Caltrop was a lot of things, but it was rarely gentle. A heavy, heavy band from Chapel Hill that edged blues-rock into metal territory with enviable technicality, the group bid farewell at a February show at The Kraken. Guitarist Sam Taylor is in Morehead City now raising a family, while bassist Murat Dirlik moved to Costa Rica.

Before the move, though, Dirlik laid down a heartbreaker of a solo record, Songs From the Last Time I Died. Today, he released it digitally under the name โ€œRotty.โ€ Thereโ€™s no live band and no physical releaseโ€”not yet, anywayโ€”but the record doesnโ€™t seem to need them. Sonically, itโ€™s tender, wounded and quiet; emotionally, itโ€™s very heavy.

โ€œItโ€™s so gentle and sad,โ€ says Mike Westbrook, who produced the album. โ€œA lot of Caltrop songs, the lyrics had some melancholy to them, but this is a pretty melancholy record.

Westbrook and Dirlik go back 25 years, to high school, and have been making music together off and on since, including their time together in hip-hop outfit Kerbloki. The songs are borne of demos Dirlik cut after a hard breakup in late 2014. The texturesโ€”the bowed bass, cello and pedal steelโ€”were often Westbrookโ€™s idea.

Some songs feature eight or nine backing harmonies, forming the enormous washes such as the backing vocals to the euphoric โ€œBorrowing Light (For Naynay),โ€ while โ€œEmpty Roomโ€ feels like a dejected doo-wop song. โ€œWhyโ€™s it always gotta rain/on the broken-hearted?โ€ Dirlik sings in the swinging โ€œChangeโ€ over simply strummed acoustic guitar and Nathan Golubโ€™s pedal steel.

Westbrook was floored by the emotional heft of these songs, but he knew, stylistically, that Dirlik had this kind of music in him. One of the first bands these two bonded over, after all, was the Beatles, in the early โ€™90s.

Still, he says, โ€œI donโ€™t think anyoneโ€™s going to expect this coming from Murat.โ€

Bio: Corbie Hill lives on three wooded acres in Pittsboro, where he is a writer, musician, dad of two and community college English instructor. He is a regular contributor to INDY Week's music section.Twitter: http://twitter.com/afraidofthebear