lineup changes reflecting the punk scene's instability, including early involvement from former drummer before his death in 1992. Key members in the included Joey Pinter, who joined around 1991 and contributed to the band's raw, dual-guitar energy, alongside bassist Tony Coiro until his passing in 1995. The Waldos' debut album, Rent Party, was released in 1994 on Sympathy for the Record Industry, produced by and featuring six Lure originals such as "7 Day Weekend" and "Too Much Junkie Business" alongside covers of tracks by , , and Claudine Clark. The record captured the band's blend of gritty punk originals and rockabilly-inflected covers, emphasizing Lure's songwriting continuity in themes of urban struggle and excess. Live efforts included Walter Lure Live in , a 2008 Nicotine Records release documenting a 2007 performance at during Lure's first European tour in over two decades, showcasing the Waldos' high-energy setlist of punk staples. In 2018, Lure issued Wacka Lacka Loom Bop A Loom Bam Boo via , a glam-punk collection billed under his name but featuring Waldos backing that included new compositions like "Damn Your Soul" and as well as refreshed takes on Heartbreakers-era songs such as The album highlighted Lure's persistent glam-infused punk style, with tracks evoking the raw edge of his earlier work while incorporating more polished production. The Waldos maintained sporadic activity through reunions and limited tours, including West Coast runs in the that paired Lure with Pinter and others to revive the band's live presence. Lure also pursued book projects, culminating in the 2020 To Hell and Back: My Life in Johnny Thunders' , in the Trenches, and Beyond, co-written with Dave Thompson and published by Backbeat Books, which detailed his punk experiences and parallel life challenges. In interviews, Lure reflected on "unfinished junkie business," referencing unresolved personal and band-related struggles with that informed his later output. Lure's songwriting with the Waldos demonstrated evolution from the Heartbreakers' immediate, chaotic punk anthems to more disciplined compositions in later releases, incorporating mature reflections on loss and survival while preserving the genre's abrasive core. The Waldos' sound maintained the foundational influence from Lure's Heartbreakers tenure, adapting it to independent releases and occasional performances.

Non-musical career

Entry into finance

In the early 1980s, following the dissolution of The Heartbreakers amid pervasive drug addiction and internal conflicts, Walter Lure sought financial stability by pivoting to a career in stockbroking on Wall Street. Motivated by the need for steady income after years of unstable band life and personal struggles with heroin, Lure recognized that continuing solely in music was unsustainable, stating, "It wasn’t like I was sick of music. I just needed a job." This transition was facilitated by his father's connections as a retired retail banker at Citibank, who arranged an entry-level position for Lure in a computing firm handling financial data for major New York banks like Chase and Citibank. Lure's initial role involved tracing transaction records and managing stock certificates during corporate , a far cry from his punk rock existence. Lacking formal training in —he admitted knowing "nothing about and bonds"—he learned the basics on the job while navigating the high-stakes environment of the Wall Street boom, characterized by and explosive growth in retail trading. Adapting proved challenging; the shift from late-night gigs and a countercultural to donning suits and adhering to corporate norms was jarring, especially as he continued using drugs initially, often procuring them during lunch breaks or the night before work. His minor in chemistry from provided a subtle analytical foundation that aided his quick grasp of complex data processes. By the mid-1980s, Lure had moved into brokerage roles at smaller New York firms, focusing on retail trading of stocks and bonds amid the era's speculative fervor. These entry-level positions, secured through his father's network, offered a pathway out of the chaos of his musical past, emphasizing execution of trades over high-level strategy during a time when Wall Street's retail sector thrived on individual investor activity.

Career progression on Wall Street

In 1986, Lure transitioned to a brokerage firm, where he began learning the intricacies of financial operations, including stock trading and settlements. By the early , he had advanced to managing a department of 25 employees before taking on a larger role overseeing a trade settlement operation with 125 staff members, handling high-volume transactions amid the era's market fluctuations, such as the and the dot-com boom. This progression marked his establishment as a senior at major firms, where he navigated the volatility of the bull market while maintaining a professional demeanor on the trading floor. Lure's career endured through significant upheavals, including the . He was employed at an firm that had been acquired by in 2003, and he witnessed the firm's collapse in September 2008, which signaled the onset of the and led to widespread mergers and layoffs in the industry. Despite the turmoil—which prompted restructurings at his workplace—Lure remained in the sector, adapting to post-crisis regulations and consolidating his expertise in . His longevity in finance, spanning over three decades, highlighted his resilience in a high-stakes environment often marked by economic downturns. Throughout his Wall Street tenure, Lure balanced his professional ascent with his punk rock identity, a duality frequently noted in media profiles. Colleagues at his firms were aware of his Heartbreakers background and often attended his Waldos performances or Heartbreakers reunions, creating an unusual office dynamic where his rock persona coexisted with suit-and-tie routines. This contrast—from CBGB stages to trading desks—was explored in interviews and obituaries, underscoring how finance provided stability while he sporadically gigged. Lure retired in early 2015 from his final role at an asset management firm, allowing him to refocus on music full-time, including tours and album releases with the Waldos, though he continued some investment activities.

Personal life and legacy

Family and personal challenges

Lure was survived by his partner, Andy Le; a brother, Fred Luhr; and a sister, Carol Luhr. Lure grappled with heroin addiction throughout much of the 1970s and 1980s, a period deeply intertwined with the punk rock scene and his time in the Heartbreakers, where drug use permeated the band's lifestyle and contributed to its instability. In a 2017 interview, he recalled, "In the early days of The Heartbreakers, I didn't need heroin every day, but later on I couldn't function without it," emphasizing how the habit escalated over time without severely disrupting performances. This addiction mirrored the broader struggles within the punk community, where substance abuse often fueled creativity but exacted a heavy personal cost. Lure achieved sobriety in 1988, marking a pivotal turn in his life as he transitioned away from the excesses of toward a more stable existence. His subsequent on offered financial security that supported his recovery and allowed him to maintain a low-key involvement in through occasional gigs and his band the Waldos. This shift underscored his resilience, as he later reflected on overcoming the "outlaw attraction" of that had defined his earlier years. The deaths of his Heartbreakers bandmates added profound personal challenges, leaving Lure as the last surviving original member. succumbed to a in 1991, died in 1992 from complications of , and Billy Rath passed away in 2014 after a long illness—events that highlighted the lethal consequences of the era's and forced Lure to confront ongoing grief amid his own path to stability. Reflecting on Thunders, Lure described him as "like a big kid that never grew up," a poignant acknowledgment of the tragic vulnerabilities that bound them. To cope with these trials and sustain his , Lure turned to physical activities as outlets for maintaining balance in his life. In a 2009 interview, he noted, "These days I'm quite normal - I do a lot of sports to stay in shape like , , etc.," activities that provided structure and relief from the emotional weight of his past.

Death and influence

In July 2020, Walter Lure was diagnosed with liver and , which progressed rapidly and led to his death from related complications on August 21, 2020, at age 71 in . Lure remained musically active into his final years, promoting his 2018 album with The Waldos through live performances and interviews, while the March 2020 release of his To Hell and Back—detailing his experiences in —represented a key project whose promotional efforts were abruptly halted by his illness. As the last surviving original member of , Lure earned the moniker "last man rockin'" for his enduring commitment to the raw energy of New York punk, influencing revivalists and later punk acts who drew from ' gritty, street-level sound. His prompted widespread tributes from peers, including of the , who called him a "true legend," of the , who lauded his "solid rhythm guitar," and of Blondie, who remembered him as an "inspiration." Obituaries in major outlets emphasized the striking contrast between his punk roots and his parallel career in , portraying him as a of punk's rebellious spirit persisting beyond its origins.

Discography

With The Heartbreakers

The Heartbreakers' sole studio album, L.A.M.F., was released in October 1977 on Track Records, featuring Walter Lure on and backing vocals throughout, with lead vocal performances on tracks including "Baby Talk," "All By Myself," and "Get Off the Phone." Lure also co-wrote "Get Off the Phone" and "Let Go" with , contributing to the album's raw punk sound amid production controversies over mixing. Live recordings from the band's late-1970s performances were captured on (1979, ), where Lure provided guitar and vocals on both volumes, highlighting energetic renditions of staples like "," "One Track Mind," and "" from a September 1978 show at the iconic New York venue. A follow-up compilation, It'll Hurt (1980, ), assembled additional live tracks from 1979 sessions with Lure on guitar and vocals, emphasizing the group's chaotic stage energy before their initial disbandment. Key singles from the era included "" (1977, Track Records), backed by "Born to Lose," on which Lure played guitar; the track, primarily co-written by and , became a punk anthem despite songwriting disputes. "One Track Mind" (1977, Track Records), backed by "Can't Keep My Eyes on You," featured Lure's co-writing with and his lead vocals, showcasing his songwriting role in the band's output. Posthumous and reunion-era releases in the 1990s included Live at the Lyceum (1990, Receiver Records), a reissue of a live album from 1984 performances at the Lyceum Ballroom in London with Lure on guitar and vocals, capitalizing on enduring punk interest after Johnny Thunders' death in 1991. Later archival efforts, such as Cleopatra Records' series of unreleased 1970s-1980s live tapes featuring Lure, continued into the 2010s, preserving his contributions to the Heartbreakers' catalog.

With The Waldos

Following the dissolution of the Heartbreakers in the late 1970s, Walter Lure formed The Waldos in 1980 as a vehicle to continue the raw, high-energy style he had helped pioneer, maintaining a focus on gritty originals and covers rooted in rock 'n' roll traditions. Under Lure's leadership as and vocalist, the band became a platform for his songwriting, blending punk aggression with influences from and R&B and . The Waldos' debut studio album, , was released in 1994 by Records, featuring original songs penned by Lure alongside the cover "Party Lights" by Claudine Clark. The album captured the band's live-wire energy, with tracks like Lure's "Rent Party Weekend" emphasizing themes of urban nightlife and rebellion, solidifying The Waldos' continuity of ' punk ethos into the 1990s. Subsequent releases included the 2005 compilation Down to Kill on Jungle Records, which drew from live recordings and archival material to highlight The Waldos' raw performances and Lure's enduring punk edge. The band issued various singles and EPs from the through the , including the 1991 7-inch "Crazy Little Baby" b/w "" on Baylor Records, an early example of Lure's infectious, hook-driven punk tunes. Later efforts like "Crazy Kids," featured on collections from the 2018 album Wacka Lacka Loom Bop A Loom Bam Boo (), continued this tradition with high-octane originals that paid homage to Lure's rock roots. In a posthumous nod to Lure's legacy, Rent Party was reissued for Record Store Day in 2021 by Jungle Records as a limited-edition blue vinyl LP with two bonus tracks, alongside a CD version containing four bonus tracks; the release came after Lure's death in August 2020 and underscored the lasting appeal of The Waldos' punk sound.

Solo releases

Walter Lure's solo output primarily consisted of live recordings and select studio projects that showcased his enduring punk ethos outside his band affiliations. His debut solo release, the live album Live in Berlin, was recorded during a 2007 performance and issued in 2008 by Nicotine Records in collaboration with Tornado Ride Records. The album features Lure delivering high-energy renditions of classics from his Heartbreakers and Waldos eras, backed by a pickup band including vocalist Dee Jaywalker, emphasizing his raw guitar work and stage presence in a punk context. Tracks such as "One Track Mind" and "Chinese Rocks" highlight the set's fidelity to New York punk roots, capturing Lure's ability to command audiences solo. In 2018, Lure released Wacka Lacka Loom Bop A Loom Bam Boo via , marking a significant personal artistic endeavor following his Waldos activities. Although credited to Walter Lure & The Waldos, the album is frequently attributed to Lure's individual vision, blending new originals with reinterpreted material. Standout tracks include "London Boys," a nod to his influences, and "Where Were You (On Our Wedding Day)?," a cover infused with his signature grit, alongside fresh compositions like "Damn Your Soul." The record's eclectic mix of rockabilly-tinged punk and elements reflects Lure's post-Waldos evolution toward more introspective expressions. Lure also contributed to the 2016 project Spilt Milk by The Last Ditches, a supergroup featuring himself alongside Binky Phillips and Randy Pratt, released on Hyperspace Records. While collaborative, Lure's songwriting and on tracks like new originals and a cover positioned it as an extension of his independent creative pursuits. No further solo singles or full-length releases materialized after 2018, though Lure discussed potential new material in pre-2020 conversations, including updates to his catalog that remained unreleased at the time of his death.

References

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