The story of RSP begins just South of Detroit in 1997. Longtime friends Jeff Howey (Guitar) and Darrell Robertson (Drums) found themselves in the midst of putting together a new music project and searching for a vocalist with a powerful and distinct [+]The story of RSP begins just South of Detroit in 1997. Longtime friends Jeff Howey (Guitar) and Darrell Robertson (Drums) found themselves in the midst of putting together a new music project and searching for a vocalist with a powerful and distinct voice. At just about the same time, longtime friend Rick Stafford returned to Detroit from several years in San Francisco, where he had honed his skills to become just the throat that Jeff and Darrell had in mind. The three had been friends as children, growing up and playing together in the actual "Ray Street Park" located in Riverview, Michigan, and now found themselves using that common bond as the starting point for something that would eventually become far greater than each individual had ever dreamed.
Adding female vocalist Schell Robertson and bassist Tom Jeffers, the band known as Ray Street Park went on to release their self-titled debut in 1999, which sold more than 1,500 copies. Performing steadily as both an original band and a four set a night cover outfit, the band had grown leaps and bounds by the end of 2001, when they decided to part ways with Schell and pursue a more balls-out, powerful sound that had thus far eluded them.
Emerging from Pete Bankert's infamous Rock City Studios in the winter of 2002 with their sophomore release "Lubricated", Ray Street Park had finally become the mature, emotion-laden, power-packed ball of thunder that the three founding members had envisioned six years before. Backed by sales of over 2,000 copies of "Lubricated", the band had to yet undergo one more major change, and the addition of bassist Terry Alan Martin, formerly of the well-known Detroit band Vinyl, has today cemented the outfit as a true force to be reckoned with when you talk about hard music in the Motor City.
Now sporting a 2004 Detroit Music Award Nomination for "Outstanding Live Performance" and 2005 nominations in the "Outstanding Live Performance" and "Outstanding Hard Rock/Metal Band" categories, RSP is charging forward into the future led by vocalist Rick Stafford and his masterful stage presence and powerful throat. He is the frontman's frontman, and leads a Ray Street Park audience with the same panache that only a young David Lee Roth once possessed.
Guitarist Jeff Howey is a dive
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