The May 2020 issue of the magazine "Uncut" includes an article covering David Roback's career.
Many thanks to Hermesacat for sharing the article on the FB discussion group.
I'm reposting it below.
You can buy a digital copy of the Uncut issue at
https://www.uncut.co.uk/digital-editions/...............................................................................
Uncut mag, May, 2020
DAVID ROBACK | 1958-2020
California Dreaming
Uncut pays tribute to DAVID ROBACK as Michael Bonner investigates the life and music of this singular, uncompromising guitarist and the three bands he co-founded: The Rain Parade, Opal and Mazzy Star.
"He always wanted the art to speak for itself, so everything was shrouded in some kind ofmystery," says one collaborator.
"He was so true to that."
Speaking to Uncut in July 2013, David Roback considered the success of his 1993 release "Fade Into You" — a dusty, lilting ballad that had turned Mazzy Star, the band he co-founded, into reluctant international stars. The song even appeared, incongruously, in the violent science-fiction war movie Starship Troopers.
"It was quite a contradiction in a way," he admitted. "But it's interesting — you know, people play your music in a bar, it's not uncommon to hear your music in any context, or anybody else's music for that matter. You could be walking down the street or you could be at a funeral and somebody's driving by playing The Beach Boys. No, we didn't feel under a lot of pressure to follow it up. Pressure doesn't get to us. It's a very internal process that we're involved in. I wouldn't say we're disengaged - we're engaged in the stories of each individual song, it is its own world unto itself. But we're not so concerned about the outside world."
By this point, Roback had spent over 30 years pursuing his unique creative vision — a noir-ish, melancholic strand of American Gothic located somewhere between third-album Velvet Underground and The Doors Of "The End". It's a story that began in California in the late '70s and took in The Rain Parade's neo-psychedelia, Opal's dreamy psych-folk and Mazzy Star's slow-spun, reverb-heavy grooves. In a series of close-quartered, hermetic collaborations - including Susanna Hoffs, Kendra Smith and Hope Sandoval — the guitarist and songwriter's creativity pulsed quietly across six studio albums and a handful of other recordings before his death on February 24, aged 61. It's a slim catalogue but unique and hugely influential, helping shape the work of artists as diverse as Wilco and Lana Del Rey.
"David Roback was in three great bands — an amazing feat for one guitar player," J Mascis tells Uncut. "What beautiful music he made."
"David Roback seemed to hold dear the things I think are most valuable in art: mystery and patience," says Hiss Golden Messenger's MC Taylor. "The music that he created affected me on a cellular level despite my not knowing a thing about him. David's work is very important to me."
It was the endeavour of someone going completely their own way. No outside influence was allowed to corrupt it. The limelight was not something to be shunned so much as simply ignored. An intensely private person anyway, Roback often presented an impenetrable front when discussing his work. Attempts to decode the music were a grave mistake; that would have been to miss the point completely. But that enigmatic fog somehow felt critical to what Roback did. "David was very precise and thoughtful about everything that he did and also very private," says The Bangles' Susanna Hoffs, a friend since childhood. "He always wanted the art to speak for itself, so everythingwas shrouded in some kind Of mystery. He was so true to that."
David Edward Roback was born in Los Angeles on April 4, 1958, to George and Rosemary Roback. His father
was a surgeon, his mother a nurse. An artistic bent manifested itself early on; Hoffs recalls performing with Roback in a production of Hello, Dolly! at an arts camp. The Beatles were on the radio — but, perhaps more thrillingly, also Love and The Doors, whose darkly kaleidoscopic music spilled out ofthe midnight alleys and freeways of California itself. "I thought theywere speaking from a world I reallywanted to be part of," Roback told me.
"David and I were both attracted to things that were darkly beautiful," explains Hoffs. "LA had a glittery, sunny exterior, but there was something mysterious beneath it. And for us, it was about looking for the single rose growing through a crack in the pavement — or like the lyric in 'I'll Be Your Mirror', 'Let me be your eyes, a hand to your darkness, so you won't be afraid' — the idea that beautiful music and art could be an answer, a response — the light that contrasted
the dark."
Roback and Hoffs made their first serious attempts at creating music together while they were both students at the University Of California, Berkeley in the late '70s. "We lived in an old Victorian house that had been renovated and divided into units," says Hoffs. "We had a darkroom there; we were painting each Other, photographing each other, writing poetry, dreaming up our band. I remember, we recorded a very droney, very groovy version of' Little Honda' that we slowed down and drenched in reverb. That period was foundational to everything that followed, really. It was the template for a lot of the music that David made with Opal and Mazzy Star."
Roback's first official recordings, however, found him temporarily altering his course. In partnership with his brother, Steven, and Matt Piucci, Roback formed The Rain Parade. Piucci and Roback had been friends since Carleton College, a small liberal arts college in Northfield, Minnesota.
"My first impressions Of David? A really sharp guy, very charismatic — but never flamboyant says Piucci. "But, yeah, he had a presence. in '81 I moved to Los Angeles, and that's when the band started. We spent 13 months above his parents' garage, writing music and learning how to do it, before anyone even saw us. We were very thorough and prepared. We loved Star Trek, so we developed this idea that we were in a spaceship together."
The Rain Parade found themselves sharing both concert bills and artistic sensibilities (psychedelia, Nuggets, Big Star, the Velvet Underground) with a loose collection of bands on the fringes of the Los Angeles club scene during the early '80s.
"I went to see Rain Parade with my girlfriend at the time, and I interviewed them for Jetlag, a little fanzine in St Louis," Jeff Tweedy tells Uncut. "I'd never seen a band, up until that point, that could actually play very well! We were eating that stuff up — Dylan, The Byrds and soon — so the idea Of that music being incorporated into a scene that was below the radar or less at the time, those things made a lot of difference."
"I guess you could say that David was the artistic director and I was the musical director," says Piucci. "He was always going to be an artist - he took the picture of Sue Hoffs on the cover of our first single, 'What's She Done To Your Mind'. The name of our album, Emergency Third Rail Power Trip - that is an actual subway sign where I lived in Oakland. It means something terrible is happening on the trains, turn the power off. But it took David to see it and read it aloud for me to realise, 'Oh, we have to use it!'"
According to Piucci, the writing process on 1983's Emergency Third Rail Power Trip was "one hundred per cent a collaboration. We had three songwriters: David, myself and Steven. That's tough, man. I mean, how long did Buffalo Springfield last? About a year and a half?"
Amid the bittersweet harmonies, raga-ish guitar riffs, trippy organ washes and tumbling drum patterns of Emergency Third Rail Power Trip, "Carolyn's Song" — credited to Roback — pointed in another direction. A heavy-lidded ballad, where sorrowful sighs stand in for a conventional chorus, it finds Roback singing, "Are you lost? Are you sad? Did I leave you alone? / Do you think that they don't understand what it's like to feel all alone?"
Critically, "Carolyn's Song" feels aesthetically bound to 1984's Rainy Day, an album Of cover versions overseen by Roback. Kendra Smith. A stunning record in its own right, Rainy Day is also a bridging work, connecting Roback's love for '60s and '70s songcraft with the dreamy, reverb-heavy music he finessed with Opal and Mazzy Star. Featuring luminaries from The Rain Parade, The Bangles, The Dream Syndicate and The Three O'Clock, Rainy Day provided a focus for the Paisley Underground, but it was also important for kickstarting a conversation about a number of artists - Dylan, Neil Young, Big Star — who at that point during the mid-'80s were largely off the critical radar.
"We recorded at this cool little studio, Radio Tokyo, where The Bangles recorded our first single," says Susanna Hoffs, who sang the Velvets' "I'll Be Your Mirror" and Dylan's "I'll Keep It With Mine" on the album. "It was in a craftsman house in Venice. It was a $10 -an-hour studio. I remember there was a bottle of whiskey. Just swigging, going for it, just one take. It was very scrappy, but it felt very authentic, too."
In some respects, Rainy Day is an American equivalent to the This Mortal Coil covers project run by 4AD's Ivo Watts-Russell — both share a similar aesthetic and a love for then-overlooked '70s music that they subsequently helped to resuscitate. It comes full circle, much later, with the cover of "Carolyn's Song" on This Mortal Coil's 1991 album Blood.
Even before Roback left The Rain Parade in 1984, the wheels had already been set in motion for another musical project, Clay Allison, formed with former Dream Syndicate vocalist Kendra Smith. Smith had appeared on Emergency Third Rail Power Trip and was also among the contributors to Rainy Day: she and Roback delivered a sparse, folky take on Buffalo Springfield's "Flying On The Ground Is Wrong", which anticipates the work they recorded together in Clay Allison and, later, Opal.
While Opal brought into focus his taste for hallucinatory folk-blues — circling back to his early love Of The Doors, among other musical touchstones — it also found Roback assembling a group Of musicians who remained collaborators for the remainder ofhis career. Drummer Keith Mitchell - after Clay Allison, the band was briefly called Smith Roback Mitchell before settling on Opal — multi-instrumentalist Suki Ewers and Rain Parade keyboardist/violinist Will Glenn.
"Opal is an amazing band," says Pat Thomas, Kendra Smith's manager. "You have Kendra in this very ethereal, Sandy Denny role and then you've got David playing this fuzzy, Neil Young guitar and they're filtering it through the psychedelia of The Doors, but also adding traditional country and folk music."
Opal's Output is slender — two EPs, "Fell From The Sun" and "Northern Line", and an album, 1987's Happy Nightmare Baby — but they cover a lot of ground, progressing from folk-blues to a more spacious, introspective sound; moving from an acoustic to an electric state and integrating glam, psychedelia and hard rock.
In 1989, Opal recorded "If The Sun Don't Shine" an adaptation of "Jugband Blues" — for a Syd Barrett covers album. It's a rackety, stop-start number — with, unexpectedly, Roback On vocals — but it features a passage of highly individual ethereal slide guitar, a real Roback trademark.
"He was a great guitar player," says William Reid, whose band, The Jesus And Mary Chain, toured with Opal in 1987. "Jamming is not a big part of my guitar ethos, but I remember getting stoned and jamming with David for hours. We just seemed to fit together, musically. Opal were a bunch of weirdos, just like us."
By 1987, playing live had become difficult for Opal. Smith, especially, seemed uncomfortable in the spotlight. She left during the Mary Chain tour, where she was replaced by Hope Sandoval.
"Hope was a teenage fan," says Susanna Hoffs. "We would help her and her friend Sylvia sneak in — they were underage — to Bangles shows. It was a very small group of us who kind of gravitated to the same stuff."
"Hope and Kendra and I were friends," Roback told me in 2013. "When Kendra decided she didn't want to continue touring, I thought maybe it would be interesting if Hope played with us. Kendra thought that was a cool idea, so that's how that happened. We were performing a lot of Opal material and one day we just thought, 'Let's just start something completely new and different.' That was Mazzy Star."
Roback and Sandoval made a perfect partnership. "I met David and Hope one bright morning in LA, by the side of the pool at the Roosevelt Hotel," recalls Rough Trade boss Geoff Travis, who released the Opal and Mazzy Star debut albums. "They were sunglasses-cool Los Angelenos, mysterious and other worldly. Friendly but slightly distant, as though other realities were playing out in their heads. They never changed. I don't know what year it was and it didn't matter. Probably the year The Rolling Stones had released Aftermath in their parallel universe."
Mazzy Star's 1990 debut album, She Hangs Brightly, arrived fully formed — a perfect distillation of the sound Roback had been moving towards since his earliest recordings in Berkeley with Susanna Hoffs. The bespoke mood is precisely sustained throughout; bitter, blue country characterised by gently rolling rhythms and guitar reverb, all topped off by Sandoval's loping, murmured vocals.
"David was a deep thinker and patient worker who could expand his creative process wide," says engineer Dale Everingham, who worked with Roback on Opal and Mazy Star releases. "David and Mazzy Star produced many times more songs than you have heard for every record. David wanted to hear all his ideas in different styles. Acoustic, full band, rock and psychedelic. Most songs were done this way. Approximately 60 reels of 2", 24-track tape were used for each record. At 16 minutes per reel? You do the math."
The follow-up, 1993's So Tonight That I Might See, continued the soft-focus, slow-motion jams of its predecessor. It also featured the band's only hit single, "Fade Into You". If it can be considered a barometer of the song's success in the mainstream, "Fade Into You" has appeared in no less than five separate episodes of the CSI franchises.
"Mazzy Star were much more accessible than Opal and had potential to make it in the mainstream," says William Reid. "so Tonight That I Might See sold about 2 million copies, I think. Most musicians would be pretty happy with that. But I remember, amusingly, David was rather upset about that. I can understand why, because having a big record can push you into a different league. Some people don't want to be a pop star, don't want to have their photograph taken and do 10 interviews a week. David was like that."
Success only encouraged Roback and Sandoval to withdraw further. Roback's response to the band's raised profile was to insulate himself from the press — partly to avoid increased scrutiny, but also tacitly to encourage myth building around the band. Their sporadic touring and release patterns Only added to the sense of inscrutability that surrounded them.
"It was a very calculated effort," agrees Matt Piucci. "He worked on it. That was not the guy I met; he was much more open. He dropped that and adhered to the philosophy of, 'Oh, ifyou don't tell anybody anything, they make stuff up and that helps promote the mystery.'"
There was a further Mazzy Star album, Among My Swan in 1996, before the band embarked on a 17-year hiatus, emerging again in 2013 with Seasons Of Your Day. During this period, Sandoval kept arguably a higher profile than her creative partner, contributing vocals to songs by The Jesus And Mary Chain, The Chemical Brothers, Death In Vegas, Massive Attack and Bert Jansch, and running a successful second band, Hope Sandoval And The Warm Inventions, with My Bloody Valentine drummer, Colm Ó Cíosóig.
Roback, meanwhile, relocated to London and Norway, where he became involved with Norwegian artists and musicians and acted — as himself — in Olivier Assayas' film , Clean. He also contributed to Beth Orton's 1999 album, Central Reservation, and performed on Bert Jansch's The Black Swan in 2006.
"David was a mysterious spirit," says Orton. "I went to Oslo, to this massive warehouse studio. There was nothing there apart from his guitar amp. Then he projected onto this white wall an Elizabeth Cotten film of her playing guitar. I don't think we slept. We sat up all night watching the film and drinking red wine. He talked in poetic riddles. Beautiful and profound, unusual. I stole so many of his lines! 'Never cry more tears than you could hold in your hands'on 'Paris Train' is one."
Le Volume Courbe's Charlotte Marionneau also remembers recording at Oslo studio: "David had a huge collection Of Francoise Hardy 7"s. He's a huge fan and met her once. He used to collect radios as well. But it was a great studio. He was charismatic. I think Hope and him are quite similar in some ways; very private. But he was generous. When I signed my first deal with Honest Jon's, he came with me to sort out the deal as he knew about the business."
Meanwhile, Roback and Sandoval continued working on Mazzy Star material. "She would come to Norway, or we would work in London, or we'd work in California," he explained. "We never actually stopped recording and writing, so it was never really about getting back into it because we never really left it. How do I think Mazzy Star has evolved over the years? I don't really look at it that way. I think that the songs we were performing and writing when we first started are equally relevant to us now as they were then. Are we perfectionists? I think perfection in music is really a dull thing; the imperfections are what give it character. We like to get a live version we like. Live, things happen in the moment."
At the time of his death, David Roback was involved in several tantalising projects. In 2016, he began working on unreleased Opal material, remixing and overdubbing additional recordings onto five unreleased songs; these are now due for imminent release as part of an Opal reissue programme overseen by Pat Thomas [see panel]. According to Susanna Hoffs, her last conversations with Roback were about releasing their archive of early cassette recordings made while they were at Berkeley under the name The Unconscious — as well as making the Rainy Day album available on streaming platforms.
When talking about Roback, musicians tend to cluster around the same handful of observations. That he was a shy, private man; that he could be controlling of his music; that he didn't suffer fools. "People get an impression from his persona that developed post-Rain Parade that he was like this dictator, " says Matt Piucci. "The 'story' is that David was some kind of controlling Svengali, but it is kind of misogynistic and insulting to the three strong, talented women who sang with him — Sue, Kendra and Hope."
"David showed a generosity I didn't always understand," says Beth Orton. "I wanted to work with him as a guitarist, not necessarily as a producer. In the end, I played guitar on my own. He never added to them. What's particularly poignant to me is that I feel like he didn't want to impose on what I was doing. He wanted to empower me to be me, on my own, and believe that I was enough — which was a beautiful thing."
"I think David was quite a hard guy to know," says William Reid. "I got on really well with him when we were both drunk, because he'd let his guard down and tell you things and I would do the same. But generally, he was a guy who kept his cards very close to his chest. I appreciate that."
As with most things, Roback kept his creative life close — though, like the equally elusive Kevin Shields or Mark Hollis, it's possible to see Roback as an auteur, sustaining a very specific artistic vision across several decades. Speaking to me in 2013, Roback admitted Mazzy Star had "written and recorded many, many songs that we've yet to release, more than another album". Whether these songs are released, of course, is another matter. "With David, the body of work was so specific. There was a care and precision," says Susanna Hoffs. "My brother has all these old Super 8 movies — sort Of noir, black and white movies — of David and I as 17, 18-year-olds. I've always thought, growing up here as we did in this idyllic setting, knowing that there was something simmering under the surface, informed what we did to some extent. Even then, David was very focused on what mattered to him — he was very true to his vision. It just seems like it wasn't finished, you know?
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Happy Reissue Baby
Among the bittersweet revelations following David Roback's death was the news that Opal's long-out-of-print catalogue is being reissued by the In Grooves Music Group. Not only that, the Early Recordings album will be enhanced with five unreleased tracks: "Hear The Wind Blow", "I Called Erin", "Don't Stop The Train", "Sailing Boats" and an alternative version of "Empty Bottles". Here, Pat Thomas, Kendra Smith's manager, shines a light on what we can expect from "I've been managing Kendra for three years. Last year she released her first solo recording in almost 25 years, 'Moon Boat', in a movie called Leave No Trace.
"A few years ago, David finally decided he was going to reissue the Opal records. Early Recordings will be releæed with five unreleased bonus tracks; Happy Nightmare Baby will be exactly as it was. These five unreleased tracks are from the early years, what I call the more folky, country stuff.
"David moves very slowly. There was some direct contact between him and Kendra. When I asked to hear the bonus tracks, David personally sent those to Kendra. I would've loved to do liner notes or go through some vintage photos - but David is also, as we know, not eager to go down memory lane, so from a packaging standpoint, these aren't super-deluxe editions.
"The CDs have been manufactured and are sitting in a warehouse. We just need to finalise some of the nuances of the paperwork between David and Kendra and they will definitely be released. When David died I thought, 'Oh my God, they're never going to come out!' But I was happy to hear through David's management that he wanted them to come out for sure.
"There will be CD and digital releases first, then we'll follow them up with vinyl. The vinyl will not have those five extra tracks — they just won't fit on a single album and the label don't want to do a double."
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DAVID ROBACK: A BUYER'S GUIDE
THE RAIN PARADE
EMERGENCY THIRD RAIL POWER TRIP
ZIPPO, 1984
Making the Paisley Underground scene, The Rain Parade's debut outlined Roback's aesthetic: blurry, spiral ling songs recalling Love, The Byrds, The Doors. An Object lesson in psychedelic understatement. 8/1O
RAINY DAY
RAINY DAY
ROUGH TRADE, 1984
Roback and friends gather together for a set of covers (Big Star, Hendrix, Velvets. Young, Beach Boys...)- It's a knowing yet generous rewriting of rock's back pages. 7/10
OPAL
HAPPY NIGHTMARE BABY
ROUGHTRADE, 1987
Roback's finest moment — and Kendra Smith's, too, trading their acoustic Cohen/Barrett vibes for a livid, electrified set—piece, with the glitter-buzz Of prime—era T. Rex in their
hearts. 9/10
OPAL
EARLY RECORDINGS
ROUGHTRADE, 1989
Their first few singles, plus previously unreleased material — reflective, pel lucid folk rock and pop psych that at moments, like "Harriet Brown" , can be deeply moving. 9/10
MAZZY STAR
SHE HANGS BRIGHTLY
ROUGHTRADE, 1990
Joining up with Hope Sandoval, on She Hangs Brightly Roback lets more light and shade into the songs. The result is a lambent set of late- night ruminations. 8/10
MAZZY STAR
SO TONIGHT THAT I MIGHT SEE
CAPITOL, 1993
They really didn't put a foot wrong, but So Tonight that I Might See is Mazzy Star's consummate collection, and not just for "Fade Into You". This one's a snails-pace, deeply hermetic gem. 9/10
MAZZY STAR
AMONG MY SWAN
CAPlTOL,1996
So Tonight established a style: Among My Swan honed it by mining the psychodrama in more measured ways. This album - lighter, more acoustic — rewards deep listening. 7/10
MAZZY STAR
SEASONS OF YOUR DAY
RHYMES OF AN HOUR, 2013
Seventeen years later, Roback and Sandoval pick up the thread. Guests appear - Bert Jansch, Colm Cios6ig Of MBV — songs unfurl slowly, taking their time to say their piece. 8/10
-JON
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