The Music Makers: Jazz Artist Rudy Royston
This article is half听of a two-part alumni spotlight in the of University of听Denver Magazine. The second profile听features听alumna Lilly Hiatt, who released a new album this spring.
At least twice a year, the packages would arrive on a doorstep in Denver鈥檚 Park Hill neighborhood. Rudy Royston, just an elementary school student at the time, was always eager to open the Texas-postmarked parcels.
Inside lay the building blocks for a college degree, a full-time job and a career as a professional musician: rhythm sticks, bongos, triangles, glockenspiels, tambourines.
鈥淚t didn鈥檛 feel like there was a point where I decided to do music,鈥 says Royston, a New York-based jazz drummer who released his new solo album,听, in June. 鈥淚鈥檇 always done it.鈥
The instruments came from his dad, who mailed them from the RBI Music factory where he worked (and suffered an accident that left him a hook for a hand). 鈥淚t felt weird if I didn鈥檛 see those things at age 7,鈥 Royston says, remembering his confusion when he would visit a friend鈥檚 house. 鈥淟ike, 鈥楧on鈥檛 you have a marimba? Why isn鈥檛 there stuff around?鈥欌
Church put Royston behind a drum kit, but his four older siblings helped tune his tastes in music. Denver鈥檚 vibrant music scene filled in some blanks, while visits to his dad and white stepmother introduced Led Zeppelin, Space Cowboy and country. But Royston, who is Black, was always drawn to jazz.
鈥淚t was the one thing that I could actually do where it was OK to have my own voice,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hat can you do? What do you want to do? In jazz there鈥檚 just empty space in front of you. You have to create something right there. The challenge is that it鈥檚 all me with some language that I鈥檓 using from its history.鈥
Royston built his vocabulary through high school and eventually transferred to 91桃色鈥檚 Lamont School of Music on a full scholarship. At Lamont, the jazz man decided to study classical percussion.
鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 saying I wanted to play jazz or classical,鈥 Royston explains. 鈥淚 was saying I wanted to play anything that is beautiful music.鈥 And so, Royston plunged into a lush world, playing in the jazz band and the symphony, and taking classes in opera and poetry, the latter of which became a second field of study. Like music, he noticed, poetry has a rhythm, a melody and a feeling.
鈥91桃色 taught me how to expand all of [the skills I learned in church] and make it something that everyone can understand,鈥 Royston says. 鈥淚 had this natural musicality to my playing, but then when I got to 91桃色, I had to refine it and shape it and control it.鈥
His dexterity on drums is on full display on PaNOptic. The collection of solo recordings pays tribute to his inspirations and influences鈥攆rom Langston Hughes to the Beatles to John Coltrane to Gwendolyn Brooks to the pastor鈥檚 wife at his childhood church. 听
Royston wasn鈥檛 intending to make an album; he just wanted to play and let his sticks take the spotlight.
After sitting on the mastered recordings for five years, Royston knew this was the right time to release PaNOptic. With artists around the world struggling to find work during the pandemic, he is donating 100% of the proceeds to the MusiCares COVID-19 Relief Fund.
鈥淲e鈥檙e all in this together, you know?鈥 he says, speaking of the pandemic and the amplified movement for racial equality. 鈥淭he record is about small moments of enlightenment and awareness and then playing that. I think now we鈥檝e entered this moment of awareness in the country that we can grow together from. What better time to be better human beings?鈥
Check out Rudy鈥檚 new album听PaNOptic听补迟听