Bruce Botnick
Known for: Sound
Born: January 14, 1945 in Los Angeles, CA
Bruce Botnick (born 1945) is an American audio engineer and record producer. He is best known for co-producing L.A. Woman, the sixth studio album by the Doors, after producer Paul A. Rothchild quit during production of the album. Botnick is also known for producing for Eddie Money and his platinum albums Eddie Money and Life for the Taking, as well as Steve Perry's platinum album Street Talk. Botnick also engineered for the Beach Boys and their eleventh studio album Pet Sounds, as well as producing and engineering for acts such as Love, Buffalo Springfield, Dave Mason, the Supremes, Marvin Gaye, the Rolling Stones, as well as film composer Jerry Goldsmith.
Known for
Showing 19 of 19 titles
Film Music Masters: Jerry Goldsmith
Echoes from the Bowl
Self
You Had to Be There
Pioniere der Filmmusik - Europas Sound für Hollywood
Self - Interviewee
Doors: Mr. Mojo Risin' - The Story of L.A. Woman
Self
When You're Strange
Self (archive footage/photos)
Classic Albums
Self - Recording Engineer
City Hall
Scoring Mixer
HWY: An American Pastoral
Sound Engineer
Bad Teacher
Scoring Mixer
Aladdin
Sound Mixer
The Return of Jafar
Sound Mixer
L.A. Confidential
Scoring Mixer
The Doors: A Celebration - VH1 Storytellers
Sound
Frank Zappa & The Mothers: Roxy: The Movie
Sound Mixer
Star Trek: First Contact
Music Editor
Total Recall
Score Engineer
The Doors: Break on Thru - A Celebration of Ray Manzarek
Sound Mixer
Mr. Baseball
Scoring Mixer