Bob Kinkel | |
---|---|
Born | New York, U.S. |
Genres | Hard rock, heavy metal, Progressive Rock, symphonic metal |
Occupations | Musician, songwriter, engineer, producer, arranger |
Instruments | Keyboards |
Years active | 1980–present |
Labels | Atlantic |
Associated acts | Savatage, Trans-Siberian Orchestra, Badlands |
Bob Kinkel (born in Buffalo, New York) is a professional session keyboardist and music engineer most known for his role as a co-creater/co-producer/co-composer and touring keyboardist with Trans-Siberian Orchestra along with extensive studio work with the prog-metal band Savatage. He attended Hamilton College and graduated with a Bachelor of arts in music with a minor in physics.[1]
His first professional music job came at the famed Record Plant Studios in New York City, where he assisted on productions for bands such as The Who, Badlands and uncredited work with Aerosmith.[1] Soon afterwards, he began his career as a keyboardist and composed the music for many successful TV advertising campaigns, including being the producer and voice behind the popular 80's "Hefty, Hefty, Hefty - Wimpy, Wimpy, Wimpy" commercial for Hefty trashbags.[2]
He teamed up with producer Paul O'Neill and vocalist/pianist Jon Oliva on Hall of the Mountain King, a 1987 album from the progressive metal group Savatage. Kinkel would join Savatage for the follow-up releases Gutter Ballet (1989) and Streets: A Rock Opera (1991), to return again with both keyboard and engineering work on Dead Winter Dead (1995), The Wake Of Magellan (1998) and Poets & Madmen (2001). [3] He provided all the keyboard orchestral arrangements while founder Jon Oliva played the standard keyboard parts, but he never performed live with the band.[4] He also an engineer on Handful Of Rain which featured Testament guitarist Alex Skolnick, and the live album Ghost In The Ruins: A Tribute To Criss Oliva. [5]
With the surprise success of the Savatage holiday song "Christmas Eve (Sarajevo 12/24)" from the 1996 album Dead Winter Dead Kinkel would help co-create/co-produce Trans-Siberian Orchestra, with O'Neill and Oliva, to reissue the track the next year on the album Christmas Eve & Other Stories. Trans-Siberian Orchestra was the Savatage line-up under a new radio friendly name with Kinkel given a more active role including co-composer. Savatage would produce two more albums before being retired while Trans-Siberian Orchestra would become one of the top grossing holiday rock tours. The band would eventually split into two tour groups named 'East' and 'West'. Kinkel would be the featured keyboardist and musical director of the East tour.[6] In discussing the unexpected development of the rock opera formatted Trans-Siberian Orchestra guitarist Al Pitrelli said in a 2007 interview: “Rock opera is not that popular right now. But about a dozen years or so ago, Paul O'Neill, Bob Kinkel, Jon Oliva and myself just sat down and said, 'We want to make a record that's representative of all four of our musical backgrounds.' It's not like we were trying to write a record that was current, or get on the charts, or keep up with kids 20, 30 years younger than us.”[7]
In 2011, Kinkel began writing, recording, and performing with New York based vocalist Dina Fanai who had previously worked as a vocal coach with Trans-Siberian Orchestra.
He lives in Brooklyn and has a wife and two children.
He was inducted into the Buffalo Music Hall of Fame in October 2007. The next year Kinkel commented to Rocknotes Webzine: "It’s just a great honor, to have someone nominate you and then go through the whole thing. That was just a huge honor and it made me feel really good. I was very proud to accept it."[8]
Contents |
|