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Bobby Liebling onstage at the Rock and Roll Hotel in Washington. Photo: The Washington Post

Dark star: how doom metal pioneers Bobby Liebling and Pentagram got one last chance

Pentagram could have been huge, but lead singer Liebling had an appetite for annihilation that almost destroyed him

TNS

The black leather boots Bobby Liebling recently purchased from "the chick section at Nordstrom" look terrific, even if the three-inch heels are killing his feet. And like the rest of his body, his feet ultimately refuse to be killed anyway.

"Overall, I'm doing all right," the 61-year-old says, sipping chocolate milk backstage at Washington's Rock and Roll Hotel on a Saturday night. "I'm still standing upright, and I've still got a semblance of a brain - which is very unusual considering I've probably consumed 30 million dollars' worth of cocaine and heroin."

Much of Liebling's life is shrouded in heavy metal myth, but this is a fact. He's been addicted to the ugliest of drugs for more than four decades, all while fronting Pentagram, a northern Virginia band that pioneered an enchanting and enduring sound that would eventually be dubbed "doom metal".

Much of the turbulence in Liebling's life is laid bare in , an acclaimed and punishing 2011 documentary that begins with the singer rifling through the couch cushions in pursuit of a crumb of crack, and it ends with him relatively cleaned up, newly married and expecting his first child.

Real life kept rolling after the credits, of course, and four years later, Liebling has struggled to maintain the film's happy ending. Recently separated from his wife, he's currently living in an apartment in Gaithersburg, Maryland, where he says he hasn't touched heroin in "years" or cocaine in "months". Pentagram aren't just touring to promote their new album, , so much as to provide the band's founder with a routine, a sense of purpose and as much serenity as there is to be found on a rock 'n' roll tour.

"I get along better with Bobby on the road than off," says Greg Turley, Pentagram's bassist and tour manager. "He has to have functional people around him for him to be able to function. And he gets that on the road."

Pentagram in 2015: Pete Campbell (left), Victor Griffin, Greg Turley and Bobby Liebling. Photo: The Washington Post

An hour before showtime, the green room is crowded with functional people - old high school buddies, longtime fans, former bandmates. Liebling is curled up on a couch, fidgeting with a stockpile of cosmetics, an unplugged hair iron, a pack of cigarettes and a box filled with prescription pills.

He eventually slips into a black studded jacket, then slips out of a pair of impossibly tight blue jeans. Beneath, he's already wearing black Spandex-ish stage pants, covering two legs that aren't much thicker than his arms. He can't weigh much more than 45 kilos, depending on his jewellery.

"Look at all these people," Liebling marvels, now holding court. "It's like a time capsule or like -"

"Like your funeral?" Turley asks.

"Yeah, like my funeral," Liebling replies. "I hope you'll all be there. It won't be long."

He laughs, but the humour feels a little bit darker at a homecoming show like tonight's - especially considering the neighbourhood.

On the way to the Rock and Roll Hotel, Pentagram's tour bus drove right past Liebling's old methadone clinic. Pointing his gnarled finger in another direction, Liebling claims he used to sell drugs out of an abandoned house a few blocks away, as a bottom-tier employee of Rayful Edmond's infamous crack syndicate.

"They used to call me 'Jeez' around here - like, short for Jesus," Liebling says, tugging at the coif that probably earned him the nickname. "That was fine with me. Jesus hung out with whores and thieves, too."

Pentagram in 1973. From left, Vincent McAllister, guitar, Geof O'Keefe, drums, Liebling, and Greg Mayne, bass. Photo: Cameron Davidson

If legends thrive on confusion, Pentagram are about as legendary as it gets. Many say the band started in 1971, but Liebling insists it was 1969. The Virginia native would spend the next 40 or so years pulling and pushing nearly three dozen band members in and out of his maniac gravity, dedicating himself to a sound and a stage persona that was almost as wild as the rest of his life.

"We used to scare people off. I mean, we really tried to horrify them," Liebling says. "Then we realised that it was no fun to play for four people in the room."

Throughout the '70s and into the '80s, Pentagram seemed to dodge fame the same way Liebling dodged death. A 1975 demo session with Blue Öyster Cult producer Murray Krugman went awry after a freak-out from Liebling. Later that year, members of Kiss reportedly pulled up to Pentagram's rehearsal space in a limousine hoping to hear the band play a few songs, but they quickly left shaking their heads.

All the while, Pentagram were helping to establish the sonic, rhythmic and melodic tenets of doom metal. The sound originated with the dense, churning riffs of Black Sabbath, but Liebling is quick to note that he learned the importance of playing in the pocket from a slew of Michigan rock bands, including MC5, Grand Funk Railroad, Alice Cooper, The Frost and others.

Doom takes various shapes today, but it's reliably the sexiest dialect in metal. Instead of harsh right angles, doom is all curves. Instead of asserting power through speed, doom establishes control by slowing things down. "It's harder to play rock slow than it is to play it fast," Liebling says. "You have to contain yourself. You can't break the speed limit, or the cops will get you."

Along with various Washington-area groups led by doom's co-godfather, Scott "Wino" Weinrich, Pentagram eventually began to influence metal musicians in the United States and around the world. Some bands have flirted with the sound (Jack White's band The Dead Weather covered Pentagram's in 2010), while others have made it sound like a spiritual practice (check out Sleep's magnificent and mystifying 2003 album, ).

Pentagram guitarist Victor Griffin says he's glad to see the band's musical influence spreading, but nothing has boosted Pentagram's profile more than the success of . "After the movie came out, you could look into the audience and see a 14-year-old and a 60-year-old singing along to the same song," Griffin says. "And that's great. Bobby and I laugh about it now, but regardless of how late this came, we're grateful to get to do it. We want to keep doing it as long as we physically can."

Griffin knows his crowd. Onstage two hours later, as he burrows into , the people in the front row - boys and girls with voluminous hair, one particularly jolly dude with a Santa Claus beard, assorted kids too young to grow peach fuzz - dutifully bang their heads. The band sounds robust, with Turley and drummer "Minnesota" Pete Campbell giving the right amount of bounce.

Bobby Liebling before the band's recent gig in Washington. Photo: The Washington Post

But it's all eyes on Liebling, who reciprocates the crowd's zeal with a bellow that seems too big, too strong for his too tiny, too frail body.

He struts across the stage like a wizard, turning his eyes into golf balls whenever Griffin takes a solo. At moments, he looks as though he's about to disintegrate - then he grins or blows a kiss or licks the air in front of his moustache.

And when the band finally downshifts to a simmer with , one of Pentagram's earliest songs, the psychic energy of the entire show suddenly reveals itself. You can almost feel the audience bathing their hero in a sweet, protective energy.

"These are gonna be some of my last days here," Liebling sings - a foreboding line that's rung true across five sordid decades. It'll remain a bluff until it isn't.

Tribune News Service

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