David Roach Dies Aged 59: The Voice of Junkyard and the Soul of Sunset Strip
David Roach, the gravel-throated frontman of Junkyard and one of the unsung heroes of late-’80s hard rock, has died at the age of 59 following a courageous battle with squamous cell carcinoma. He passed away peacefully at home, held by his wife Jennifer, just two weeks after the couple exchanged vows in a deeply emotional ceremony attended by his bandmates.
Roach wasn’t just a singer—he was a force. Born in Texas and forged in the fire of Los Angeles’ Sunset Strip, he co-founded Junkyard in 1987, a band that defied easy categorization. While their peers leaned into glam excess or hardcore fury, Junkyard carved out a blues-soaked, streetwise sound that felt like the bastard child of Lynyrd Skynyrd and Guns N’ Roses. Their self-titled debut in 1989, released on Geffen Records, was a raw, swaggering statement, with Roach’s voice cutting through the mix like a switchblade in a smoky dive bar.

Tracks like “Hollywood” and “Simple Man” weren’t just songs—they were snapshots of a scene teetering between glory and grit. Roach’s delivery was never polished, never pretty, but always honest. He sang like he’d lived every lyric, and chances are, he had.
Junkyard’s second album, Sixes, Sevens & Nines, dropped in 1991, with production from Ed Stasium and contributions from Steve Earle. But just as the band was gearing up for a third release, Geffen pulled the plug. The record was shelved, and Junkyard disbanded in 1992. Roach, undeterred, formed Borracho and kept the music alive, eventually reuniting with Junkyard in 2000. Their 2017 comeback album High Water proved they still had plenty to say—and plenty of fire to say it with.

Roach’s final years were marked by resilience. Diagnosed with an aggressive form of cancer in early 2025, he faced the disease with the same grit that defined his music. His wife Jennifer became his full-time carer, and fans rallied around a GoFundMe campaign that raised over $36,000 to support his treatment. Even in the face of illness, Roach remained a beacon of generosity and humor, donating artwork and lifting spirits with his signature charm.

Bandmate Chris Gates summed it up best: “I loved him like a little brother. We had our ups and downs, but that never changed. I’ll miss playing music with him, but he’ll always be an important part of me”.
David Roach wasn’t a household name, but he was a lifeblood of a scene that prized authenticity over artifice. He sang for the outsiders, the misfits, the ones who never quite fit the mold. And in doing so, he became a legend in his own right.
Play some Junkyard tonight. Turn it up loud. That voice deserves to echo.
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David Roach Dies Aged 59: The Voice of Junkyard and the Soul of Sunset Strip@RockNews
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