Kenny Roby
Saturday, April 6
7 p.m. with J. Kutchma
10 p.m. with The Temperance League
$8-$10
Kings Barcade

In December, Kenny Roby gave one of his first performances in support of his new record, Memories & Birds, which he finally released in April. The first of three acts on a Friday night bill at downtown Raleigh bar Kings, Roby and his three-piece played to an appreciative audience of 25 people or so. By the time headliner Mark Eitzel went on, the crowd had thickened slightly.
Roby took the low turnout in stride: โIt wasnโt as bad for me as it was for him,โ he offered, referring to Eitzel.
Two attendeesa newly married couple from Charlottehad driven up to hear Roby after stumbling upon his performance a few weeks earlier in support of style-busting indie rocker Citizen Cope. After Roby finished โColorado,โ the elegiac centerpiece of Memories & Birds, the husband bellowed, โYou epic fuckinโ bastard!โ
Roby responded, unfazed, โWell, thatโs a new one.โ
Roby comes by his unflappability honestly. Now 41, heโs been performing on stages since the late โ80s, when he led a high school punk band called The Lubricators. As a frontman, Roby was โpretty hard to ignore,โ remembers Jac Cain, who played bass with The Lubricators after they relocated from Robyโs hometown of Clemson, S.C., to Raleigh in 1991. โEnergetic, vibrant and heโs physically imposing, so he was a pretty strong presence onstage,โ Cain says. The Lubricators toured with heavy-hitters the Circle Jerks and Janeโs Addiction, but Roby soon outgrew the bandโs full-blast approach. He left the group about a year later. โThatโs when Kenny was really starting to come into his own as a songwriter,โ Cain says, โwhen he evolved into the Americana thing.โ
By the mid-โ90s, Robyโs โAmericana thingโ became 6 String Drag, which he started with his old friend Rob Keller and which lit up the Triangle music scene at the height of the great alt-country hope. The band signed to E-Squared, the large imprint run by alt-country statesman Steve Earle. 6 String Drag made one more well-received record and broke up.
Roby subsequently released three soulful, increasingly soul-baring records, which have earned him comparisons to Randy Newman and Elvis Costello thanks to certain shared virtuesgenre mastery, a way with a phrase, an undeniable vocal similarity. Yet Roby is releasing his latest record himself, after drumming up a few thousand bucks via Kickstarter and enlisting a core group of loyalists to get the word out.
The cold realities of todayโs music market may no longer come as a surprise, but for a man whoโs been making music so longand, with Memories & Birds, just made the record of his lifethose realities bite a bit harder. Nevertheless, after a hiatus of about seven years, Roby remains undaunted.
โI just understand that I chose to do it this time,โ he says over coffee, โto get out there and try to help promote the record and try to have somewhat of a career again. So on the days that Iโm suffering through it, Iโm like, โOK, I chose to do this.’โ
Roby has no illusions about the current state of the music biz, where the mere idea of having a dedicated booking agent has become what he terms โthe holy grail.โ Roby relies on a couple of close pals and associates to help him. Gary Waldman is โas much a friend as a manager,โ and Brad Hunt handles radio and oversees distribution of the music. But the bulk of promoting Kenny Roby falls to Kenny Roby.
Heโs a realist, not one for dwelling on what-ifs, yet he canโt help speculating as to how his old bandโs country-soul hybrid might have fared in the roots-music-loving climate of the current mainstream.
โIf weโd have come out five years ago, who knows what could have happened? From what I understand, [Avett Brothers bassist] Bob Crawford was a big 6 String Drag fan,โ he says. โIf 6 String Drag went out today as we were back then, opening up for The Avett Brothers, we would have a career. We had momentum. And right about then โฆ everybody pulled in different directions.โ
As Keller remembers the end of 6 String Drag, the band had simply outgrown the lifestyle: โWith everybody getting wives and girlfriends and gettinโ pregnant and everything, it was just tough to stay together and stay on the road, which a band like that has to do to really make a career out of it.โ
The career that Roby has had instead has tested him. Roby as a solo act first bowed in 2000 with Mercuryโs Blues. Abetted by three of four of his former bandmates, he enriched 6 String Dragโs mix of styles with a newfound world-weariness of tempo and spirit. The reviews were positive, and he toured Europe and made a small run through the States. But the record failed to build a substantial audience.
In late 2001, Robyโs father died, and he went into a tailspin. Not the usual rock โnโ roll tailspin, but the tailspin of a guy who refuses to wallow. For a time, he put music aside and concerned himself with the business of raising his two sons while his wife dealt with breadwinning. He wondered whether or not he wanted to be a musician. He studied theology. He gave up cigarettes and swore off booze. He went back to church. Heโd done all these things to varying degrees in the past; now, he did them with vigor.
When the urge to write songs returned, it came back full-force and hasnโt left him since. โIโd probably be writing even if I was laying in the hospital and couldnโt talk and couldnโt use my hands or anything; it would still be in the back of my head just churning,โ he says. โThe ovenโs always on; the waterโs always heating, if not boiling.โ
The record that followed, 2002โs Rather Not Know, marked a shift from the earthly concerns of Mercuryโs Blues toward the ethereal terrain of death, dying and reunion.
And then, another long silence. He re-emerged four years later with The Mercy Filter, a slanted rock โnโ roll record. In typical Roby fashion, serious themes are sometimes obscured by ebullient music, such as on a rollicking, Buddy Holly-informed song called โThe Liver.โ If you listen long enough, youโll hear that itโs his โclean record.โ
โBecause of my family responsibility, any problems I had werenโt really well publicized,โ he reckons. โItโs not like a Steve Earle thing. You donโt have to do the big clean record if nobody knew that you were dirty.โ
Soon thereafter, Roby, then 34, finally felt compelled to find a job outside of music.
โIโd asked for so much from so many people to kind of sustain my artistic career,โ he says. โNot only do I need a paycheck, but I need some daily discipline, because Iโm going a bit nuts left to my own devices. I needed a daily work schedule to keep some sanity.โ
When Woody Allenโs jailbird in Take the Money and Run breaks a rule, heโs punished by having to spend the night with an insurance salesman. Itโs a milieu that would seem particularly unsuitable for a guy who lives and breathes music. But in 2003, Roby took a gig sorting mail at an insurance company, a job he says โany monkey could do.โ Upon hearing his music, his co-workers were incredulous.
โOne guy was like, โWhat the fuck are you doing here?’โ Roby remembers. โAnd I was like, โI got a family.’โ
Seven years is a ridiculously long pause between albums, so it computes that Memories & Birds is a world away in spirit from its predecessor. The former addressed faith, doubt and getting oneโs shit together; in the dusty, elliptical narratives of Memories & Birds, Roby all but completely subsumes himself.
โThereโs no โIโ on this record at all,โ he says. โIโm involved, and thereโs part of me in the songs, but itโs totally about these characters.โ
That character focus derives from a pretty unexpected source. Roby shared the mailroom with a philosophy and physics double major who had just graduated from college. They listened to books on tape, trading recommendations and sharing insights on Cormac McCarthy, Harry Crews, Carl Hiaasen, murder mysteries and Western tales. Roby compares it to the education people get in prison.
Roby has long dreamed of making a concept album, and in a sense, heโs just made one. The songs on Memories & Birds suggest eight linked short stories, or a series of four diptychs. โThematically, I ended up pairing a lot of songs together on the record, because they just worked. Like, this could be the kid when he was young, this is him when he grows up. It wasnโt like I sat down and wrote the record that way, but it kinda wanted to go that way,โ he says.
Various configurations of 12 musicians playing strings, woodwinds, glockenspiel and kalimba, along with traditional rock instruments, add flesh to Robyโs imaginings. According to Jason Merritt, who co-produced the record and played keyboards and several other instruments, they were looking to pair accurate execution with a human touch.
โThere should be some rub,โ Merritt says, โand there should be some tension. Donโt fix the mistakes sometimes. The way you want to put the chords together really invoked a certain mood. Maybe that darkness sounds at times imperfect.โ
The set opener and title track so strongly evokes Sunday morning in New Orleans that it almost conjures its own weather system. The songโs bewitching theme touches down in a couplet grounded with enough regret that it hints at a novel-length backstory: โWrote a letter to my mother that Iโll never send/ Wrote another to myself and tore it up again.โ
Roby wrote the song in an hour, sitting at a coffee shop, yet it has the agelessness of a standard, a melody made to be hummed. Indeed, itโs graced with a brief but essential whistled passage that adds just the right hint of Otis on the dock of the bay. โIโm not a good whistler,โ he tells me. โWhistlingโs real lonely. If itโs too pretty, itโs not lonely.โ
Loneliness and isolation are the recordโs recurring themes. The ostensible answer to the wistful opener, for instance, is the chamber-pop R&B of โThe Monster,โ a sprightly snapshot of small-town weirdness and xenophobia. As on the recordโs other grooverthe Motown-infused โTired of Being in Loveโthe darkness is easy to miss amid the swagger of horns and soul-queen backing vocals. As he puts it, itโs a bubblegum song, but itโs about a womanโs isolation from her husband, a shell-shocked Korean War vet. Itโs Robyโs way of summoning the faรงade of American life in that era: โHow everythingโs OK and bubblegum, and weโre just gonna wipe our tears and wash the dishes.โ
Roby first dove deeply into music as a kid in Clemson. His fascination was nurtured through friendships with knowledgeable buddies eager to share the stuff that stirred their souls. He rattles off Randy Newman, George Jones, Bad Brains, Mott the Hoople and Captain Beefheart by way of example.
โGuys were pulling from everywhere before there was an Internet,โ he says. โThrough being friends with different people in a small town, you get everything. If youโre artisticgay kids, drama club kids, poets, artistic peopleas long as you werenโt a jock or going to the Baptist church, you were pretty much part of the scene. It wouldnโt have been this way as much in the big city.โ
Robyโs openness to musical cross-pollination manifests itself on Memories & Birds in sometimes oblique ways. The influence of Stephin Merrittโs eclectic and playful Magnetic Fields, for instance, is more theoretical than applied.
Says Roby: โIt wasnโt, โOh, Iโm gonna sound like the Magnetic Fields or Iโm gonna write songs like him. I wanted to write with that freedom that he has, with his range. The parts some people would make fun of, I like thatjust one slight twist away from being pop or going country or blues.โ
Magnetic Fields also stoked Robyโs willingness to simply go with what sounded good to him, regardless of its provenance. โWhen I started writing more, I kind of left things in that early morning voice, like that โearly morning, Iโm not gonna sing really loud โcause the kids are still asleep upstairsโ voice. Or when Iโm sitting there with the voice recorder at work and I canโt sing loud, and Iโm like whispering, singing real soft like that, in a cubiclewell, I kind of left things that way.โ
His willingness to leave it that way is something Jason Merritt cites as one of the recordโs great strengths. The seven-minute โColoradoโ is his favorite moment on the album, but it was initially a nest of vipers.
โI certainly had my misgivings about it, but just living up to Kennyโs example and just going with it and not judging it as we went, that was really important,โ Merritt explains. โIโm used to three-and-a-half-minute pop songs. You start thinking about the audience out there and will they be able to hang with this. And it was great to just say: The hell with that. Iโd say thatโs what Iโm most proud about this record: We just did it. We just sort of let it happen, with no particular agendas of how it might be received.โ
Robyโs openness to new means extends beyond his music, too. As of February, heโs out of the insurance business, having taken night school classes and earned his massage therapy license with specialization in sports and pain management. He chose massage โbecause it was one of the only things I thought I was good at, that I was fascinated with, that wasnโt music.โ
He gets as animated discussing antagonists and prime muscle groups as he does talking about his beloved Doug Sahm, or his unlikely embrace of late-period releases by bands such as Hรผsker Dรผ, The Replacements and the Minutemen. Well, almost as much.
โI come from a family of teachers,โ he says, โso I enjoy educating [clients] and saying, โThis is the issue.โ I like that aspect of itthe teaching.โ
Trying different things keeps the music fresh, too. โI sing a little bit in lower keys now, without quite going the Leonard Cohen route,โ Roby says. โSo Iโve got more range. I can sing higher stuff better now because Iโve learned to sing better.โ
Roby is like a veteran baseball pitcher who doesnโt have the same fastball he once had, but he still knows how to get guys out. He warms to the analogy.
โBut when he hits that fastball, itโs like, โWhoa. Heโs been throwinโ 80. Where did 93 come from?โ Iโve become a pitcher instead of a thrower,โ he declares. โThereโs your article right there: a pitcher not a thrower.โ
Once the baseball riff passes, Roby completes the thought, finishes the diptych.
โThereโs no buzz like a creative buzz,โ he says. โYou grab it and doors open.โ
This article appeared in print with the headline โOver & over.โ



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