As a producer,
Rob Cavallo worked on chart-topping material for
Green Day (the 15-million-selling album
Dookie, as well as the four-million-selling
Insomnia),
Goo Goo Dolls,
L7,
the Dance Hall Crashers,
Alanis Morissette ("Uninvited" from the City of Angels soundtrack),
Jawbreaker,
David Cook, and
the Muffs. Born in Washington, D.C., his father owned the Cellar Door and became a manager whose client lists included
Little Feat,
Weather Report, and
Prince. At age ten,
Rob Cavallo and his family relocated to Los Angeles, where
Cavallo would often accompany his father to the recording studio and learn guitar licks from the blues great
Lowell Fulson. Enthusiastic about music,
Cavallo spent many hours playing guitar and listening to records in his room. His father bought him a Teac A3340 four-track tape recorder, and
Cavallo began to experiment with multi-track recording.
In his teens,
Cavallo began playing in numerous cover bands. After high school, he went to work for top engineer
George Massenburg, building electronic equipment and being second engineer on sessions by
Fleetwood Mac and
Linda Ronstadt. He also attended the
Dick Grove School of Music.
Cavallo's father eventually introduced him to
Lenny Waronker of Warner Bros./Reprise Records, who offered
Cavallo a position in the label's A&R department. He began working closely with A&R head
Michael Ostin and other music business luminaries like
Ted Templeman,
Tommy LiPuma, and
Russ Titelman.
Around 1992, fellow A&R employee
David Katznelson approached
Cavallo about producing his bi-gender band,
the Muffs. The project went well and attracted attention from
Green Day, a San Francisco band that had yet to break into the mainstream.
Cavallo was asked to produce the band's next album,
Dookie, which became of the biggest albums of the '90s and helped establish both
Green Day and
Cavallo himself as industry icons.
Rob Cavallo was made Senior Vice President of Reprise Records; later, he assumed the role of staff producer at Warner Bros. while helping to manage their A&R department. His work can be heard on
Clapton Chronicles: The Best of Eric Clapton; the movie soundtracks to The Runaway Bride, City of Angels, Varsity Blues, Detroit Rock City, Godzilla, Clueless, Angus, Tommy Boy, Private Parts, Jerky Boys, National Lampoon's Senior Trip; and such albums as
Speak of the Devil by
Chris Isaak,
Boy Named Goo by
Goo Goo Dolls,
Nimrod and
Insomniac by
Green Day,
Jump Start by
Simon Says,
Totally Crushed Out! by
that dog,
Trailer by
Ash,
Fourth World by
Kara's Flowers (who later became
Maroon 5), and the debut record by
David Cook. ~ Ed Hogan, All Music Guide