No doubt one of the most honest and heart-felt musical offerings Rob has ever made, the former member of seminal indie-rock band Change of Heart, who went on to start his own band Rocket Science and then Doctor with The Watchmen’s Daniel Greaves, recorded You Are The Jaguar with no set plan or vision. “I didn’t know what I wanted to do, but I did know that I wanted to make a record and that I was writing songs based on what I was going through at the time,” he remembers telling his manager Jake Gold of The Management Trust.
Drawing from ‘70s U.K. punk to early ‘80s pop to Detroit rock ‘n’ roll, besides writing lyrics from a unique, personal perspective, he arrived at an equally fresh rock sound.
Joining Rob (lead singer and bass) are Niva Chow (vocalist) of Sticky Rice; Damon Richardson (guitar), formerly of Danko Jones; Alex O’Reilly (drums), ex of Doctor; and John Pogue (guitar). All have worked with each other in various other projects before joining Dearly Beloved. "There is an ambiguous identity at work here, both a solo artist and a band," states Rob.
The band’s debut, You Are the Jaguar, was written, produced and recorded by Rob at Toronto’s Orange Studios and in his home studio, Phoebe Street. "The prettiest sounding moments on the record are the darkest in terms of subject matter, and the most brutal and sonically punishing moments are actually the happiest. Simply put, it’s survival art, and it's fraught with all the inherent conflict and turmoil that comes with that,” he says citing "The Butler Routine," "Acquiesce (These Times Are Underrated)" and "Perils of Snap Decisions" as examples of such moments.
Rob, who is Geddy Lee’s nephew and grew up hanging with Rush in the studio, attending concerts and “analyzing their songwriting,” been playing drums and bass in different bands since his teens. One might think after years on the road, particularly with Change Of Heart, that he might not relish the thought of jumping in a van with Dearly Beloved, but he says the whole band is excited.
You Are the Jaguar is not a traditional solo album; it documents life experiences from the perspective of one man yet is buoyed by the generosity and love of close friends. That bond is evident when you see this group live and is also an essential ingredient in making Dearly Beloved stand out from the rest. As Higgins describes, "It's chaos tempered with love and delivered with great fury."
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