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If you love modern rock, thank Bob Ezrin | CBC Arts

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The producer of classic albums like The Wall, Berlin and School’s Out gets a Governor General’s Lifetime Achievement Award for shaping the industry — and giving back.

Bob Ezrin, a man in his 70s, stands in front of a forest scene projected on a screen.

Super producer Bob Ezrin is receiving a Governor General’s Lifetime Achievement Award as part of this year's Governor General's Performing Arts Awards. (Ryan Emberley)

To hear Bob Ezrin tell it, there's a universe where some of today's most-loved albums (think Lou Reed's Berlin, Kiss's Destroyer and Pink Floyd's The Wall) almost didn't happen. 

Ezrin, a legendary music producer who's worked with everyone from Taylor Swift to U2 (and produced all the albums just mentioned), is a 2025 Governor General's Performing Arts Award recipient who has undeniably shaped popular music. But his original plan was something else all together. "When I first started in this business, I thought I was going into the movie business," he told the CBC in 2023, saying he always envisioned making film scores. "I have a particular reverence for film study, and I love it." 

Thankfully for music lovers everywhere, things didn't work out that way. (Though it is worth noting that that same year, Ezrin did make good on his cinephile ambitions, co-producing an immersive short film titled In The Wake Of Progress. He also has credits in the realms of TV and live event production.)

But back to the music: Ezrin's love affair with the medium came long before he became the producer for Peter Gabriel or Deep Purple, each of whom he's produced multiple albums for. In an interview on CBC's The Current from March of this year, he recalls the moment he knew he belonged behind a sound board.

"The most important thing for me was the music," Ezrin recalls of his childhood, which featured many excursions to the United States (until recently, Ezrin was a double citizen). "My uncle was a collector. I would sit in his basement. He had a great stereo, which I think may be the reason that I ended up being a record producer in the first place. But I would listen downstairs to music from New Orleans and music from New York and from Chicago, and I would imagine these mythical places. The music was so magical that the places had to be as well, didn't they?"

Soon, he'd find out for himself, setting off to Michigan to work with Alice Cooper, a longtime collaborator — Ezrin produced Cooper's School's Out and Killer, alongside almost every other entry in the eyeliner-ed rocker's discography — and, later, a career zig-zagging from the sound booth at Toronto's Nimbus 9 Productions to launching a charity in L.A. with U2's The Edge that replaces music instruments lost to natural disasters. 

The charity, called Music Rising, is one of several philanthropic ventures Ezrin takes part in when he's not mixing instant classics, showing a commitment to helping others have their own music-filled imaginations.

"I've had the opportunity to work with some of my childhood heroes, and every single thing I've done has been a highlight on one level or another," Ezrin says in a Governor General's Award release announcing him as the 2025 Lifetime Artistic Achievement Award for popular music. "It's a blessing and a privilege and an honour, and I'm thankful for it every single day."

Originally from rural New Brunswick but based in Halifax for almost a decade, Morgan Mullin is a freelance journalist with bylines in Chatelaine and The Globe and Mail. A Polaris Prize Juror, she covers music, arts and culture on the east coast—primarily at local news site The Coast, where she is Arts Editor. She can be found on Twitter at @WellFedWanderer.

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