The
Bobs | Press
RICHARD BOB
GREENE— | —MATTHEW BOB STULL
AMY BOB ENGELHARDT— |— DAN BOB SCHUMACHER

It all started when
Western Onion went bust, leaving all singing telegram deliverers broke
and unemployed.
Thus began the Great San Francisco Singing Telegram Depression of
1981. Gunnar Madsen and Matthew Stull, two of the newly unemployed,
placed
a free 25-words-or-less ad in the classifieds for a bass singer.
They got one call--from bass singer, songwriter and recording engineer
Richard
Greene.
After six months of rehearsal, the trio debuted at an open mike
in a Cuban restaurant, shuffled ahead of the line of waiting flamenco
guitarists
by a manager aware of his patrons’ acute flamenco ennui. They sang "Psycho
Killer,” "A White Sportcoat" and a few others. The
audience loved them. The Bobs were born.
At first, The Bobs’ material consisted of uniquely arranged cover
tunes. As they began writing their own songs, the need for another voice
became apparent. Auditions found Janie 'Bob' Scott. Appearances helped
the stage show gel. A contract with local record company Kaleidoscope
Records produced a first album, THE BOBS. A Grammy® nomination for
their arrangement of The Beatles’ "Helter Skelter" and
a national concert tour resulted in radio airplay and television appearances,
followed by concerts and festivals in Europe. Their special blend of
music, theatre, comedy and performance art moved the Los Angeles Daily
News to comment, “The Bobs prove that the best instrument in
creating music is the human brain. They are nothing less than sensational.”
Over 25 years later, The Bobs, “a band without instruments,” are
still bob-bob-bobbin’ along with surprisingly few personnel changes.
In 1990, Gunnar retired, replaced by Joe Bob Finetti, whose vocal percussion
and sound effects added a new layer of vocal pyrotechnics to the sound.
In 2004, Dan Bob Schumacher took over the role of resident groove-master
and oral instrumentalist, as funky as he is tall. Since 1998, Amy Bob
Engelhardt has commandeered the femme-Bob slot (held by Janie Scott for
15 years and, briefly, Lori Rivera), packing a pistol wit, years of musical,
comedy and theatrical experience, and numerous haircolors. Witnessing
these four amazing personalities and their combined musical wizardry,
audiences tend to “spontaneously combust” (to quote a Bobs
song) with alarming regularity. The Bergen Record/Home News Tribune calls
The Bobs “One of the most entertaining acts on the live circuit
today.”
Highlights of the group’s career include performing with Jason
Alexander on the Emmy® Awards telecast, and providing musical commentary
for National Public Radio’s Morning Edition. Citations have included
Contemporary A cappella Recording Awards (CARA) too numerous to mention
since the Awards were established in 1992. Composer/lyricists Richard
Bob Greene and Amy Bob Engelhardt have repeatedly garnered ASCAP Songwriting
Awards for their Bobs compositions.
A particularly notable avenue of statement for The Bobs has been collaboration
with artists in other disciplines. Their first commission was a series
of songs, "The Laundry Cycle," for the Oberlin Dance Collective
in 1987. Later that year, they met the dance troupe Momix, (later known
as ISO). Improvising with them yielded a show that toured fine arts venues
worldwide for a period of years, resulting in a commission from Lincoln
Center and a one-hour “Lonesome Pine Special” for PBS. The
program is now part of the media archives at the Smithsonian Institute's
Museum of American History. The Bobs were also featured in a tribute
special on comedian Andy Kaufman for NBC, on PBS’ Great Performances
in “The Beatles Songbook” and in a special with Harry Shearer
for HBO. The group returned to Lincoln Center in 2001 to headline the
prestigious American Songbook Series and recently collaborated with The
Flying Karamazov Brothers in “A Comedy of Eras” - a musical/historical/fictional
theater piece workshopped at Seattle’s A Contemporary Theater. “RHAPSODY
IN BOB” premiered at The Barns of Wolf Trap in Spring 2005; the
centerpiece of this show is their breathtaking arrangement of Gershwin’s
masterwork, “Rhapsody in Blue” for piano (guest artist
Bob Malone) and The Bobs (as the vocal orchestra). A recording of this
piece
was released shortly afterwards.
In 2007, Coldfoot Films released SIGN MY SNARLING MOVIE: 25 YEARS OF
THE BOBS, a documentary about the group’s history and evolution,
and The Bobs’ 14th album arrived shortly thereafter. GET YOUR
MONKEY OFF MY DOG is a collection of all-new, original instant Bobs
classics.
The Bobs, described by the Seattle Times as “a musical equivalent
of a Gary Larsen drawing,” continue to add to their musical palette
of possibilities as no other group, honing a catalogue of fourteen albums
of witty original material and outrageous covers of classic songs. The
Bobs are the prevailing trailblazers in the flourishing world of contemporary
a cappella music, clear-cutting their own musical freeway. They are among
the elite handful of totally original creators, who use just their voices
and body percussion to fill a room with an orchestra of harmonious sound.
They have left an indelible mark on vocal music, expertly skewering standards
and establishing their own hilarious norms. Once dubbed the only New
Wave a cappella group in history, “The Bobs,” commented The
Washington Post, “prove that the human voice remains the most
powerful instrument of all.”