Denver-based Rock N Roll is Dead keeps it simple: straight-ahead rock and roll, powered by the songs of Lenny Kravitz and The Black Crowes. The band formed the way a lot of the best Denver projects do—through years of crossing paths, sharing stages, and finding the right chemistry. Pat, Rich, Robert and Will connected through different local bands, and once Aaron joined to complete the lineup, everything locked in. Expect big riffs, deep grooves, and the kind of set that reminds you rock never went anywhere.
Lead Vocals, Rhythm Guitar
Will LLoyd
Will, an Orlando native now based in Highlands Ranch, started on piano early before switching to guitar in his late teens. A longtime Denver cover-band guitarist/bassist and vocalist with a love for blues, rock, and alternative, he’s excited to deliver straight-up rock ’n’ roll with Rock N Roll is Dead.
Lead Guitar, Backup Vocals
Robert Finke
Robert has been playing electric guitar for over 25 years, with side quests on drums and bass. He’s spent that time chasing the perfect tone for every song and is fluent in the Helix, Kemper, and Tone Master Pro ecosystems. If you want to nerd out on effects chains, amp profiles, impulse responses, and speaker impedance curves, Robert’s your guy
Keys, Backup Vocals
Rich Field
Rich Field has been playing classical piano since he was 9—back when lessons meant posture, precision, and balancing pennies on his hands. If one fell, he got a not-so-gentle reminder to steady up. These days he brings that same control (and a whole lot of swagger) to the keys for Rock N Roll is Dead. Just don’t heckle him… unless you’re trying to get turned to glass.
Drums, Backup Vocals
Pat Dubois
Born in Chicago and now based in Littleton, Patrick has always been surrounded by music. He started on piano like most of us, but eventually found his home behind the kit—banging the skins for local blues, classic rock, ’80s/’90s, grunge, and even live rap bands.
Bass, Backup Vocals
Aaron Levin
Aaron picked up the bass and went straight for Rush — Working Man and The Trees were his first two songs, and he never looked back. The Beatles, Black Sabbath, and a grunge phase he’s still very much in, rounded out the rest. Deep pocket groove, heavy influence, and the low end that drives Rock N Roll Is Dead.