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    <title>Rocco DeLuca</title>
    <link>http://www.bmi.com/affiliate/rss/C3502</link>
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    <dc:rights>Copyright 2008</dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2008-05-16T14:00:01-05:00</dc:date>
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      <title>Rocco DeLuca</title>
      <link>http://www.bmi.com/musicworld/entry/535190</link>
      <description></description>
      <dc:subject>DeLuca, Rocco, Diddley, Bo, Hooker, John Lee, Blues, Hitmaker</dc:subject>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>If you&#8217;re the type of singer/songwriter to name your debut album <em>I Trust You to Kill Me</em> (Ironworks), chances are you&#8217;re not going to be shy in interviews &#8212; and so it is with <a id='f3502' class='f3502' href='/affiliate/C3502'>Rocco DeLuca</a>, a 30-year-old modern blues act who&#8217;s more Robert Johnson than Robert Cray.</p>

<p>&#8220;The music I was raised on had heat. Energy. That feeling of aggression,&#8221; he declares. &#8220;The music of today seems so washed out and generic. To get &#8217;em back, we needed to stick the real soul, that punk element back into it.&#8221;</p>

<p>Whether on the soul-baring &#8220;Speak to Me,&#8221; the richly textural &#8220;Bus Ride&#8221; or the plainspoken drug tale &#8220;Dope,&#8221; DeLuca, his Dobro steel guitar and his band The Burden deliver a searingly mesmerizing sound that&#8217;s hard to shake.</p>

<p>No surprise, then, to find that the clich&#233; about music &#8220;being in his blood&#8221; is more truthful than usual: His father was a touring guitarist for such notable blues acts as <a id='f888' class='f888' href='/affiliate/C888'>Bo Diddley</a>. &#8220;I remember he and my uncles would have these late-night jam sessions and I would hang out with them and then end up crawling into Uncle Joe&#8217;s bass drum and falling asleep to the drone,&#8221; he grins.</p>

<p>DeLuca himself eventually became a local opener throughout his native southern California for Taj Mahal and <a id='f2619' class='f2619' href='/affiliate/C2619'>John Lee Hooker</a> before graduating to a two-year residency at L.A.&#8217;s Gypsy Lounge..</p>

<p>A demo caught the ears of Jude Cole and 24 star Kiefer Sutherland, who signed DeLuca to their Ironworks label in 2005; Cole produced the album, while Sutherland shepherded DeLuca and his band on their first international press tour &#8212; a sometimes chaotic affair &#8212;  as recorded in a 2006 documentary also titled <em>I Trust You to Kill Me</em>.</p>

<p>Slowly, steadily, DeLuca is making a name for himself. &#8220;You&#8217;ve gotta die a few times and be fierce enough to fall,&#8221; he asserts. &#8220;I&#8217;ve fallen on my face many times. But it&#8217;s those times and battle scars that make my music what it is today.&#8221;</p>
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      <dc:date>2007-08-01T02:57:00-05:00</dc:date>
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