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Mark Roebuck

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Mark Roebuck
Birth nameMark Morgan Roebuck
Born (1958-11-23) November 23, 1958 (age 65)
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
GenresFolk, rock and roll
Occupation(s)Musician, songwriter
Instrument(s)Vocals, guitar
Years active1982–present
LabelsBearsville, Not Lame, Fear of the Atom
Websitedeal-band.com/main.html

Mark Roebuck is a composer and musician living near Charlottesville, Virginia, known primarily for his work as the main songwriter for the 1980s underground power pop group The Deal and for his later project, Tribe of Heaven, Imagine We Were, recorded with Dave Matthews in 1989-90 and finally put out as an independent release in 2005.

Early career

Born in New Orleans, Louisiana,[1] Roebuck moved at age four to Petersburg, Virginia. In his teens, he began writing and recording original music and playing professionally as a folk duo with classmate Eric Schwartz.[2] In 1977 Roebuck and Schwartz both moved to Charlottesville to attend the University of Virginia.[3] There they met Memphis musician and classmate Haines Fullerton and formed The Deal. They eventually added Hugh Patton and Jim Jones to the lineup and began playing up and down the east coast, while continuing to record demos of their original material.[4] In 1982 they signed with Premier Talent Agency and completed a management contract with former Ramones manager Linda S. Stein.[5] In 1983 Albert Grossman, head of Warner Bros. Records subsidiary label Bearsville Records, signed the band to a five-album recording contract.[6] In late 1983, The Deal recorded Time Won't Come Back, a five-song EP produced by Richard Gottehrer.[7] Shortly thereafter Warner Bros. severed ties with Bearsville, and the EP was never released. In 1984 Hugh Patton and Eric Schwartz left the band.[8] Former Big Star drummer Jody Stephens briefly signed on, but left and was replaced by Mike Clark.[9] With this new lineup The Deal began working on a second EP, provisionally titled Tuesday Gone To Ruin, which was completed in late 1985. It included five new original songs, and a guitar solo by fellow Bearsville artist Todd Rundgren.[10] In January, 1986 Albert Grossman died of a massive coronary while flying on the Concorde to a musical convention in Europe, effectively ending Bearsville's status as an active company in the music industry, and ending any chance for the release of the second EP.[11] Roebuck and the other members of the Deal were on the verge of calling it quits when Jody Stephens, by then running Ardent Studios in Memphis, offered the band a spec deal to record an entire album. The result was Brave New World, completed in 1987.[12] The record included some percussion contributions from Stephens as well as a few background vocals from Stephens' Big Star bandmate Alex Chilton.[13] The project was shopped unsuccessfully to major labels, and was eventually released independently.[14] It was largely a critical success, called by the Washington Post, 'remarkably assured pop classicism,'[15] and it led to The Deal being named by Musician Magazine one of the twenty best unsigned bands in the world.[16] However, sales were limited, and in fall 1988 the Deal finally broke up.[17] The music of the Deal remained firmly in obscurity until 2003 when a power pop independent label, Not Lame Recordings, released Goodbye September, a 14-song anthology of the Deal's music.[18] The record was highly praised and became one of Not Lame's best selling releases of that year.[19]

In 1989, after the breakup of the Deal, Roebuck invited then-fellow-bartender Dave Matthews to write and record a folk-acoustic CD. They recorded ten songs at the Scottsville, Virginia studio of Charlottesville musician Greg Howard, calling the project Tribe of Heaven, Imagine We Were.[20] Roebuck was simultaneously working with musicians Mike Colley and TR3's Warren Richardson on another vastly different project, Burning Core. Burning Core fused elements of rap, metal, funk, and jazz and included a co-written composition with future Dave Matthews Band keyboardist Peter Griesar.[21] In 1990 Roebuck traveled to New York with both projects, but was unable to secure a major label deal.[22] Matthews went on to form the Dave Matthews Band, and Roebuck, then working as a bartender at the restaurant Eastern Standard, gave the band their first paying gig.[23] He had them perform every Tuesday night for $50.00, plus free beer and liquor.[24] One of the songs co-written by Matthews and Roebuck on the Tribe of Heaven project, "The Song That Jane Likes," was included on the Dave Matthews Band's first CD Remember Two Things as well as RCA's 2004 release The Gorge. The song has also been included on Volumes 12, 16, 18, and 20 of RCA's Live Trax Series, all released between 2008 and 2012.[25] 15 years after its completion, Tribe of Heaven, Imagine We Were was finally put out as a nine-song independent release in 2005.[26]

Later projects

In 1996 Roebuck and Burning Core bandmate Mike Colley formed the rap-rock quartet SubSeven. In 1998 they put out an eleven-song CD entitled Wild Hallucinations From the Deep Sleep Deprivation.[27] In 2000, after several years away from music, Roebuck joined Big Circle, an ensemble made up of fellow Charlottesville musicians Charlie Pastorfield, Rusty Speidel, Jim Ralston, Tim Anderson, and Tony Fischer. Their 2004 CD Things May Change garnered excellent reviews and was given a 4-Star Rating by the AllMusic Guide.[28] Mark Roebuck has released two projects since the end of Big Circle: 2007's Some Half-Remembered Thing with Noonday Ruin[29] and the 2011 acoustic project Midnight To Morning done in collaboration with Tony Fischer.[30] Roebuck has two sisters, Sharon, an attorney and advanced practice nurse; and Robin, a chef and decorative artist. His brother Steven is a teacher and painter who has designed much of the artwork on Roebuck's various independent releases. In 1994 Roebuck received a Masters in Social Work, and he has worked in private practice as a Psychotherapist in the Staunton, Virginia area since 1998.[31] Since 2001 he has been married to Julie Henshaw Roebuck, a Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner. They have one child, Holden Jerome Roebuck, born May 23, 2012.

Discography

  • The Deal, Time Won't Come Back (Unreleased) Warner Bros. Records/ Bearsville Records (1983)
  • The Deal, Tuesday Gone To Ruin (Unreleased) Bearsville Records (1985)
  • The Deal, Brave New World, (LP/Cassette) Rainbeat Records (1987)
  • SubSeven, Wild Hallucinations From The Deep Sleep Deprivation, (CD/Digital) Fear of the Atom Records (1998)
  • The Deal, Goodbye September, (CD/Digital) Not Lame Records (2003)
  • Big Circle, Things May Change, (CD/Digital) Fear of the Atom Records (2004)
  • Tribe of Heaven, Imagine We Were, (CD) Fear of the Atom Records (2005)
  • Mark Roebuck with Noonday Ruin, Some Half-Remembered Thing, (CD/Digital) Fear of the Atom Records (2007)
  • Mark Roebuck and Tony Fischer, Midnight To Morning, (CD/Digital) Fear of the Atom Records (2011)
  • Burning Core, Beast (Songs 1989-92), (Digital) Fear of the Atom Records (2011)
  • Mark Roebuck with Michael Clarke and Tim Ryan, The World And All Within, (CD/Digital) Fear of the Atom Records (2016)
  • Kingdom of Mustang, Kingdom of Mustang, (CD/Digital) KoM Records (2018)

Guest appearances

  • Charlie Pastorfield, Maybe We Have Changed, (LP) White Line Records (1982)
  • Shannon Worrell, Three Wishes, (CD) Super Duke Records (1994)

References

  1. ^ Celebrity Birth Information: Mark Roebuck. http://www.quotesby.co.uk/celebrities/mark_roebuck-c190889/ Archived 2013-06-24 at archive.today
  2. ^ Graves, Lee and King, Carianne. "Rockin' The Grounds." The University of Virginia Magazine. Summer 2011. (p. 25) http://uvamagazine.org/features/article/rockin_the_grounds/P5/
  3. ^ "Fashion 1982." Los Angeles Times. (1982-03-19)
  4. ^ Glauber, Gary (2003-11-01) "The Deal, Goodbye September". Pop Matters http://www.popmatters.com/pm/review/deal-goodbye
  5. ^ "First Impression" (1981-10-01) Andy Warhol's Interview Magazine (p. 25)
  6. ^ McNair, Dave. (2004-09-16). "Dave, Fame, And Haines: Celebrity, Suicide, And The Etiquette of Envy". The Hook Issue 0337 (http://www.readthehook.com/files/old/stories/2004/09/16/coverDaveFameAndHainesCele.html)
  7. ^ "The Deal, Making Records Not Road Trips." Commonwealth: The Magazine of Virginia.1983-11-01
  8. ^ Sendra, Tim. "Deal: Biography." Allmusic http://www.allmusic.com/artist/deal-p552898/biography
  9. ^ Crigler, Pete (2010). Keeping It Tight in the Old Dominion: A History Of Virginia Rock Music. Dog Ear Publishing. (pp. 22-23)
  10. ^ Sendra
  11. ^ Van Noy, Nikki (2011). So Much To Say: Dave Matthews Band, 20 Years On The Road. Simon & Schuster. p 17
  12. ^ Sendra
  13. ^ Crigler, (p. 23)
  14. ^ Sendra
  15. ^ Brown, Joe (1988-09-02). "Takin' Stock of Unknown Rock." The Washington Post.
  16. ^ "Finally the Semi-finalists." Musician Magazine. 1988-06-01
  17. ^ Glauber
  18. ^ Rick Schadelbauer. Amplifier Magazine. Issue 38. Sept-Oct 2003. (p. 38)
  19. ^ Loftus, Johnny. The Deal, Goodbye September: Review. Allmusic (http://www.allmusic.com/album/goodbye-september-r622263/review)
  20. ^ Van Noy (p.18)
  21. ^ Burning Core: Biography, CDBaby: http://www.cdbaby.com/AlbumDetails.aspx?AlbumID=burningcore
  22. ^ Van Noy (p.18)
  23. ^ Delancey, Morgan (1998). The Dave Matthews Band: Step Into the Light. ECW Press. P. 53
  24. ^ Van Noy (p. 25)
  25. ^ DMB Releases "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-08-04. Retrieved 2012-08-05.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  26. ^ Van Noy (p. 18)
  27. ^ Burning Core: Biography, CDBaby: (http://www.cdbaby.com/AlbumDetails.aspx?AlbumID=burningcore)
  28. ^ Planer, Lindsay. Big Circle, Things May Change: Review. Allmusic (http://www.allmusic.com/album/things-may-change-r741273)
  29. ^ Kangas, Timo. New Discs: Mark Roebuck and Noonday Ruin, Some Half Remembered Thing. Realtid.se Kronikor (07-20-2010)http://www.realtid.se/ArticlePages/200707/20/20070720153437_Realtid740/20070720153437_Realtid740.dbp.asp
  30. ^ Mark Roebuck and Tony Fischer: Biography, CDBaby: http://www.cdbaby.com/AlbumDetails.aspx?AlbumID=roebuckfischer
  31. ^ Vigliotti, Jake. "The Song That Mark Co-Wrote." Antsmarching (07-27-2004) http://antsmarching.org/columns/column.php?columnid=18