Roy Moller

Musical artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Roy Moller is a Scottish singer, songwriter and poet. He was born in Edinburgh in 1963; his parents were from Toronto in Canada, and he was adopted soon after birth.[1] His early musical influences included Elvis Presley, Joy Division, The Fall, Ivor Cutler and David Bowie.[2] He attended Trinity Academy, then moved to Glasgow where he studied English at the University of Strathclyde.[3] While there, he won the Keith Wright Poetry Competition.[4]

Also known asRoy Møller
Born (1963-07-03) 3 July 1963 (age 62)
Edinburgh
Quick facts Background information, Also known as ...
Roy Moller
Background information
Also known asRoy Møller
Born (1963-07-03) 3 July 1963 (age 62)
Edinburgh
Websiteroymoller.bandcamp.com
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Moller played in bands including Meth O.D. and The Wow Kafe. His first solo work was 2003's "Maximum Smile".[3] He has collaborated with Stevie Jackson from Belle and Sebastian[4][5][6] in a band called the Store Keys.[7] He played with Davy Henderson in the band Jesus, Baby![3] When Marc Riley interviewed him on BBC Radio in 2011, he called Moller "Scotland's best-kept secret".[8]

In 2008, Moller had a son with wife Emma, named Peter.[9] In 2013, Moller moved to Dunbar.[4] In 2014 he took My Week Beats Your Year, his musical tribute to Lou Reed, to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe;[10] Gus Ironside called it "witty, mesmerising and highly poignant".[11] In the same year his poetry debut Imports was published by Appletree Writers Press,[12] and his album One Domino was called "intoxicating and compulsively habit-forming".[13]

Moller has been involved in the Dunbar CoastWord Festival,[14] and with Neu!Reekie![3][5] He contributed a poem to The Sea, a 2015 anthology to raise funds for the Royal National Lifeboat Institution.[15] Louder Than War called There's A Thousand Untold Stories (2016) "a tour de force of sparkling lo-fi gems".[16] In 2017 he performed Redemptions, an evening of poetry and song, with Paul Hullah and Martin Metcalfe, at the Scottish Poetry Library.[17] In 2019, Dionysia Press published Moller's poetry collection about his birth and adoption, "Be My Baby" [18] Later that year, he returned to music, by releasing a single, Semicolon with the Chain Pier Group.[19]

Moller's musical work has been compared to Julian Cope, Vic Godard,[20] and Iggy Pop.[7] He is dyspraxic, and believes his experience of dyspraxia has influenced his work.[2][21]

He is a supporter of Tottenham Hotspur F.C.[22]

Discography

  • Speak When I'm Spoken To (2006)
  • Playing Songs No One's Listening To (2011)
  • The Singing's Getting Better (with Sporting Hero, 2012)
  • One Domino (2014)
  • My Week Beats Your Year (2014)
  • There's A Thousand Untold Stories (2016)[23]
  • There's A Thousand More Untold Stories (2016)


References

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