Bruce Robb

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Bruce Robb
Bruce Robb.jpg
Background information
GenresRock, R&B, Blues, Alternative Rock, Country Rock, Folk Rock, Classic Rock, Jazz
Occupation(s)Record Producer, audio engineer, musician, and music supervisor
InstrumentsHammond B3, Keys, Vocals
Years active1967–present
LabelsChess Records, Argo Records, RCA Records, Mercury Records, Atlantic Records, ABC-Dunhill Records
Associated actsThe Robbs, Del Shannon, The Lemonheads, Steve Cropper, John Mellencamp, Ringo Starr, Robert Bradley's Blackwater Surprise, Art Garfunkel, Harry Nilsson

Bruce Robb is an American musician, record producer, engineer, and music supervisor. He is most recognized for his time as a member of “The Robbs” during the 1960s, then as a founder of Cherokee Studios in the 1970s; followed by decades of producing, engineering and recording with artists like Mos Def, Macy Gray, Henry Rollins, Steve Vai, The Lemonheads, John Mellencamp, Steve Cropper, Ringo Starr, Etta James, Art Garfunkel, Rod Stewart, Del Shannon, and Wilson Pickett amongst others.[1]

Cherokee Studios founder[]

Cherokee Studios 1.jpg

By 1969, The Robbs now calling themselves “Cherokee” had settled on a ranch in Chatsworth, California. With the help of friends Roger Nichols and Toby Foster, the band converted their barn into an artist-owned recording studio. Bruce was particularly enthusiastic about the idea because he had always disliked the sterile vibe in the studios of the era. The studio's first clients started with friends like Del Shannon, who brought Jeff Lynne from Electric Light Orchestra to the facility. As word spread about the facility other artists of note - Little Richard, Bob Crewe, Michael McDonald and others - came to the studio to record. Then, Nichols recorded Steely Dan’s “Pretzel Logic,” which resulted in the studio, now known as “Cherokee Ranch”, earning their first gold record.[2] All the while, Bruce was honing his skills as an engineer and producer under the tutelage of his[citation needed] brother Dee.

In ’74, an eviction for running an “illegal home studio” prompted the Robbs to purchase the former MGM Recording Studios in Los Angeles. The clients of Cherokee Studios included David Bowie, Michael Jackson, Elton John, Bob Dylan, and each one of the Beatles.[3]

Record production and engineering[]

Brothers Robb Production Inc.[]

Robb with Evan Dando Cherokee 2006

An A&R rep named Tom Carolan, who had known the Robb brothers for years at Cherokee, brought them their first major record to produce together with a new alternative band he had scouted for Atlantic Records called The Lemonheads.[4] The album “It's a Shame About Ray” was a commercial success for Evan Dando. The Robbs also did production work for Buffalo Tom and Lita Ford, and then another gold record for The Lemonheads with “Come on Feel the Lemonheads.” During pre-production of the all female Japanese pop-punk band “Shonen Knife,” was diagnosed with cancer.[5] Bruce and Joe completed the album as “The Brothers Robb,” and then shifted focus back to their individual careers. After several years of treatment, Dee returned to the studio and the brothers joined one more time for Ronnie Laws’ “Everlasting.” Although the production charted, their individual producing schedules rarely aligned again. (The partnership ended with Dee's sudden passing in 2008.)

Production work with Steve Cropper[]

Bruce Robb collaborated with Steve Cropper on a record for John Cougar Mellencamp.[6] They also worked on recordings for Levon Helm (of The Band),[7][8] Harry Nilsson[9] and Robben Ford[10] while Cropper made Cherokee his permanent home. The production duo also contributed to Justine Bateman’s and Julia Roberts’ singing debut in the film Satisfaction.[11] Cropper's membership in The Blues Brothers fostered creative relationships with Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi for their movies, such as Dragnet,[12] The Great Outdoors, and the title track by Fear[12] for Neighbors. They also produced two full-length albums for Cropper[13] as well.

Film and television[]

With Scarlett Pomers Premiere 2009

Bruce Robb was uncredited on his first movie soundtrack in the 1970s alongside Flo and Eddie of The Turtles when they produced an original score for a racy Roger Corman produced flick, Dirty Duck. He later also worked with director David Lynch,[14] produced Shelley Duvall and Robin Williams singing showtunes for Robert Altman’s Popeye, and recorded a full orchestra in the scoring of Twins. He has also been credited as a producer alongside music supervisor Evyen Klean, with whom he collaborated for HBO’s Lackawanna Blues. Robb also worked on the Amy Smart vehicle Love N' Dancing, for which he is listed as the music supervisor-producer and soundtrack producer, with other varied music credits (producer, engineer, arranger, mixing, performer, composer) on over 30 original songs recorded for the film's dance choreography.[15]

Work with John Carpenter[]

With John & Cody Carpenter Cherokee 2005

The sci-fi/horror director and composer John Carpenter first hired Robb to produce the soundtrack for Village of the Damned. “Bruce Robb guided our compositions, molded them, shaped them, and when they came out of the speakers they were transformed into one of the most full, most romantic scores I've ever done,” says Carpenter on his official website for the Village soundtrack.[16] Their collaboration on Vampire$,[17] which won a Saturn Award for Best Music from the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, and Ghosts of Mars,[18] for which Robb produced the original heavy metal score performed by Anthrax with Steve Vai, Robin Finck, and Buckethead.

Touring years[]

"The Robbs"[]

Bruce Robb first gained exposure in the music industry as a member of “The Robbs”. The 1960s folk rock band was composed of brothers Dee Robb (lead vocals, guitar), Joe Robb (sax, vocals), Bruce Robb (Hammond B3, vocals) and “cousin” Craig “Robb” Krampf (drums, vocals). After some regional touring success, The Robbs were discovered by Dick Clark while performing at his Teen World's Fair at the International Amphitheatre in Chicago.[19][20] Clark invited the band to guest on his hit music television show, “Where The Action Is.” Fan reaction to The Robb's first TV appearance resulted in the band extending their stay to become series regulars for the final year of the series in 1967. During that same year, the band became one of the three house bands (with The Doors and The Chambers Brothers) at The Whisky on Sunset. The daily TV exposure catapulted the band to a brief celebrity period with heavy coverage in the major teen magazines alongside major groups like The Beatles, The Monkees, and The Kinks. Over the course of their performing years, The Robbs were recorded on Chess, Argo, RCA, Mercury, Atlantic and ABC/Dunhill record labels, and toured with major acts like Jerry Lee Lewis, The Byrds, The Turtles, Buffalo Springfield, and The Beach Boys. The Robbs released a total of two full-length albums and a number of singles with mostly "bubbling under" appearances on the charts. The band never officially “broke up,” but rather got distracted by the spontaneous success of their own studio during the production of their third album (never released).[21]

The Robbs produce Summerfest[]

In 1968, the new arts festival conceived by Milwaukee's then-mayor Henry W. Maier was in the final planning stages, with music noticeably absent. At the urging of business leaders who wanted to attract the youth, the Mayor's office was prompted to contact a Wisconsin native band for help. With a TV show and heavy touring schedule at the time, The Robbs were one of the most successful bands to come from the Milwaukee area. They agreed to headline and produce a music counterpart to the event. But, The Robbs insisted on expanding the city's vision from small concerts on plywood staging at the lakefront, to a giant circus big top with professional sound and lighting and a 3,000-seat capacity. Beginning July 20, Summerfest’s inaugural eight-day concert series stole the spotlight with sold-out daily matinee and evening performances. The Robbs, who were the backup band for other acts throughout the run, were joined onstage by: Ronnie Dove, Freddie Cannon, The Esquires, The New Colony Six, Eric and Errol, The Lemon Pipers, The Next Five, The Destinations, The Messengers, The Picture and The Wet Wild and Away Dancers. Teenage pandemonium far surpassed the conservative city's expectations requiring additional security, but ultimately drawing the highest attendance of all the events of Summerfest.[22][23][24]

The success of the music series attracted many major artists from The Doors, The Beach Boys, and Bob Dylan, to Sting, Metallica, and Prince. After years of planning for Summerfest, the last minute music event launched what has grown to become “The World's Largest Music Festival” (certified by Guinness World Records in 1999) attracting up to 1 million people today.

Companies[]

Quarter 2 Three Records[]

Quarter 2 Three Records is Robb's indie record label. Artists include: blues and classic R&B artist Robert Bradley's Blackwater Surprise, hip hop group JustMATTER, and new artists in development. Recent label releases include: "Out of the Wilderness" by Robert Bradley's Blackwater Surprise and the original soundtrack for the motion picture "Love N' Dancing" by Various Artists.[25]

Bruce Robb Productions[]

In addition to record production, Bruce Robb Productions focuses on original music production and music supervision services for the film, television and commercial industries. Robb's production company handled all of the music department tasks for the Amy Smart dance movie "Love N' Dancing" which was released in 2009.[26] BRP delivered over 30 original songs created for specific dance choreography, with Robb as the lead music producer/composer/supervisor for the film's original score and soundtrack.

A&R Studio Design + Construction[]

A&R Studio Design + Construction is a firm specializing in professional studio builds for the entertainment, broadcast and recording industries. A&R is: acoustic architect George Augspurger, former News Corp./Fox Studio's Project Manager John ANDerson and Robb.[27][28]

List of albums produced, engineered, mixed by Robb[]

Artist Album Credits
Robert Bradley's Blackwater Surprise Out of the Wilderness Producer/Engineer/Mixing/Hammond B3
Robert Bradley's Blackwater Surprise Still Lovin’ You Producer/Engineer/Mixing/Hammond B3
David Jaurequi Fox Bat Strategy: A Tribute to Dave Jaurequi Engineer/Mixing
Donovan Lady of the Stars Producer, engineer, organ
Shelby Lynne Just Because I'm a Woman The Songs of Dolly Parton Producer/Engineer/Mixing
Shelby Lynne Identity Crisis Producer/Engineer/Mixing
Shelby Lynne Definitive Collection Producer/Engineer/Mixing
Various Artists Rise Above: 24 Black Flag Songs to Benefit the West Memphis Three Engineer
The Lemonheads Come on Feel the Lemonheads Producer/Engineer/Mixing/B3
The Lemonheads It's a Shame About Ray & Collector Edition Producer/Engineer/Mixing/B3
Cher Heart of Stone Engineer
Cher Chronicles Engineer
Ronnie Laws Everlasting Producer/Engineer/Mixing/B3
Selena Dreaming of You Engineer/Mixing
Rickie Lee Jones Flying Cowboys Engineer
John Cougar Mellencamp Words & Music: John Mellencamp's Greatest Hits Producer/Engineer/Mixing
John Cougar Mellencamp The Best That I Could Do 1978–1988 Producer/Engineer/Mixing
John Cougar Mellencamp Nothin' Matters and What If It Did Producer/Engineer/Mixing
Dr. John Mos’ Scocious: Anthology Engineer/Mixing
Burton Cummings Dream of a Child Producer/Engineer/Mixing
Burton Cummings Woman Love Producer/Engineer/Mixing
Burton Cummings Sweet Sweet Producer/Engineer/Mixing
Burton Cummings Heart Producer/Engineer/Mixing
Burton Cummings Collection Producer/Engineer/Mixing
Buffalo Tom Big Red Letter Day Producer/Engineer/Mixing/B3
Soul Asylum Grave Dancers Union Engineer/Mixing
Warpipes Holes in the Heavens Engineer
Flo & Eddie Best of Flo & Eddie Engineer/Mixing/B3/Piano/BG vocals
Barbra Streisand The Broadway Album Engineer
Barry Manilow Manilow Engineer/Mixing
Steve Cropper Playing My Thang Producer/Engineer/Mixing
Steve Cropper Night After Night Producer/Engineer/Mixing
Ringo Starr Stop and Smell the Roses Engineer/Mixing
Levon Helm Levon Helm 1978 Engineer/Mixing
Levon Helm Levon Helm 1982 Engineer/Mixing
Harry Nilsson Flash Harry Producer/Engineer/Mixing
Billy Vera & the Beaters The Best of Billy Vera & The Beaters Engineer/Mixing
Billy Vera & the Beaters By Request Engineer/Mixing
Etta James Deep in the Night Engineer/Mixing
Art Garfunkel Watermark Engineer/Mixing
Jean-Luc Ponty Mystical Adventures Engineer
Tower of Power We Came To Play Engineer
Robben Ford The Inside Story Engineer/Mixing
Bob Crewe Motivation Engineer/Mixing
Livingston Taylor Man's Best Friend Engineer/Mixing
Maria Muldaur Open Your Eyes Engineer/Mixing
Nazareth Malice in Wonderland Engineer/Mixing
Jewel First Studio Recording Producer/Engineer/Mixing
The Robbs The Robbs B3, Piano, Background Vocals
The Robbs Cherokee B3, Piano, Background Vocals

List of films and television shows with music credits for Robb[]

Film/TV Credits
Love N' Dancing Music Supervisor

Producer/Engineer/5.1 Mixing Composer/Arranger/Contractor B3/synthesizer/Wurlitzer/Piano/vibes/percussion/ BG vocals Over 30 orig. custom songs

The Story of Hudson Hawk Engineer, Bruce Willis & Robert Kraft piano interview
Masters of Horror: John Carpenter's Cigarette Burns Music Supervisor

Producer/Engineer/Mixing

Lackawanna Blues Producer/Engineer/Mixing

Arranger/Contractor B3/Wurlitzer Orig. prods. w/Mos Def, Macy Gray, Robert Bradley

Just Friends Producer/Engineer/Mixing

“Into Your Arms” (The Lemonheads)

Punch-Drunk Love Producer/Engineer/Mixing
Run Ronnie Run! Producer/Engineer/Mixing

“Ass Kickin’ Fat Kid” theme song w/Scott Ian (Anthrax) & Samantha Maloney (Hole)

Ghosts of Mars Music Supervisor

Producer/Engineer/5.1 Mixing Fender Rhodes Carpenter's score w/Anthrax, Steve Vai, Buckethead, Elliot Easton, Robin Finck

The Other Sister Engineer/Mixing

“Mrs. Robinson” (The Lemonheads)

Don Juan DeMarco Engineer/Mixing

Orig. prods. w/Selena, Sol de Mexico (incls. Sp. vers. Bryan Adam's theme)

John Carpenter's Vampires Music Supervisor

Producer/Engineer/5.1 Mixing Arranger/Contractor B3/percussion Carpenter's score w/Steve Cropper, Duck Dunn, Jeff Baxter

The Experts Engineer/5.1 Mixing

“Back in the USSR” remake

Twins Engineer/5.1 Mixing

Orig. score prod w/composer Randy Edelman

The Great Outdoors Engineer/5.1 Mixing “Land of a Thousand Dances” remake w/ Wilson Pickett & The Elwood Blues Revue

“Hot Fun in the Summertime” remake w/The Elwood Blues Revue & Sam Moore

Satisfaction Engineer/Mixing Orig. soundtrack w/Justine Bateman, Julia Roberts, Steve Cropper, Duck Dunn & James Burton
Innerspace Producer/Engineer/Mixing “Twistin’ the Night Away” w/Rod Stewart end titles theme
Dragnet Engineer, Mixing “Just the Facts” theme & other songs w/Dan Akroyd
Melanie Producer/Engineer/Mixing “You Saved My Soul” theme & other songs w/Burton Cummings
Neighbors Producer/Engineer/Mixing End title theme w/Fear (Belushi's pick, but rejected)
Popeye Producer/Engineer/Mixing Orig. Harry Nilsson songs w/Shelley Duvall, Robin Williams
Down and Dirty Duck Engineer, Mixing B3, Wurlitzer, piano, BG vocals Orig. soundtrack w/Flo & Eddie (The Turtles)
Charmed Engineer/Mixing Orig. theme song w/Liz Phair & Angelo Badalamenti
Crime Story Producer/Engineer/Mixing Series theme song remake of “Runaway” w/Del Shannon
The Nutcracker: A Fantasy on Ice Engineer/Mixing Lorne Greene's narration
The George Burns Special Live Broadcast Engineer/Mixer

References[]

  1. ^ "Bruce Robb - Credits". AllMusic. AllMusic. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  2. ^ Droney, Maureen. "Cherokee Studios". Mix Online. New Bay Media LLC. Retrieved 7 November 2017.
  3. ^ Badman, Keith (28 October 2009). The Beatles Diary Volume 2: After the Breakup 1970-2001. Google Books. Omnibus Press. ISBN 9780857120014. Retrieved 2 November 2017.
  4. ^ Wild, David. "The Return of Dr. Feelgood, Come On Feel Evan Dando". Evan Dando & The Lemonheads. Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 8 November 2017. Retrieved 7 November 2017.
  5. ^ "Album Picks". Google. Nielsen Business Media. 31 August 1996. Retrieved 7 November 2017.
  6. ^ Johnson, Heather (26 June 2012). Born in a Small Town. Google Books. Omnibus Press. ISBN 9780857128430. Retrieved 2 November 2017.
  7. ^ "Levon Helm: Levon Helm". The Band. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  8. ^ "Bruce Robb". All Music. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  9. ^ Shipton, Alyn (19 June 2013). Nilsson: The Life of a Singer-Songwriter. Google Books. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199330683. Retrieved 2 November 2017.
  10. ^ "Robben Ford: The Inside Story". Guitar Nine. Guitar Nine. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  11. ^ "Satisfaction (1988)". AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  12. ^ a b COP11. "Dan Akroyd". Bellazon. Bellazon. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  13. ^ "Bruce Robb". All Music. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  14. ^ Luzer, David. "Music Monday: David Lynch . . .Rocks?". Mother Jones. Mother Jones and the Foundation for National Progress. Retrieved 7 November 2017.
  15. ^ DeBruge, Peter. "Love N"Dancing". Variety. Variety Media, LLC. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  16. ^ "Soundtrack: Village of the Damned". John Carpenter. John carpenter. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
  17. ^ "John Carpenter - Soundtrack - Vampires". John Carpenter. John Carpenter. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  18. ^ "John Carpenter - Soundtrack - Ghosts of Mars". John Carpenter. John Carpenter. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  19. ^ Kotal, Kent. "Wrapping Things Up in Wisconsin . . .with a Robbs Reboot". Forgotten Hits. Awesome Inc. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  20. ^ Unterberger, Richie. "Liner Notes for The Robbs". Richie Unterberger. Richie Unterberger. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  21. ^ Cook, Rob (November 1999). The Rodgers Book. Google. Hal Leonard Corp. ISBN 9781476851372. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  22. ^ "Summerfest Schedule 1968". Children in Urban America Project. CUAP. Retrieved 15 November 2017.
  23. ^ Olsen, Drew. "On the last day, a look back at the first Summerfest". onMilwaukee. onMilwaukee.com. Retrieved 15 November 2017.
  24. ^ Bartlett, James. "It's Cooler by the Lake". The Hits Just Keep On Comin'. Word Press. Retrieved 15 November 2017.
  25. ^ de la Rosa, Aunny. "Industry Interview: Bruce Robb, Founder of Cherokee Studios". Rock N Platinum. Rock N Platinum. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  26. ^ "Love N'Dancing - 2009". Hollywood.com. Hollywood.com LLC. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  27. ^ de la Rosa, Aunny. "Industry Interview: Bruce Robb, Founder of Cherokee Studios". Rock N Platinum. Rock N Platinum. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  28. ^ "Music Studio to Live/Work Lofts". REThink Development. REThink Development Corp. Retrieved 16 November 2017.

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