Robert E. King

"Rob King's excellent song, 'Goin'
to Lou's' gives him room to showcase his talents as a
musician and hard rock and roll screamer...King is superlight and superfast, and he keeps the band on time through
all the changes and beats."
---ZigZag Magazine, 1978--
Birthday:October 3,
1955 in
Ann Arbor,
MI
Favorite Composers: Beethoven, Charlie Parker
Musical Influences: Beatles, Charlie Parker, Lester Young,
Frank Zappa, Buddy Rich
Instrument: drums
Past Bands: Destroy All Monsters, Killer Trout, The Faith Healers
Current Band: Hearts of Joy
Rob King
was born in 1955 in
Ann Arbor. About a year or two after his father Richard opened King's Keyboard House, Rob started working at the store, cleaning. He started taking piano lessons at age 5 from
a private teacher, and by age 12 had discovered the drums. "I liked the way they sounded," he
explains, and for three or four years took private lessons. Soon he stopped
taking lessons to play on his own, however, and ceased his piano lessons, as
well.
In high
school Rob was in various rock/blues bands, and at age 17 joined a group that
played at venues such as the Blind Pig and Mr. Floods in
Ann Arbor. In addition to playing in bands, Rob also began moving pianos at his
father's store. He went to
Pioneer
High School
until 1972, and graduated from
Community
High School in 1974.
In 1977,
Rob joined the band Destroy All Monsters (DAM). Included in the line up was former MC5 bassist Mike Davis and former
Stooges guitarist Ron Asheton. They toured
England
in the late 1970s, played often in
New
York City, and cut records that were mildly
successful. His favorite venue was the
Lyceum in
England
,
where DAM boasted an audience of about 4,000 people. He also loved playing at the CBGB in
New York, though he
prefers the term "new wave" over "punk." DAM played shows with bands such as the Ramones, and Rob even jammed with Iggy Pop on occasion. But being a rock star
wasn't all it was made out to be; Rob discontinued playing with Destroy All
Monsters in 1980 because he was "disappointed in the way things were
going." Before and after DAM, Rob had played in bands that played mostly
cover songs, sticking to the Ann Arbor/Detroit area. Aside from DAM, Rob has
been in bands such as Killer Trout and The Faith Healers.
Rob was
married, but his wife wasn't musical. She was critical of his profession in music, and they divorced after
five years. "Marriage and music
just don't go together," Rob says.
Today Rob
continues to take part in the family business, moving and tuning pianos at King's Keyboard House. He's taken a few jazz drum classes at
Washtenaw
Community College, and has been
working full time with the family since 1980. He lives in
Ypsilanti,
not far from King's Keyboard House and Julie's Music. His church band, Hearts of Joy, includes
guitar, bass, piano, drums, and two vocalists. They play mostly church music, and perform every other Sunday. Top