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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Now_WhatNow What?! - Wikipedia

    Now What?! is the 19th studio album by English rock band Deep Purple.It was released on 26 April 2013 and produced by Bob Ezrin.A dedicated official web site was also created by the band to post updates about the album. It was the band's first studio album in over seven years as Deep Purple's previous studio album, Rapture of the Deep, was released in late 2005.

  2. 23 de may. de 2019 · From Pink Floyd to Peter Gabriel, producer Bob Ezrin reflects on the highlights of his career. ... Closed Captioning and Described Video is available for many CBC shows offered on CBC Gem.

  3. I’d chosen Bob Ezrin to produce the album, after having met with many producers, and he was based in Toronto at the time. ... Unfortunately, we didn’t really have budget to do much in the way of video at that time.” Bob Ezrin talking to CBC Radio in Canada in May 2019 about the making of the album: So, then we got together in Toronto, ...

  4. 9 de abr. de 2021 · He always was. Love It To Death [their defining, Detroit-recorded third album, released in 1971, Ezrin and the band’s first collaboration] was the first real Alice Cooper album, because Bob got involved and gave us a sound. "When we first got together with Bob he said: ‘You hear a Doors song, you know it’s The Doors.

  5. 24 de may. de 2012 · Some of that stuff is on my Full Meltdown album. Anyhow, Paul Stanley came over to say hello to me and asked me if I would come in and play on a track that Bruce Kulick hadn’t been able to do. Paul asked me to come over and play, so I went over. I said hello to Bob (Ezrin); they played the track for me and I played a solo. That was it.”

  6. Read more about Bob Ezrin GRAMMY History and other GRAMMY-winning and GRAMMY-nominated artists on GRAMMY.com

  7. 28 de mar. de 2023 · Bob Ezrin produced and mixed Reed’s 1973 release Berlin, a confounding and disorienting concept album that was considered a critical and commercial failure at the time. In fact, Rolling Stone labeled Berlin a “disaster” upon its release in 1973—although it’s worth noting that by the dawn of the new millennium, RS had included it in its list of the “500 Greatest Albums of All Time.”