In many ways, the scene is straight out of a
David Lynch movie. The living room doesn’t look
lived in. The walls are bare, and aside from a pair
of sofas that line the walls and a strangely
out-of-place upright piano, the room is empty of
furniture. The floor space is bare carpet. Far
back--in fact as far back in the room as one can
get--sit a dozen or so people, most in their mid-30s
and all sporting a unified clean-cut, all-American
look resonant of an Abercrombie & Fitch
advertisement.
They stare, apparently mystified, in the same
direction: a singular vision that ultimately seems
the source of a steady mixture of concern, confusion
and adoration. One might expect the focus of that
gaze to be on a religious lecturer or an Amway
salesman, but tonight the focus of that stare is a
singer-songwriter. If the collected Abercrombies
look the part of stereotypical Christians, then the
musician on the other side of the room is their
essential opposite.
He is identified as a “Christian musician,” to be
sure, but in comparison with the audience, he is
strikingly different. He is older, for one thing, by
about 20 years. His hair is messed into a sort of
drooping black coiffure, as if the Cure’s lead
singer, Robert Smith, had gone the way of Icarus,
flapping his wax wings too close to the sun, with
the resulting heat partially melting his hairdo.
In his hands, he flays an acoustic guitar,
playing it with a madman’s abandon atop a mess of
cables, pedals and amplifiers. And when he sings,
his voice is a mixture of beautiful tenor and
snarling, gutbucket bluesman.
It is a stunning performance in every sense of
the word, a show that seems to spark directly out of
the man’s heart like electricity from a wire.
In a Saturday-night bar, Michael Roe might appear
totally normal onstage: another guitar slinger,
songwriter, singer and musician with that job’s
requisite sense of destruction, excess and abandon.
But this isn’t a bar, and the dozen young Christians
seem somehow confused by the whole proceedings. To
be sure, there are a few die-hard fans in the meager
crowd. But, on the whole, the applause between Roe’s
songs tonight is a bit hesitant, even for a house
concert.
The situation itself is a strange one, for not so
very long ago, Roe was poised on the edge of
stardom, or so it seemed. Instead, his career
entered what has become an old, tired story: the
story of someone who was nearly famous; who almost
made it; who was almost, but never quite, a
superstar. It’s a particularly strange position, for
in some circles, Roe is about as famous as a man can
get. In the Christian-music scene, he and his band,
the 77’s, are nearly legendary. They have sold
thousands of albums worldwide and have headlined the
massive Christian-music festival Cornerstone a
number of times. But here in his hometown of
Sacramento, only a few people know who he is at all,
and most of those probably know him in some kind of
Christian-music context.
It’s a limited context and one that has served
Roe as much as it has hindered him. After all, if
one looks at his upcoming tour dates, those in
support of a new album he’s recording with longtime
collaborator Mark Harmon, they are for venues that
most touring musicians would scoff at: Christ the
King Church in Oxford, Miss.; North Rock Hill Church
in Rock Hill, S.C.; Community Baptist Church in
Somerset, N.J. Peppered in between the church shows
are occasional secular venues--a bar here, a
coffeehouse there--but it’s crystal clear that the
church shows (and house concerts like this one) are
more or less Roe’s bread and butter.
And therein lies the tension: Roe is neither one
nor the other. He’s not a dove-stroking,
organ-playing door-knocker ready to crank into
another run at “What a Friend We Have in Jesus.” But
he’s not a drug-fueled, excess-heavy rocker worthy
of VH1’s Behind the Music either.
Instead, he is like a man caught up in a
high-wire act between faith and rock ’n’ roll, for
while rock music has been the music of youth
(especially white, suburban youth) at least since
Elvis first shook his hips onstage, it also is a
form of music often ascribed--at least by
Christians--to that cloven-hoofed beast, the devil
himself.
The balancing act between these extremes
ultimately uncovers a mostly untold story about one
of Sacramento’s greatest musicians and about a
period that many secular music fans know little
about: a period in which Christian music was the
city’s biggest export and in which a collection of
bands--among them Roe’s own group, the 77’s--were
poised, for a brief moment, on the edge of
mainstream stardom, only to have those dreams be
dashed by a music industry that quite simply dropped
the marketing ball.
Raised by devout Christian parents IN San Jose in
the 1960s and early 1970s, Roe immediately was drawn
to music. But there was a conflict built directly
into that music, for Roe wasn't drawn to the
schmaltz, but to the rock.
Years later, sitting outside of a Starbucks
coffee shop in Citrus Heights, not far from the
modest apartment he has lived in for more than 20
years, Roe noted that “in those days, there was a
sharp line between doing music and doing the
church.” He paused to take a drag on his cigarette,
and then said, “It was either the devil’s way or
God’s way. I was no different than Elvis or Jerry
Lee Lewis in that regard--all guys raised in the
church. I was a Pentecostal, just like Jerry Lee.”
Of course, Roe’s aspirations to play rock ’n’
roll were no different from countless other similar
teenage dreams. Nonetheless, to Roe’s parents, they
were probably the same as having their only son fall
directly into hell itself. After all, the view of
most Christian music in the mid-1960s was
essentially the same stereotypical vision that many
of us still have of Christian music: old white men
playing organs and singing paeans to Jesus. The idea
of rock music--to some the very definition of sin
and sexuality--was antithetical to the safe, popular
Christian music, a music perhaps best epitomized in
the 1970s by Jerry Lee Lewis’ first cousin, Jimmy
Swaggart.
So, what’s a Pentecostal kid to do when his
tastes veer more toward Led Zeppelin than “Just a
Closer Walk With Thee”? As a teenager, Roe made his
first attempts to reconcile the viewpoints. “In
1969, I was 15 and had a group called 'The
Brotherhood,’” Roe explained. “That was a Christian
[rock] band, but there wasn’t really anything like
that at the time.” The biggest show the band ever
played was opening for none other than Swaggart
himself, to an enthusiastic audience of 15,000 who
cheered the band’s Christian rock music with
rapturous applause. Swaggart, not to be upstaged,
followed up by giving a sermon on the evils of rock
’n’ roll music.
In talking with Roe today about this event--35
years after the fact--one can sense an upwelling of
impish glee at this last detail. His eyes twinkle,
and he lets go a loud, guffawing laugh that is half
real and half an outtake from the Hee Haw
television show. If there are parts of the story
that trigger such outbursts, they are the moments
when the bare ironies of the world are revealed for
all to see: Roe’s first success at rock ’n’ roll was
at once a mixing of spiritual and secular goals. He
must have felt elated at the knowledge that these
worlds could coexist, only to have that elation
stomped on by a man who was, at that time, perhaps
the most powerful and well-known leader in American
spiritual life.
Today, Roe has a few vices, vices mild to those
not religiously minded but perhaps looming more
importantly in the eyes of Christians. Smoking is
one (he puffed casually through many of our
interviews), and the occasional glass of wine is
another. When he was an adolescent, the third major
vice was rock ’n’ roll. “I wanted my music to
express the idea of faith and still wanted to serve
God through my music even though I didn’t know what
that meant,” he said. “I didn’t know how to work
that out.”
What happened next really does carry the features
of a VH1 rockumentary. First, Roe quite literally
heard the voice of God telling him--of all
things--to go to Sacramento. Rather than heed the
call, Roe chose to ignore it, and his already
stressed mental faculties became more and more
frayed. It was a moment in which desire to serve
both God and rock music seemed to pull the young man
apart. “It became a real Jonah-and-the-whale
story--very biblical,” Roe commented. In the
biblical story of Jonah, Jonah hears the voice of
God and ignores it. It takes being swallowed by a
whale and later being vomited up on dry land to
convince Jonah of his own error in judgment. Roe’s
belly of the whale was the Pomona Psychiatric
Hospital. “I was eventually hospitalized in Pomona
and endured six hellish weeks of mental torment,
fear, hallucinations, group therapy and extremely
tasty Cream of Wheat in the commissary,” Roe said.
“I was administered Elavil [an anti-depressant] and
Haldol [an anti-psychotic] and was sent home after
my parents’ savings had run out.”
The move to Sacramento came soon after he was
released from the hospital. It was a significant
move, in large part because it marked the beginning
of Roe’s serious involvement with music and because
it intersected with a local ministry just starting
to become a force, both in Christianity and in
Christian music.
Warehouse Ministries, known to most simply
as “the Warehouse,” opened its doors officially in
1974. It had a somewhat shaky start, if the church’s
own Web site is to be believed. But, before long, it
flourished under a particularly edgy banner: that of
Christian rock ’n’ roll. Mary Neely, who founded the
church with her husband, Louis, had modeled their
ministry after Chuck Smith’s Calvary Chapel in Costa
Mesa, a church considered by some to be radical for
producing weekend Christian-rock concerts as part of
its ministry. In keeping with Calvary’s format, the
Warehouse also produced weekend concerts (many in
support of touring Christian-rock bands from
Southern California).
Roe was hired as a Warehouse employee after
arriving in Sacramento in 1979. Soon after that, the
church suggested forming a house band that would
perform at local high schools in order to promote
the weekend concert series. Roe was tapped as the
guitar player and primary vocalist for the project,
along with bassist Jan Eric, keyboardist and second
guitarist Mark Tootle, and drummer Mark Proctor
(and, for a time, singer Sharon McCall). The band
initially was called the Scratch Band. Later, with
the departure of McCall and the replacement of
Proctor with drummer Aaron Smith (whose drum credits
included work with the Temptations, Ray Charles and
Christian-rock group Vector), the group changed its
name to the 77’s after a line from the biblical book
of Daniel.
In the context of Sacramento and the Warehouse,
the 77’s were not an isolated Christian band. In
fact, the Warehouse itself seemed to draw musicians
to it. The church’s next logical step was to build a
recording studio for these musicians to work in and,
eventually, to segue those recordings into a bona
fide record label. Called Exit Records and run by
Mary Neely, the label was meant to offer an outlet
to the various musicians who had begun to congregate
around the Warehouse scene, among them transplanted
Englishman Steve Scott and Sacramento-area native
Charlie Peacock. “Exit was edgy,” Neely remembered
from her Warehouse office. “We were really edgier
than, say, anything coming out of Nashville. And I
think the 77’s were a part of that edginess.”
The 77’s debut album, Ping Pong Over the Abyss,
appeared in 1982. Today, listening to that
initial release, Ping Pong stands out in part
because the band doesn’t quite know what it wants to
sound like. What is clear, though, is that Roe, even
at that early date, was already a phenomenal,
passionate guitar player. His contributions to what
was essentially a Christian new-wave album consisted
of moodily moaned vocals that are reminiscent at
times of Michael Gira of Swans or Doors vocalist Jim
Morrison, often over a music backdrop that was so
completely of the 1980s that it sounds, to
today’s ears, terribly dated. What doesn’t sound
dated, though, is Roe’s guitar work, often coming in
like a blast of chaotic noise that totters between
weird rockabilly riffs and the burned-out,
late-night heroin dirges of Velvet Underground-era
Lou Reed.
The rest of the 1980s was a roller coaster, both
for the Warehouse’s burgeoning music scene and for
the band. Just before the 77’s released their second
album, the superb All Fall Down,
Sacramento-area native Peacock released his first
for Exit. That album, Lie Down in the Grass,
became a surprise success. And that album, in
combination with Exit’s impressive roster of
Christian musicians (most of whom didn’t sound like
“Christian musicians”--at least not by 1980s
standards), garnered the attention of major-label
powerhouse Island Records, home to Bob Marley, Steve
Winwood and a band of Irish superstars
(three-quarters of whom were also Christians) by the
name of U2. Island agreed to distribute Exit titles,
and soon the 77’s found themselves label mates with
some of their heroes.
Roe had become an interesting and extremely
personal songwriter during the space between Ping
Pong and All Fall Down, contributing to
the latter album “You Don’t Scare Me,” a spooky,
harrowing song about worldly evil and random
misfortune featuring Roe’s characteristically
shaking and violent guitar work; and “Mercy Mercy,”
a staggering, punk-rock-meets-rockabilly song
co-written by Proctor and circling the idea of
asking for forgiveness only after one’s mistakes
have already been made. (“I was wallowing / In a pit
of snakes,” Roe sings, his voice inflected slightly
with Elvis’ fast vibrato. “They come crawling / Up
around my legs / Now I despise them / But I know /
If they hypnotize me / Down down I go.” The chorus
is a simple, effective repeat performed with the
quavering, staggering voice like a man caught up on
the edge of a precipice he knows he cannot avoid:
“Then I say Lord / Have mercy on me.”)
“You Don’t Scare Me” and “Mercy Mercy” are early
indications of what Roe would do his entire life:
bring a decidedly personal point of view to his
music. It’s exactly the same artistic focus that
John Lennon had, and it’s the same force that the
middle generation of confessional American poets had
(among them, Robert Lowell, Sylvia Plath, Allen
Ginsberg and James Wright). Here, the art is not
some abstract person, thought or idea, but rather
about himself, about his own life, revealing his own
experience. That sense of the personal--when offered
honestly and with integrity--becomes, in a very real
sense, universal. This is what poetry does, and this
is what makes Roe’s lyrical work fit so easily into
the confessional-poetry genre.
Like contemporary Christian musicians David Bazan
of Pedro the Lion and singer-songwriter Damien
Jurado, Roe’s viewpoint tends toward how difficult
it is to live a life of integrity in a fundamentally
flawed world (or, perhaps more accurately, a clear
statement that the human condition itself is
flawed).
These elements all are in abundance in Roe’s
lyrics for the album the band released on
Exit/Island in 1987. Simply called 77’s, the
album featured a live-concert shot on the cover,
Roe’s hairstyle a shock of jet black above a ghostly
white face. The band hoped that this would be the
album that would bring the band from the spiritual
world of the church to mainstream American
listeners. “In our naiveté, we thought that now that
we were on U2’s label, we thought it would open a
bunch of doors for us,” Roe commented. His voice is
devoid of irony now, tinged instead with a sense of
slightly hidden bitterness.
At the time, the band’s connection with Island
must have seemed like a vindication of all those
years of teen angst--the tension between rock ’n’
roll and Christianity reconciling itself in such a
way as to almost ensure both spiritual and secular
success.
But the Island connection backfired. “They just
didn’t get our record into stores very well,” Roe
commented. “It wasn’t in the regular record stores,
and it wasn’t in the Christian stores, so our fans
couldn’t find it.” As a result, the band found
itself falling between the cracks, signed with a
major-label distributor that, in the end, didn’t
seem to know what to do with it.
Island’s failure is a shame because 77’s
features two of the most powerful songs of Roe’s
career, and although they were economically and
artistically overshadowed by U2’s breakthrough album
of that year, The Joshua Tree, they still
stand up as well as anything the label released. The
first, “The Lust, the Flesh, the Eyes, and the Pride
of Life,” is a Byrds-inspired piece about the real
drive to become a rock star (which in the end proved
to be more secular and ego-oriented than spiritual).
The second, “I Could Laugh,” features Roe at his
darkest--a counter to “You Don’t Scare Me,” which
ultimately implies that the author was, in fact,
scared. Very scared indeed. Bassist Eric commented
that “You Don’t Scare Me” was “Mike with a needle in
his arm about ready to commit suicide.” And,
although Roe has no history of heroin use, it’s an
apt comparison. In a slowly spinning monotone, over
keening acoustic guitars, Roe sings: “Meanwhile I
dwell / On the baby that I killed / Or the drink I
should have not refilled / And every heart I broke
in 2 / And left to die / Bleeding on the roadside.”
Strong words--particularly coming from a Christian
artist, putting out a Christian album with a
Christian band.
The following months saw the 77’s trying their
best to overcome Island’s lack of interest, in large
part by staging blistering live concerts. They were
burning brightest as a creative force, and, in
retrospect, they were at the very edge of burning
out altogether. “By this point, we’ve done all these
things: packing clubs everywhere,” Roe remarked.
There was a weariness in his voice--a sense that
he’d told this part of the story one too many times.
“The band is really hot. Really polished. We’d
brought this from the church to be a viable club
act. It was very bluesy--the Doors one moment, the
Yardbirds the next.” But that combination never
resulted in the kind of mainstream success the band
was hoping for.
Later that year, Eric revealed that he had
been having an extramarital affair that eventually
led to divorce and the breakup of his family, and
pastor Louis Neely felt it important to remove him
from the ministry. That ministry included the 77’s.
Soon afterward, Peacock made a decision to pursue
his own career in music in the center of the
contemporary Christian-music scene--Nashville--and
Eric, already without a band and still in deep
personal turmoil, decided to follow him. “Mary
[Neely] was pretty bitter because her baby--Exit
Records--began to crumble due to my indiscretion,”
Eric said via telephone from Nashville. “If there
was a domino that tripped a bunch of other things
that were already brewing, I was it.” Regardless of
the catalyst, almost overnight Exit Records was no
more. The 77’s had lost their bass player, and soon
Tootle also chose to leave the band (he still works
as the Warehouse’s music director to this day). In
the space of a few weeks, Roe found himself without
a label and without a band.
Roe settled into a life of teaching guitar
lessons from his home--the same modest Citrus
Heights apartment that he lives in to this day. He
had a new baby, but not so very long after that, his
marriage of 10 years disintegrated, leaving Roe even
more confused about his future in music and in life.
He managed to put out a solo record in 1989, titled
after a track on Love’s 1967 album Da Capo,
“7 and 7 Is” (which typographically was made to look
like “77’s”--this was the 77’s after all, but then
again it wasn’t). A collection of home demos and
odds and ends, 7 and 7 Is did little to
cement Roe as a solo artist, but it at least showed
him that continuing to put out records was a
possibility, with or without his beloved band.
It seems impossible to describe the ensuing years
except as a dichotomy, for Roe has been involved
with a staggering number of albums since that
initial solo album. Two new versions of the 77’s
appeared: the first with Mark Harmon, David
Leonhardt and longtime drummer Aaron Smith; and then
later as a trio with Harmon and the band’s current
drummer, Bruce Spencer. To this listener’s ears, the
ensuing 77’s albums have been at best touch-and-go,
increasingly relying on the kind of guitar
pyrotechnics that have been a mainstay of 1970s
classic-rockers such as Aerosmith. If there is a low
point to this period, it is the band’s 2001 album,
A Golden Field of Radioactive Crows, a
guitar-driven album full of overwrought,
pseudo-hard-rock posturing and musical and lyrical
clichés.
This creative downward spiral could be ascribed
to many sources, not the least of which is Roe
himself, for while he has been involved in an
ever-increasing number of albums--including his work
with the 77’s; his solo albums; and ongoing projects
with the Lost Dogs, a sort of Christian-rock
supergroup--his actual songwriting and musical
creativity was increasingly waning in the 1990s. He
views himself as essentially musically passive, and
Harmon and others have corroborated that assessment.
Regarding Radioactive Crows, Harmon said, “We
were set up for Mike to write, but he was just going
through a lot of personal stuff. ... But it’s like
everything else--if you don’t do it, it atrophies.
He’s passive, not lazy. I think part of it’s
writer’s block, but it lasted a long time.”
But just one year later, he released two projects
that have reasserted his presence as a musician and
as a creative force: the 77’s 2002 EP release,
Direct; and, in particular, Roe’s latest solo
album, Say Your Prayers. Something of the
fire of Roe’s earliest releases is present again,
and yet they are contained in relatively quiet
packages. Spencer’s rock-solid drumming is coupled
on such songs as Direct’s “Dig My Heels” (a
song Roe co-wrote with Spencer and Harmon) with an
acoustic-guitar-driven and melodic presentation.
Lyrically, Roe seems to be casting back over the
previous year’s sense of artistic loss: “Like a
hurricane year ’round / winds of change were blowing
/ but we did not hear the sound / now all is lost /
and I’m needing to be found.” Say Your Prayers,
influenced heavily by Mark Kozelek’s album Rock
’n’ Roll Singer (itself a collection of acoustic
covers of AC/DC songs), is similarly quiet and
textural, relying on delicate lyricism and beautiful
melodies.
Today, Roe is pragmatic about the
possibilities and about the way in which he’s lived
his life. He has been doing some local session work
lately (most recently with singer-songwriter Lisa
Phenix) and periodically records radio commercials
(he’s the musical voice of the State Fair, for
example). Most Sundays, he can be found at his local
church attending to his spiritual needs.
He is also weeks away from completing a new
album, this one a collaboration with 77’s bassist
Harmon titled Fun With Sound, a project that
couples Roe’s vocals, guitar, and lyrics with
Harmon’s interests in electronic and loop-based
music. It’s a surprisingly different album for Roe,
but if there’s one thing that can be said about the
artist, it’s that he leaves his particular stamp on
everything he touches. For, despite Fun With
Sound being a departure, it still sounds
remarkably like a Michael Roe project. It is a sound
signature that he has retained from that first 77’s
album in 1982 right up through today: a combination
of arching, explosive guitar and melodic, soaring
vocals.
In many ways, he seems reconciled to the tensions
of his youth. Christian rock is a
multimillion-dollar industry these days, so much so
that as the rest of the record industry complains of
economic doldrums, the Christian-music scene
(including pop, rock and country) is on the sales
upswing, and the 77’s and others of their generation
certainly did something to create that model. Roe
hasn’t tapped into those millions--after all,
artistic pioneers seldom get to reap the rewards of
their innovations--and he still seems out of place
performing in living rooms and at churches. But then
again, that’s one of the differences that have made
him something of a legend in the Christian-music
community, a fundamental understanding that who he
is--as a person and as a Christian--is not going to
be shaped by what others want him or need him to be.
As for thoughts of “success,” Roe has come to
terms with such ideas: “I had to come to a new place
inside to understand what success was about.” He
pauses, taking another drag on his cigarette. “None
of the labels of 'Christian music’ were going to
work for me. I was going to have to come up with a
new template.” Again, a drag. His daughter, Devon,
is 15 years old now and sits at her father’s side
during the interview, quietly reading C.S. Lewis’
The Screwtape Letters. “I had to realize that I
was not going to be a successful pop star of any
kind,” he says. “Instead, I was going to try to
survive with some shred of dignity. The road was
rocky, but the high points became the music. And
then the gradual realization [came] that there were
hundreds and maybe thousands of people who had heard
it and were affected by it, many in profound ways.”
It is closing in on midnight on Roe’s back patio,
and, after a time, Devon retreats inside again,
fearing spiders. Apart from the quiet murmur of
Roe’s voice, all is dark and quiet. “I had a
therapist tell me that I was one of the only true
neurotics he’d ever met,” Roe says. “He defined it
as someone trying to live in two worlds
simultaneously. But that’s the classic Christian
condition.” Roe takes one last drag and snuffs his
cigarette out. There is a long pause as if he’s
waiting for the weight of those words to sink in: a
Christian musician essentially calling Christianity
a state of neurosis.
Perhaps it’s as a state of neurosis--an accepted
state of neurosis--that Roe has reconciled the
tensions that have made up his life, for if his many
fans can learn anything from his music it is that a
religious belief often makes life not easier but
vastly more difficult. “There are a lot of facets to
this walk of faith,” he has said. “It’s often a
lonely, heartbreaking journey for anyone.” One might
assume that the rewards are worth that effort. But,
more often than not, Roe’s songs tend the garden of
loneliness, of difficulty, of losing one’s way along
the path. If he has found some sense of grace amid
that loneliness, it is in accepting it as it is
rather than fighting to change it.