Biography
From a purely personal point of view, the way Rockie
Lynne sees it, life doesn't necessarily begin at birth.
"When I was in the 7th grade I mowed lawns and
saved my money until I had enough to go to JC Penney
and buy a guitar. That was the beginning of my life."
Technically, Life Before Music - LBM - began for this
singer/songwriter in Statesville, North Carolina, in
the Piedmont region of the state where Interstates 40
and 77 meet. It was a small town where many of the residents
make a living in one of the furniture factories and
live their lives according to the strict tenets of the
Southern Baptist Church. "Growing up in my family
it was church, church, church," Rockie recalls.
"Several times a week, sometimes twice in one day.
And according to Southern Baptists, everything is a
sin." Certainly, the notion of a boy, still too
young to read a hymnal, who believed that his own words
he was singing in his head were better than those he
was hearing sung around him by members of the congregation,
would have been regarded as near blasphemy, so he kept
his words and his thoughts to himself.
And luckily for him, a Kodak moment that caught a 4-year-old
Rockie holding his uncle's guitar did not also reveal
the passion in his young heart for music, inexplicable
given the fact that there was none in his own home.
At least not until he bought the guitar and shortly
afterwards a record player from an unlikely source.
"The First Baptist Church was having a yard sale
and there was a cheap little record player with two
albums for 75 cents. We were totally poor, so every
cent mattered. But since the money was going to the
church, my mother guessed it was okay." Had she
been familiar with the artists whose records were part
of the package - KISS and Jimi Hendrix - she no doubt
would have considered it far from okay, a fact Rockie
was well aware of. "I knew I would get into big
trouble if my parents ever actually heard the records,
so I sat in my closet late at night listening to them
really low and trying to figure the songs out on my
guitar."
"I have always gravitated to music. I don't remember
ever not feeling that way. I believed in my heart that
I had something to say, songs to sing that were worth
sharing, that people would want to hear. It wasn't as
if I had the goal of a record deal - that was hardly
conceivable. I just wanted to write songs and make music.
I felt that I was a success just because I managed to
earn a living doing it."
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