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The Trust: News

Two words: Come together - March 1, 2006

A month after his death,
Nate Robinson’s friends remember
BY RAY RIZZO

I cannot tell you about Nate in 500 words. I will try to find him in a few haikus printed in a paper that I am pretty sure he never read. Not that he disliked LEO. I think Nathan appreciated LEO because his friends and the musicians he spent his time working with read it, if only to see their names written inside. It is good for the paper — hell, this city — that Nate’s friends are among its community. It is good of this paper to give 500 words to Nathan Robinson: sound engineer, musician, friend, brother, son, grandson. All over the city this week, many of Louisville’s Most Eccentric Observers can gather upon this memorial, smoke a Red or a Green, toss back some Makers and ask our newest space traveler, “S’up?”

It isn’t good that we’re here and Nate is gone. For those who didn’t know him, Nate would like you to take these 500 words and rearrange them in any manner you see fit so they may work for someone you know who might leave this world loved but with not as much in print. Now you know. For those who did know him, 500 words aren’t enough. And yet — Nathan: one word opens a universe. Nathan, a memory: “Let me eat it!” Nathan, a sign: “Peace!” Nathan, a sound: “The bass tone is the fuunk!”

Nathan is reaching beyond his body now. That is some wild shit, Nate. It’s crayyyzy! You better cut this out and put it on your fridge. Because any place of Nathan’s was a place worth gathering. Dog shit on the floor, ashtray runneth over, fuck it. In Nathan’s home, pizza from last night’s crew was daily bread. You bet your ass I gave thanks to have it. Nathan showed me there was nothing in the loaves, ya dummy. It was the people you broke bread with. He also tried to talk me out of eating stale pizza.

Nathan never sat at a table, a bar or recording studio where he didn’t take you in as a friend. I believe the ledger of Nate Dawg balanced all debts, graces and minor thefts in the currency of essence. Now, Nathan would be first to say that “essentials” like friendship, sonic alchemy and laughter were not as good as cash when you are starting your own recording business, but he was just starting to get calls from people who understood his worth. In his presence I always felt lucky.

I’ve thought about Travis Meeks a lot this week. The day Nathan died, Travis told me he saw Jesus once. In Los Angeles, late into an emotional night. Travis looked upon his couch to see Jesus sitting, smoking a Marlboro Red. When he outed Jesus from his disguise, Travis says Jesus sat back on the couch, got real quiet and grinned a shiteating grin until the sun rose. Nathan, the word in Hebrew: “God has given!”

One more thing — I’m sure I’m over my limit, but this is important. I’d like to tell the other driver, on behalf of at least a few of Nathan’s friends gathered here at this memorial: There is nothing you need forgiveness for. But if it helps, you are forgiven. I mean, I am sure if Nathan could have got up and kicked in your bumper and cursed for a month, you would have heard nothing like it, laughed your ass off, and eventually become cool. If he were here, Nathan would tell you that this is just some fucked up shit that happens.

I know you don’t know me, but here it is in Nate’s 500 words. Or you could take Travis’ mom’s word for it. When she called Travis, she said, “Goddammit, Trav, I know that boy, and when he went into critical condition I knew he’d take one look at the other side, look back at us and say, ‘Fuck y’all!’”

Ray Rizzo is a Louisville writer and musician living in Brooklyn. Contact him at http//motherlodge.blogspot.com

Recording engineer Nate Robinson dies - February 10, 2006

Recording engineer Nate Robinson dies
24-year-old victim of auto accident

By Paula Burba
Obituary information
pburba@courier-journal.com
The Courier-Journal

Nathan "Nate" Robinson, a 24-year-old recording engineer who was well-known in the Louisville music community, died Tuesday from injuries suffered in a wreck Monday night.

Robinson, who was driving a Honda Accord, was turning from Stony Brook Drive onto Hurstbourne Parkway near Bardstown Road at about 8:45 p.m. Monday when a northbound Ford Mustang ran a red light and hit Robinson's car, said Alicia Smiley, a Louisville Metro Police spokeswoman.

Robinson underwent surgery at University Hospital while friends crowded the waiting room, said his mother, Rhonda Ledford.

"He wouldn't give up," Ledford said of her son.

But Robinson died about 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, she said.

He was a 2000 graduate of Breckinridge County High School and attended Middle Tennessee University in Murfreesboro for a semester before moving to Nashville, Tenn., to complete a sound and audio engineering vocational program.

A guitar player since the seventh grade, Robinson preferred the technical side of the music business, his mother said. After school, he got a job at DSL Studios when he was only 20.

He took a year off to tour the country with Travis Meeks, former leader of the band Days of the New. He returned home to Louisville and in the past few years had worked with such local acts as Catch Kennedy, am Sunday, Ray Rizzo, the Java Men and Todd Hildreth, said his brother, Timothy Robinson.

A CD he had recorded, mixed and engineered for The Trust, formerly the Herbie Hinkle Ensemble, was released at Headliner's Music Hall on Jan. 28.

The crash is under investigation, Smiley said. A passenger in Robinson's car was treated at University Hospital and released, and the driver and a passenger in the Mustang were taken there for observation, Smiley said.

-------------------------------------------------

There are so many things, I could say about Nate... He was a true professional, a master of Pro Tools, and sound engineering in general, generous, straight forward, and honest. He'd give you his opinion, and usually he was right. I think Nate's favorite song on The Trust cd was "Inside Out." I used his Taylor acoustic on that track, which for me, has become completely magical. He kept saying, "Whenever you quit being a pussy, and wanna lay it down, here's the guitar you wanna use... trust me." Then he'd bust out with that unique laugh of his...

The last three months spent in his basement are a treasure. We learned instantly to work together as a team. Feeding off of each other and learning from each other. There was even talk of of joining forces, so to speak. My home studio, and his. I can only imagine what the results of that could have been. What it boils down to for me is, we played and recorded the tracks, but Nate is all over our cd. His emotion, ideas, edits, work ethic, inspiration... I could go on forever.

See you on the other side my brother.
We love you.

For those who came and rocked.. We salute you! - January 29, 2006

We just want to thank all of you who attended the cd release show last night. It was a HUGE success! You guys made it happen. Give yourselves a pat on the back. Thank you, Thank you, Thank you.

I keep hearing a rumor that some people saw some sort of ghostly apparition durring our set?? I didn't see anything. I'm wondering what some of you are talking about. Let me know.

Again, thanks for your support, you guys rock. Sorry for the cheesy AC/DC reference, but it seemed logical.

Peace bitches!
The Trust

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - December 28, 2005

The Hawk, The Trust And Gillis Announce Triple Bill Release Party


Louisville, KY – In a self-effacing move for most artists hungry for attention from media and local audiences, 3 Louisville artists have come together to share the spotlight releasing all three of their albums on the same night. The Hawk, The Trust and Gillis will be celebrating the release of their respective EPs Saturday January 28th at Headliners Music Hall (1386 Lexington Road, Louisville) with performances by all three acts and special guest Shirock from Nashville Tennessee.



The Hawk, fronted by Songwriter/Vocalist/Guitarist Josh Hawkins, have been roaming the rock venues of Louisville this past year building a powerful following around a ferocious live show and a frontman with the range of Buckley and the brazenness of a carnival barker. Recorded and mixed in Lexington Kentucky by engineer / producer Duane Lundy, Tied With Tiny Strings will mark the debut recording by this genre jumping band of musical misfits.



The Trust, formerly The Herbie Hinkle Ensemble, decided to honor the passing of their founding member Herbie Hinkle with a new self-titled release, The Trust is packed full of 70’s after-school-special soul rock. Jon Beazlie fronts what could be Louisville’s most underrated / unknown outfit of rock-n-roll wanderers. Produced and recorded entirely on their own… this album should finally put The Trust in the mix of Louisville’s must-see bands.



Gillis will be showcasing his lo-fi / anti-folk melancholy tales by releasing the EP If It Wasn’t For Gravity. This EP, also produced by Duane Lundy in Lexington Kentucky, focuses on the dynamic of delicate sound and sincere storytelling merging in simple song and minimal production where communication is desired much more than recognition.



Here’s The Info:

Saturday January 28th

Headliners Music Hall • 1386 Lexington Road

Doors at 9:00p • Show at 9:30p

Gillis • The Trust • The Hawk • Nashville’s Shirock will close the evening’s events.

New Everything! - December 5, 2005

Yes, we did it again. We've got a slightly different name, new (er) site, and new music posted. The new cd is due out January 2006. Bring on the ROCK!

Music.. - November 15, 2005

I took the new songs down while we're in the process of getting the final mixes done. You can still hear a few new songs on myspace...
http://www.myspace.com/thehinklefamilytrust

New Songs Posted! - November 5, 2005

Check out the sneak listens on the music page. All songs were recorded by us, and mixed by Nate Robinson.

New CD!! - October 13, 2005

The tracking for our new cd is completed. Mixdown will start within the week. We're hoping to get it printed by Christmas, but the official release will be after the first of the year.

Request us! - August 14, 2005

Send an email between 9am & 11:00 on Fridays ( All Request Friday Morning w/Stacy Owen)
to... studio@wfpk.org

New music posted! - July 29, 2005

So, yeah, check out Mid City Life, Siren and All these songs, on the music page. They were recorded at 91.9 WFPK's "Live Lunch" in January.
Really!

Past email to the list people... - April 16, 2005

People of Herb,
As long as I have known Herbie Hinkle, I knew in the back of my head this would one day come. Folks... Herbie. Is. Dead.
As you may or may not know, Herbie had been sick for quite some time. Last week I got the call from Herb's caregivers that he had passed. Due to the nature of the subject and the reality of "What next?" it has taken some time for me to clearly collect my thoughts, thus resulting in the delay of this news.

From the moment I first met the guy, his pale skin reeked of death... actually, it was probably 90% b. o., 5% gangrene from his left hand, and 5% Old Spice. (That still don't make it right!) When I first set foot in his basement, the empty pill bottles, rubber bands, whisky crates, and piles of used gauze sprinkled with an occasional onion skin, clued me in to Herbie's dire situation, and of course my own cruel whore fate... months and months of tortuous, somewhat cryptic, musical information being crammed into my head, forcing me to ultimately become... A PROFESSIONAL MUSICIAN!

For over three years, The Herbie Hinkle Ensemble has been playing Herb's sung melodies. If you've had the honor of wittnessing the rare appearance of Herbie at a show, you are one of the lucky ones. As ill as he was, it was a wonder he ever made it out at all. (Hence our numerous excuses for his absences.)

The gradually worsening condition of the founder of the band left us confused and frustrated; we knew we were coming to a turning point and a very important decision. The time to make that decision came on Saturday, shortly after the death of Pope John Paul II (which was ironic, because the Pope WAS morally opposed to poisoning stray dogs in the park, unlike Herbie). We knew that Herbie would want us to continue in his absence, but ultimately we were too grief-stricken to move forward with the original band name. Together, we decided to honor Herb's memory by dutifully renaming the band The Hinkle Family Trust.