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Brett Rosenberg
Itchy to stake out new ground, Brett Rosenberg is moving to Nashville in April. (Ricardo De Lima)
ROCK NOTES

Brett Rosenberg says goodbye to Boston

Today, Brett Rosenberg is in a hurry. But then, he’s always been in a hurry. To write good songs, to make better records, to be in a great band. Since the singer-guitarist moved to Boston from his hometown of Albany eight years ago, Rosenberg’s succeeded on most of those counts, and sometimes all of them.

At 28, he’s released six well-received albums, plays lead guitar with the Boston glam rock ’n’ soul combo the Rudds, is a member of Graham Parker’s touring band, and has been nominated for three Boston Music Awards. He also fronts his own power-pop outfit, the Brett Rosenberg Problem, occasionally plays second guitar with his upstate New York heroes the Figgs, and has even been a sideman for legendary rock star groupie turned tell-all author Bebe Buell (who also happens to be actress Liv Tyler’s mom).

But Rosenberg’s itchy to stake out new ground, and come April that means a move to Nashville. His monthlong residency at Toad, which begins Feb. 1 and continues every Thursday night with a full band, is being billed as a series of farewell shows.

‘‘I’m just looking for a little adventure, a little change of pace,’’ says Rosenberg during a quick interview over the phone from Cambridge’s Moontower studios, where he’s in the middle of recording keyboard tracks for a batch of new songs. ‘‘Nashville is warm and cheap, and I’m in no hurry to move to another really expensive city again after living in Boston for eight years. I’m looking forward to it — what else am I gonna do here?’’

Rudds frontman John Powhida says he’ll miss Rosenberg not only as a bandmate, but as a friend, roommate, and musical inspiration. ‘‘Brett always encouraged my edgy and wild ideas and has kept me from succumbing to middle-aged laziness,’’ writes Powhida in an e-mail. ‘‘I, of course, will miss his fine singing voice and great arranging and production skills. ..... I would be lying if I said I wasn’t concerned about the Rudds’ guitar future.’’ But, he adds, Rosenberg ‘‘wants to continue touring with the Rudds and I will be delighted to keep him in the band in that capacity.’’

Although Rosenberg claims he’s never even set foot in Nashville, that’s precisely the point. Discovery of the unknown and setting up new challenges are what it’s all about, he says — just like the ones he set for himself when he moved to Boston as a pimply, precocious kid of 20 and within a year had a band and an album’s worth of clever, catchy tunes he put out as ‘‘Pop Riot!’’ (a disc of ‘‘songs about girls that are short, raw, and fast,’’ as he accurately described it to me then). Now he says he finds it difficult to listen to his early songs. He likes his latest album, ‘‘Drop Dead Air,’’ which he self-released last autumn, much better.

‘‘Before, making a record was about compensating for my lack of confidence,’’ he says. ‘‘I hadn’t really been in a band before [the Problem] and had to embrace the generic for the sake of just learning how to use a template and create something listenable. I feel like I’m writing more like a 22-year-old now than I did back then, when I felt like I was trying to write like I was 30 — and coming up with 12.’’

Still, there’s a kind of pure, guileless, underdog charm to Rosenberg’s early albums that makes them exhilarating, if at times interchangeable. ‘‘That’s kind of the problem with Boston — there’s a little too much support for local music,’’ he says. ‘‘A lot of bands like mine made albums that were less than stellar and got fawned over. And bands either broke up or didn’t grow or got [angry] the first time somebody gave them a bad review — or an accurate review.

‘‘Bands have it a little too easy here sometimes,’’ he continues. ‘‘You have to have confidence in your abilities, but most people have confidence in their hype instead — confidence in what other people think about you instead of what you’re actually doing. So you don’t actually end up doing anything. If I were to isolate the flaws of everything I’ve done in the past six years, that would probably be it.’’

Nevertheless, Rosenberg credits Boston as the city that taught him how to be a musician. ‘‘I learned a ton about music and playing and the process of writing and recording an album,’’ says Rosenberg, who adds that he has ‘‘no intention’’ of leaving the Rudds, despite the geographical distance. ‘‘Where I came from in Albany, you can’t really just play your songs out and get 100 or 200 people to show up. But I want to do that in 20 other cities — there’s more adventure to be had than driving down the street and playing a show. I feel I’m ready to go.’’

Then he laughs, a little nervously perhaps. ‘‘I’ll probably be back here in six months.’’

The Brett Rosenberg Problem’s farewell residency at Toad starts Feb. 1 and continues every Thursday in February. All shows (with opening acts) begin at 7 p.m. No cover. Call 617-497-4950 or go to brettrosenberg.com for more information.

BITS & PIECES. Tonight: Robin Lane and the Chartbusters are at the Lizard Lounge. The Coffin Lids headline the Abbey Lounge. Luminescent Orchestrii and Sxip Shirey (the latter with Dresden Dolls drummer Brian Viglione) are at P.A.’s Lounge. Tomorrow: Twilight Ranchers are at the Plough & Stars. Monday: Rhys Chatham’s Guitar Trio All-Stars (featuring Chris Brokaw) are at Great Scott. Tuesday: Incubus headlines an Avalon bill with Albert Hammond Jr. The Hillbilly Pilgrims, featuring Mark Erelli, are at the Plough & Stars. Wednesday: Los Diablos are at Atwood’s Tavern. Thursday: Jabe Beyer and the Boutiques are at Atwood’s.

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