Home
Music
Forum
Log in
Sign up
Contact us
Dark mode
 
Bob Both
Bob Both is a producer, engineer, singer/guitarist who writes, produces and plays songs in several styles including Funk, Rock, Blues, psychedelic and more. He was James Brown's engineer in the 1970's and owns Twain Recording Studios in NJ. Bob made his first record "Christian Woman" at age 17, released on his own Twain Records September 10, 1970. His second record "Good Day" (available here) was released on February 18, 1971. Since then Bob has written, produced and recorded songs in many different styles, as a solo artist, with bands and as producer/engineer to many other artists. Today Bob continues to write and record songs in various styles. Explore Bob's continuing musical journey and enjoy the trip.
Tell me about your history? How did you get where you are now?
Bob Both is best known for his work as engineer/producer with legendary R&B artist JAMES BROWN. You can watch a video interview with Bob at www.recordproduction.com/bob-both-recording-engineer.htm. Bob is also a musician, producer, arranger and songwriter. This page features some of the many songs he has produced, arranged and recorded with bands, as a solo artist and with other artists. Bob Both started playing guitar at age 11, influenced by The Beatles. He started his first band in the 8th grade. Bob played guitar in bands throughout high school and started writing his own songs, recording them on a stereo tape deck in his bedroom. After high school Bob attended art school for 1 year and then quit to pursue a career in the music business. He released a 45 RPM record "Good Day" in early 1971 on his own label, Twain Records and started Twain Music, a BMI publishing company. Twain was originally formed to release Bob's own material, but later he signed several other artists to the label. Johnny Scotton was the first artist signed releasing the funky "i'm Not Tired Yet" in 1972. Later that same year Bob recorded and released the now funk cult classic "Rap On" by The Williams Brothers. Twain also released two various artist sampler albums. In November 1971, just after he turned 19, Bob got a job working as an A&R assistant at Polydor Records in New York City. There Bob learned the principals of record production and met James Brown. In 1972 Bob became James Browns recording engineer, production supervisor and A&R Director. Bob worked on 12 James Brown albums including the million sellers "Get On The Good Foot", "The Payback" and "Doin' It To Death". During this time Bob was also playing and recording with two good friends Andy Sweetser (drums) and Duncan Cleary (guitar). They played out as a cover band called SWEET AIR and recorded under the name "Labor/Dressing". They were not signed to a record label.There was a lot of music created by these three guys between 1971 -76. The songs ranged from jazz/funk instrumentals to Zappa style vocals. Some of the songs are posted here. The recordings were done in a small 8 track studio Bob had put together in his parents basement. By 1975 Bob's career with Brown was in full swing and he purchased a house in West Milford, NJ. In 1976 Bob built Twain Recording in his home and when he left James Brown in 1977 he turned the studio into a 16 track commercial operation. The studio became a well known place for local and regional artists to record. It was expanded to 24 track in 1979. Operating the studio as manager and chief engineer was Bob's main focus for the next 10 years. The studio also employed two staff engineers. During the late seventies and early 80's the studio became well known for recording Punk music and became home for the now cult classic "Mutha Records" label, who recorded the bulk of their artists at Twain. While running the studio Bob continued to play in bands. From 1977- 80 he played bass in ADAM , a cover band playing five nights a week. The bands guitarist was his good friend Tom Spingler. They recorded many demos at Twain Studios. They were shopped to record labels by an advertising executive who took an interest in the band, but they failed to get a record deal. Bob and Tom also recorded many of Toms songs as a duo. In 1983 Bob put together a Jimi Hendrix tribute show called Voo Doo Child. It featured slide projections that were timed to the music, sound effects and a light show. The show got good reviews but was complex to stage, so after it's premier in a local club, Bob decided to move on to other things. Bob left live performing for about 5 years after Voo Doo Child and concentrated on recording and producing. During this period one of the projects Bob produced, arranged and performed on was an album for songwriter/singer Tom Storms, who had just left a popular regional band called THE WATCH. Bob returned to live performing in 1987 playing duo gigs with former ADAM band mate and long time friend singer/songwriter, Tom Spingler . With a renewed interest in live performing Bob then performed as a solo artist for 14 years (1988-2001) playing covers and originals in clubs and bars in NJ and NY working with midi tracks of over 400 songs that he sequenced himself. Bob was also still running Twain Recording, but business had slowed down in the late 90's. Bob revisited his role as bass player in 1996 when he once again teamed up with ex-band mates Tom Spingler & Bob Van Dyke to form the Country rock band NORTHFIELD. They recorded one independent CD, and did some concert appearances. The group didn't find the success they had hoped for and split up in 1998. Bob continued his solo performing while teaching Pro Tools recording courses at William Paterson University and Ramapo College of NJ (1993-2006). Busy with teaching and his studio work Bob took another break from live performing from 2001- 2006. He expanded Twain Recording to a full Pro Tools Studio in 2001, to keep pace with the digital age that recording had moved to. In August 2006 Bob returned to the stage joining the classic rock band THE ROCKAHOLICS on guitar and vocals. It expanded his guitar playing and vocal skills even more. In 2014 Bob got a renewed passion to produce, arrange and perform some new solo recordings. He has been recording several solo projects each year, keeping his approach fresh and refining his identity as a recording artist and producer. Currently Bob continues to operate his personal studio Twain Recording , producing and recording local and regional acts and performing with "The Rockaholics" for fun whenever a gig pops up. He continues to make new solo recordings of both cover and original songs. Keep checking this site for his latest recordings.
Your musical influences
The Beatles, Frank Zappa, Steely Dan, 70's Funk/jazz, The Who, The Stones, James Brown, orchestral soundtracks
What equipment do you use?
1975 Gibson Les Paul Custom and Guild S-200 Thunderbird guitars, Fender P-Bass Special, Vox VT120 and Marshall Artist 3202 amplifiers, Roland ME-70 effects pedal, Hofner Beatle Bass, Pro Tools 10.
Anything else?
Bob is available for engineering, mixing and production projects in various musical genres. He can work with you remotely, at his own studio or any studio of your choice. You can contact him at labordressing@optonline.net with your project requirements.
About us/Contact DMCA/Copyrights Privacy Legal
1997-2024 SoundClick Inc, all rights reserved. SoundClick and The SoundClick Logo are registered trademarks.
PLAY
FOLLOW
SHARE
free
Buy
Playlist