Canadian producer Bob Ezrin on elevating Pink Floyd, taming KISS and leaving the U.S. behind
Bob Ezrin's resumé is as impressive as it is diverse. Over his five-decade career, the legendary Canadian music producer has worked with dozens of artists, from Alice Cooper and Jane's Addiction to Taylor Swift and Andrea Bocelli.
"Most people don't understand what I do for a living," he told CBC's Ian Hanomansing in a wide-ranging interview.
"You're dealing with extremely talented, often very high-strung people or complicated people, and you're trying to get the best performance out of them you possibly can on every level."
For Ezrin, that work has included concept development, co-writing, arranging and sound design. But it has also required getting more intimate with a band, with Ezrin often playing the role of psychologist, confessor or protector — sometimes all in one day.
That work often came at a personal cost — from being individually called out in reviews to a falling-out with an "apoplectic" Roger Waters — but his collaborations have helped create genre-defining releases, like KISS's slick Destroyer from 1976 and Pink Floyd's transcendental 1979 concept album The Wall.
Now, as he celebrates receiving a Governor General Arts Award for Lifetime Achievement, the 76-year-old musical icon reflected on everything from recording with Pink Floyd to reworking KISS's sound — and why he decided to renounce his U.S. citizenship.
WATCH | Ezrin explains his role:
Bob Ezrin explains the role of the producer when making music
8 minutes ago
Duration 0:37
Inside the recording process for The Wall
One of Ezrin's career highlights came while recording The Wall. He fondly remembers working with guitarist David Gilmour when he played the iconic first solo on Comfortably Numb, one of the band's most iconic songs.
Gilmour's two solos on the track are consistently regarded as some of the best of all time. Ezrin says he recognized the power of that first solo as soon as Gilmour started playing along with the track.
"I did get tears in my eyes. It just blew me away," he said. "Like, it's so majestic and so melodically perfect and so serves the story, you know, in a way that just regular orchestration or other things like that could never have done."
WATCH | Being in the room for Comfortably Numb:
What was it like to be in the studio for the Comfortably Numb solo
8 minutes ago
Duration 1:10
That moment of perfection came during a famously acrimonious period for Pink Floyd.
Main lyricist Waters had started to assert his primacy within the band, Ezrin said. The project was based on Waters's life, so he had a deep, proprietary feeling about it, and was at first resistant to input from the others.
'No points for Ezrin'
Even with the tension, Ezrin says there were some good times — "laughter, kibitzing, messing around" — as well as some schoolyard bullying.
"There was a lot of picking on me," said Ezrin. "One day I showed up after we had taken a break and everybody had 'NOPE' buttons, N-O-P-E. And what it stood for was 'No Points for Ezrin.'" (Points meaning royalties for the album sales.)
"I didn't think it was that serious, and later on I found out that they were more serious than I thought," said Ezrin, who noted that in the end he did get paid for the project.
When the album wrapped, Waters and Ezrin had a major falling-out, after Ezrin inadvertently gave away some secrets about The Wall tour to a Billboard journalist.
"Roger went absolutely nuclear, apoplectic," said Ezrin. "And he had every right to."
The relationship between the two men has never fully recovered, and the rift may have deepened in recent years, with Ezrin even regretting parts of The Wall.
"There are some parts … I wish I hadn't done," he said, calling elements of the album "almost neo-fascistic."
The album includes fascist imagery to portray the protagonist's downward spiral, as he eventually hallucinates being a neo-Nazi leader. Ezrin says he used to think the references were done satirically, but he now believes Waters wasn't joking.
"He wasn't kidding. He really wasn't kidding about some of that stuff," Ezrin said.
In recent years, Waters has been accused of repeated antisemitism, with witnesses claiming to have heard him make derogatory references to Jews. He has publicly denied being antisemitic, and has repeatedly said that The Wall is anti-fascist.
Tweaking an iconic band's image
While Ezrin's production is primarily well regarded by fans and peers, critical reception hasn't always been positive. He laughs when he recalls the first time he worked with the band KISS, on their fourth studio album, Destroyer.
"The first review for Destroyer was just devastating," he said. "And in fact the reviewer said something like, 'I've got a mind to go up to Toronto and punch Bob Ezrin in the nose on behalf of KISS fans everywhere.'"
This sort of thing used to happen because he was often hired to change the direction of a musical act, he said.
WATCH | How Ezrin made KISS get vulnerable:
How Bob Ezrin convinced KISS to soften their image
8 minutes ago
Duration 1:03
For KISS, Ezrin was brought in to try and broaden their audience, which he said at the time was largely "15-year-old pimply boys."
He told the band they needed to show a more vulnerable side to generate interest from "the girls of America."
That included reworking the song Beth, changing it from what he called a "screw-you" kind of song to a "gentle, sweet" ballad that was almost lullaby-like, adding in a piano melody and a walking bass line.
He also worked to make the overall sound more polished than the band's earlier albums.
It was a huge departure for KISS. And while the alterations did anger some die-hard fans, the plan worked. Destroyer became the first KISS album to be certified platinum.
Returning home to Canada
Ezrin says he is grateful to be recognized with the Governor General's Award. It coincides with a major move for him — he announced in February he'd be renouncing his U.S. citizenship and returning to Toronto, after four decades of living in the States. The political climate had become too polarized, he said.
Several months in, he says he's comfortable with his decision. As for what his American friends think, he joked, "Many of them want to be adopted."
WATCH | Ezrin on the U.S. political climate:
Bob Ezrin renounced his U.S. citizenship and returned to Canada
8 minutes ago
Duration 0:56
Music producer Bob Ezrin tells The National's Ian Hamomansing how his American friends reacted to his decision to renounce his U.S. citizenship and return to Canada.
Now, at 76, he continues to work. He recently finished an album with the original Alice Cooper Band, and he is wrapping up a project with the English rock band Deep Purple.
"Sometimes I have to sort of pinch myself. Because I just do what I do," he said. "But I really appreciate the recognition and I appreciate being appreciated.
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Globe and Mail
an hour ago
- Globe and Mail
Film producer Debbie Nightingale co-founded the documentary festival Hot Docs
Debbie Nightingale produced movies and television shows before a personal plot twist led her to become a goat farmer. Over time, her Ontario farm became a popular tourist attraction. Ms. Nightingale, who has died at 71, was a prominent member of the Canadian film and television industry whose many credits included co-founding a documentary festival now known as Hot Docs. In a career lasting more than three decades, she served as executive producer for the documentary Quality Balls: The David Steinberg Story, a 2013 documentary about the Winnipeg-born comedian, as well as for the 2010 series, Living in Your Car, a comedy about a high-flying executive convicted of fraud who tries to rebuild his life from his luxury car, for which she received a Gemini nomination. 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'It took six months to get about $100,000, which in 1993 was a hefty chunk of change.' Ms. Nightingale's experience running industry events, including for the Toronto International Film Festival, proved invaluable, and Hot Docs grew to become North America's biggest documentary showcase. She became executive director of Hot Docs, while also sharing her expertise by serving on other boards, including Women in Film & TV Toronto. 'Every part of the Hot Docs we know today grew from what Debbie helped establish,' the organization said in a statement released on her death. 'She recognized the importance of documentary filmmaking and providing a place where filmmakers, funders and audiences could connect. Without her, we wouldn't be here.' Even as she succeeded in her entertainment career, she dreamed of raising animals in the countryside. In 2008, she and her husband, a soon-to-retire literary agent, purchased a 25-acre (10.1 hectare) hobby farm with a Victorian farmhouse in Campbellford, about 180 kilometres east of Toronto. The property, which cost $450,000, came with three horses and 20 chickens. While she enjoyed her weekend immersion into a more bucolic lifestyle, she also soon discovered she had a limited knowledge of animal husbandry. For Hot Docs, a new leader and new vision aim to steady a beleaguered film festival 'The chickens seemed easy enough at first: all I had to was feed them, collect their eggs and clean their coop,' she wrote for Toronto Life magazine. 'That was until I walked in one day to find one lying dead. The next day, I walked in to find another dead chicken, and another the following morning. It was like a scene from The Birds – and I was convinced that I was somewhat responsible. When I called the vet in a panic, he burst out laughing. 'The thing about chickens,' he said, 'is that they live, and then they die.' They weren't spring chickens, he told me. They'd died of old age.' She moved to the farm full-time after purchasing four Nigerian dwarf goats at $100 each, juggling her day job as a film executive by e-mail while tending to the farm from dawn until well past sunset. An education in hircine care was gained through YouTube videos and word-of-mouth instruction. The addition of a buck to the herd quickly led to four pregnant does. One morning, she was greeted by a shivering kid separated from the does in the barn. 'I freaked out: whose baby was it? What if it hadn't eaten or bonded with its mother?' she wrote in Toronto Life. 'I called our breeder. 'Just pick up the baby,' she said nonchalantly. 'The mother will start screaming once you do.' She was right: As soon as I grabbed the kid, Pearl bleated bloody murder.' The couple later moved to a 200-acre (80.1-hectare) farm outside Port Hope at Newtonville, about 100 km east of Toronto, adding sheep, pigs, alpacas, miniature Icelandic horses and a mule to the menagerie. Experience in marketing movies and television programs proved invaluable in gaining a following for the farm, named Haute Goat, on social media. The farm became a popular attraction, including such scheduled events as a 'shmurgle,' during which customers spend an hour hugging, cuddling, snuggling, scratching and otherwise enjoying the playfulness of a goat herd. The farm also hosts an annual event called Goatchella. The farm includes an 18-hole disc golf course, a café called the Screaming Goat, and a shop selling products made from goat milk such as cheeses, chocolates and fudge, as well as skin-care products, including soap, lip balm and face cleansers. Deborah Esther Nightingale was born in Toronto on Oct. 14, 1953, to Helen (née Coffer) and Bernard (Buddy) Nightingale. Her Polish-born paternal grandfather was an upholsterer who repaired cinema seats before starting an office furniture manufacturing company, which became the family business. Her father eventually sold the business before working in commercial real estate. Ms. Nightingale died of a rare form of lung cancer at Northumberland Hills Hospital in Coburg, Ont., on July 10. She leaves Shain Jaffe, her husband of 27 years. She also leaves children Sarah, Leland and Noah Nightingale-Forfar; stepchildren Gita Jaffe and Meave Forfar; four grandchildren; a sister, Caron Nightingale; a brother, Ben Nightingale; and her stepmother, Margaret Nightingale. For all the early hiccups in farming, Ms. Nightingale proved an adept agriculturalist. In 2015, she and her husband received a premier's award for their products made from goat milk. At a ceremony, two Ontario MPPs presented a plaque, as well as a certificate from the Premier and a cheque from the province for $5,000. Ms. Nightingale said success depended on their goats. 'They are our livelihood and our inspiration,' she told a reporter from the Brighton [Ont.] Independent newspaper at a ceremony in which she received the award. 'Time to get going. I've got goats to feed.' You can find more obituaries from The Globe and Mail here. To submit a memory about someone we have recently profiled on the Obituaries page, e-mail us at obit@


Globe and Mail
an hour ago
- Globe and Mail
Disney Stock Before Q3 Earnings: Buy Now or Wait for Results?
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National Post
3 hours ago
- National Post
WWE megastar returns at SummerSlam amidst sex trafficking lawsuit
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