Search results
Robert Alan Ezrin OC (born March 25, 1949) is a Canadian music producer and keyboardist, best known for his work with Lou Reed, Alice Cooper, Aerosmith, Kiss, Pink Floyd, Deep Purple, Peter Gabriel, Andrea Bocelli and Phish.
Feb 9, 2024 · Bob Ezrin paid tribute to Wayne Kramer – his friend of over 50 years – and said the upcoming final MC5 album, Heavy Lifting, was a fitting tribute to the late band leader. The record had...
- Martin Kielty
Nov 29, 2021 · In the world of Bob Ezrin (dubbed ‘Bobo Earzone’ by Hanoi Rocks; he worked with them on their Three Steps From The Move release in 1984), there was a little thing called ‘pre-production’ that had to be factored in – a first-time experience for Kiss, who must have felt they were suddenly back at school.
- Dante Bonutto
Sep 28, 2023 · Last year, producer of Pink Floyd’s The Wall Bob Ezrin gave David Gilmour’s iconic second guitar solo on Comfortably Numb an extra layer of mysticism by revealing the lead effort that eventually made the final cut was the Stratocaster master’s first take.
Aug 8, 2024 · We had Bob Ezrin produce it after we covered Argent’s old song as a test to see if we could work with him. But we completely reworked it; Argent’s version was inappropriate for Kiss. Our version was a part of the Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey soundtrack, and then we committed to working with Bob for Revenge .”
Feb 1, 2014 · His pivotal break came in 1970, when he witnessed an Alice Cooper performance at New York’s legendary Max’s Kansas City. Though Ezrin was just 19 at the time, his belief in the Cooper band was strong enough that he convinced Richardson to give him a shot at producing the group.
People also ask
Who is Bob Ezrin?
Did Bob and Ezrin work together?
Why did Bob Ezrin write'revenge'?
Did Bob Ezrin really 'pre-production' Kiss?
Does Alice Cooper reunite with Bob Ezrin?
Did Bob Ezrin mention David Gilmour's first solo?
Bob Ezrin: For me, number one, all time, is the solo in the middle of the song “Comfortably Numb” and right behind it comes the solo at the end of “Comfortably Numb” by David Gilmour of the little English band called Pink Floyd.