About RkS

Bassist RkS (he started
using the moniker RkS "professionally" at the age of 10) has been
involved in musical endeavors and explorations since the tender age of three,
when he was introduced to music by his father, a music educator and classical
musician. With the 6-string electric “contra bass” and fretless electric bass
being his main tools of the trade today, RkS originally began playing violin,
initially studying the Suzuki violin method, which gave him an early and solid
foundation in the fundamentals of music theory and musicianship. Throughout his
youth, Rk studied and played various instruments, including violin, piano and
an assortment of brass instruments. But his exposure to 1970’s heavy
jazz-fusion and (now classic) progressive rock began to plant the seed of
interest in rock music and its various experimental off-spring. Listening to
bands like Return to Forever, Pat Metheny Group, Yes, Rush, and even early
electronic music from bands like Kraftwerk inspired Rk to be drawn more to
keyboards and synthesizers initially, which he still is interested in. However,
Rk gives credit to the music of Weather Report with infecting him with the
virus of electric bass infatuation which has motivated him musically ever
since.
The first time he heard the late, great Jaco
Pastorius’ bass playing on the Weather Report album Heavy Weather, Rk knew he
wanted to play bass. He was 8 years old at the time. But it wasn’t until around
age 11, after co-founding his first rock band (a trio in which he played
keyboards . . . there was no bass player), that he actually got his hands on
the instrument which in this case was a Hondo Precision Bass knock-off which
was lent to him by his good friend, the band’s guitarist’s Eric Daugherty’s
older brother who wasn’t using it very much. Much to the delight of himself and
his young musical cohorts, Rk had a natural ability on the instrument and could
also replicate and easily learn bass lines for tunes that the band had desired
to play. From that point, although Rk was very involved in his grade school,
junior high, and high school music programs by playing trumpet and other brass
instruments, he shifted most of his focus to bass. He saved money from mowing
lawns in the summer to buy his first bass, a cheap SG-shaped thing made by the
Kay musical instrument company. In the early 1980’s Rk co-founded a progressive
rock cover band (mostly Rush and Pink Floyd) called Time Piece with Eric on
guitar, young 6-string phenom Eddie Maioro on lead guitar, drummer Dana Gilman,
and vocalist Rich Black while in junior high school, and became a prominent
figure in the youth music community in his area. The band continued when Rk
entered high school, replacing Dana with drummer Mark Bencivengo and Rich Black
with vocalist David Kalm. They also dropped guitarist Eddie Maioro when he went
to a different high school. Rk started to sit in with other bands and projects
and also helped organize independent rock shows and battles of the bands in and
around his high school.
Rk has always tried to keep busy as a player,
even from the early days. After participating in a few of the honors regional
and tri-state Jazz Band programs, he scored a spot in the Jazz Studies program
at William Paterson College in NJ, and not only studied the acoustic and
electric bass and jazz music, but continued to play in an odd combination of
jazz-fusion and punk and hardcore projects. Always having an interest in both
heavy and experimental music which was fueled by punk, hard core, new wave and
early alternative movements of the 1980’s and early 1990’s, one of the most
notable projects that Rk played in was the “art-core” quartet called Ultraism,
featuring Rk on fretted and fretless basses, drummer Bencivengo, guitar
experimentalist John Kayes and singer David Kalm. Rk still regards this as one
of his most fond band experiences. At this time, Rk was greatly influenced by
such performers and groups as King Crimson, Adrianne Belew, Robert Fripp, Andy
Summers, Talking Heads, David Byrne, ,
Mick Karn, and even heavier bands like Black Flag, Henry Rollins Group, Bad
Brains, and .
It was the summer of 1989 that changed Rk’s
musical career. After making a decision to shift academic gears to studying
multi-media production, Rk transferred further south in NJ to Rowan University
(then Glassboro State College), where he pursued a degree in Radio, Television,
and Film production. However, upon arriving there, Rk discovered a thriving
independent music scene in and around South jersey and ,
and fell in with the musical community on campus. It was here that he met up
with the likes of keyboardist Kenneth A. Johnson, guitarists Sean Heim and Mark
Sannuti, vocalists Suzanne Hamilton and Paul Knox, and a host of drummers
including Jay Fisher and Joe Wells. Here, Rk became an integral member in a
number of progressive rock and funk bands and recording projects including the
funk band Chocolate City, the experimental funk “jam band” quartet Room Full Of
Booty (both with guitarist Heim and keyboardist Tom Weber, as well as Joe Wells playing kit for the latter, and Jay Fisher on drums for the former), the “roots rock”/cover band A Few Moments Later (also with Wells on drums), and the progressive
rock ensemble called The Web (featuring Heim and Xperiment guitarist Mark Sannuti on guitars), which eventually morphed itself into the
psychedelic-progressive heavy funk band Yurasis Dragon. Yurasis Dragon, or YD, as it’s fans
fondly referred to it (the last incarnation featured Rk on 6-string “contra
bass” and fretless bass, Ken Johnson on keyboards/sequencing/samples, Suzanne
Hamilton on vocals, Jay Fisher on drums, and guitar virtuoso Bill Molchanow),
played shows and engaged in some recording projects (one of which was produced
by New Jersey Indie-Rock production giant Greg Frey). The band continued to
thrill and South Jersey Philly club audiences with its
onslaught of technique, blazing guitar and keyboard solos, and solid foundation
of funk, until the band finally dissolved in 1999, having its last show at the
popular Pontiac Grille in Philly.
At this time, Rk took an all too lengthy and
somewhat forced hiatus from musical performing to deal with “everyday life”
issues, but the sweet, sultry tones of the bass constantly called to Rk and he
soon returned to recording and playing in projects. In 2001, he began working
on recording sessions with musicians like Bo Child and Mark Hill of Heard of
Blues and Stringzville, singer-songwriter Steve Kunzman, and singer-songwriter
Carol Barbieri, who he continues to play the occasional show with in support of
her most CD release, Let it Go, which he lent his bass playing skills to.
During the past five years or so, and currently, Rk has been busy
playing more rock-oriented projects as well as jazz sessions, recording
projects and shows including:
• The groundbreaking and exploratory WordRock collaborative production
project
Dawson/Scott, featuring poet/spoken-word artist Cyndi Dawson
and Rk.
• The avant garde/experimental rock and modern punk trio
Tweede Kamer, with Mark Bencivengo on drums and guitarist/songwriter Chris
McMillan on guitar and vocals.
• Acoustic rock/indie rock ensemble known as Back-Alley Diplomats.
•The progressive rock/electronica creative
collective known as The Xperiment, founded by ex-Web guitarist Mark Sannuti and
his wife, keyboardist Linda Sannuti.
• The classic rock live review known as TnT Blues.
And many others.
So what does the musical future hold for RkS? In
addition to continuing the aforementioned projects, Rk is interested in doing
solo productions which bring him into new areas of playing. Rk has always had a
side-interest in electronic music, but in addition to continuing to listen to
and study past and current experimental and progressive rock music and bass
playing, he has turned his sites to the blossoming electronica scene in the
and in , particularly the jungle, breakbeat and
drum-and-bass genres. After re-evaluating his sound, Rk has been going back to
basics and paying much more attention to groove and foundation in his sound and
playing. He feels that many of the more adventurous and intricate electronica
forms not only explore this, but integrate real bass playing and drumming
rather than sequenced and synthesized bass parts. Inspired by producers and
projects such as Junglefunk (featuring Living Colour drummer Wil Calhoun and
Bassist Doug Wimbish), LTJ Bukem, Dieselboy, Salmonella Dub, as well as
state-side “hip-hop” performers like Erykha Badu and The Roots, Rk is currently involved in an independent, groove oriented electronic release which not only features all “real” bass tracks and more fretless
playing, but some ambient guitar work by him, and numerous guest appearances
from his musical cohorts. The upcoming Dawson/Scott full-legnth release employs these influences, techniques, and principals, and also features musical compositions and production by Rk. In addition to working on solo production work, Rk
continues to seek out studio session work from area independent artists as well
as the aforementioned live band projects. With a vast bass-playing resume
stretching over 26 years, Rk hopes to become a low-frequency force to recon
with in the
independent and live music scene, and possibly beyond. Rk has also been
experimenting with producing live digital recordings of the various gigs
he is involved in.

RkS currently plays Yamaha electric bass instruments, Tune Guitar Technology electric bass instruments and Michael Kelly Guitar Company acoustic bass instruments, and Gallien-Krueger bass amplification.