Bob Ray Starker described the prime years of the Sovines as “a pretty standard Columbus run.” “Eight years, three or four albums, did some touring, never quit our day jobs,” said Starker, who joined his Sovines bandmate, Matt Benz, at a Clintonville coffee shop for an early July interview. “We had enough people spread around the country that it was worth going out [on tour], but it was never lucrative enough to quit our day jobs. And I feel like…
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