In Sympathy for the Devil a lyric says: And I lay traps for troubadours who get killed before they reach Bombay
What are they referring to?
Troubadour is synonymous with bard or poet, so in what historical event would the devil be trying to trap and kill poets before Bombay?
A troubadour can be in the broadest sense any wandering minstrel or singer. When Beggar’s Banquet came out I was in high school, and the Viet Nam war was raging. I tended to think of that lyric in terms of idealistic young men who get killed in southeast Asia, and still do. Now why the people fighting in southeast Asis were on there way to Bombay is another question altogether, and I don’t have the answer for that.
Nah, I take the phrase more literally. Back in those days, lots of young people set off for India in search of enlightenment. Maharishi, Sai Baba, etc. and were never heard from again.
The definitive version of the song can be found on “Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out” a live set compiled from their 1969 tour. The studio version is quite lame in comparison.
The Stones were certainly aware of the Hippy Trail and probably also knew how dangerous it was. Naive hippies made easy targets for robbers and murderers.
A serial killer named Charles Sobhraj, who preyed on tourists that traveled the Hippy Trial, was caught in the mid 70’s. He was a notorious example, but I’m sure you could find many cases of hippies being killed on the trail before and after Sobhraj.
I had always figured it was a reference to the British army’s march through India. Didn’t a lot of 'em die from extreme heat and malaria before they made it to the coast?