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Montrose
Montrose
California-based hard rock band
1
Ronnie Montrose
Ronnie Montrose
American rock guitarist, songwriter
2
Ambrosia
Ambrosia
American rock band
3
Simon Townshend
Simon Townshend
British guitarist
4
Davey Faragher
Davey Faragher
American musician
5
Armageddon
Armageddon
hard rock band formed in 1974
6
Link Wray
Link Wray
American rock and roll guitarist
7
Peter Frampton
Peter Frampton
English rock musician
8
Max Bennett
Max Bennett
Jazz bassist
9
Danny Kortchmar
Danny Kortchmar
American musician
10
Davey Johnstone
Davey Johnstone
Scottish rock guitarist and vocalist
11
Charles Wright & the Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band
Charles Wright & the Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band
band
12
Humble Pie
Humble Pie
English rock band
13
Bill Rieflin
Bill Rieflin
American musician
14
Al Perkins
Al Perkins
American musician
15
Tom Scott
Tom Scott
American jazz musician
16
Phil Palmer
Phil Palmer
British musician
17
Joe Mondragon
Joe Mondragon
Woody Herman Band member
18
Maria Muldaur
Maria Muldaur
American folk-blues singer
19
Crown Prince Waterford
Crown Prince Waterford
American jazz musician
20
Steve Cropper
Steve Cropper
American guitarist, songwriter and record producer
21
David Pack
David Pack
American musician
22
UFO
UFO
English heavy metal and hard rock band
23
Dave Meniketti
Dave Meniketti
American musician
24
Badfinger
Badfinger
British rock band
25
Gary Wright
Gary Wright
American recording artist; singer, songwriter, musician, and composer
26
John Dummer Band
John Dummer Band
27
Nicky Hopkins
Nicky Hopkins
English session musician; pianist and organist
28
Grand Funk Railroad
Grand Funk Railroad
American band
29
Monster Magnet
Monster Magnet
American stoner rock band
30
Malice
Malice
American musical group
31
Robin Trower
Robin Trower
English rock guitarist
32
The Residents
The Residents
American band and art collective
33
Union
Union
American rock group formed in 1997
34
Black 'N Blue
Black 'N Blue
American musical group; heavy metal band from Portland, Oregon
35
Kenickie
Kenickie
rock band from Sunderland, United Kingdom
36
Ernie Watts
Ernie Watts
American jazz musician
37
Pat Metheny
Pat Metheny
American jazz musician
38
Ritchie Blackmore
Ritchie Blackmore
British guitarist and songwriter, guitarist of the band Deep Purple
39
Maggie Bell
Maggie Bell
Scottish singer-songwriter
40
Rupert Hine
Rupert Hine
British singer
41
Swans
Swans
American band
42
Lion
Lion
rock band from the United States
43
David "Fathead" Newman
David "Fathead" Newman
American jazz and rhythm-and-blues saxophonist
44
Little Feat
Little Feat
American band
45
Bob Seger
Bob Seger
American singer-songwriter
46
Joe Walsh
Joe Walsh
American musician, songwriter, record producer, and actor
47
Big Joe Turner
Big Joe Turner
American blues shouter
48
Alan Parsons
Alan Parsons
audio engineer, musician, and record producer from England
49
Echo & the Bunnymen
Echo & the Bunnymen
British band
50
Threshold
Threshold
English progressive metal band
51
Lee Kerslake
Lee Kerslake
British musician
52
Ry Cooder
Ry Cooder
American guitarist, singer and composer
Intro
American singer
Genres
Music

Robert Dennis James (1952 – February 2021) was an American rock singer-songwriter who was best known for his work with the band Montrose.

Born in Struthers, Ohio, James moved to the South Bay area of Los Angeles in 1963. His early bands The Symbols of Time, Shatterminx, and Swan included David Pack (Ambrosia), Joe Puerta (Ambrosia), Robert Fleischman (Journey), and Marc Droubay (Survivor). In early 1975 he was chosen by Ronnie Montrose as the replacement for vocalist Sammy Hagar in the band Montrose and is featured as lead vocalist and co-songwriter on the Montrose albums Warner Brothers Presents... Montrose! (1975) and Jump On It (1976).

After leaving Montrose in early 1977 he reunited with his pre-Montrose original band Swan who recorded demos at Capitol Records with Montrose engineer Charles Faris and performed live in the Los Angeles area. In 1978 he relocated to New York to join the Anglo-American group Magnet who were mentored by Danny Goldberg, Phil DeHaviland, Jerry Moss, and Peter Frampton. Magnet featured Frampton's former Humble Pie bandmate Jerry Shirley on drums, and released the album Worldwide Attraction on the A&M label in 1979. During this period James was approached by Aerosmith manager David Krebs as a possible replacement for Steven Tyler.

Circa 1981, following the dissolution of Magnet, James formed the Los Angeles based group Private Army featuring former Cheap Trick member Pete Comita on guitar and the future Quiet Riot rhythm section of bassist Rudy Sarzo and drummer Frankie Banali. When Pete Comita left the band, Bob James replaced him with guitarist Peter Van Name. By early 1982 Private Army had disbanded and James relocated to Chicago to form 'USSA' with Private Army guitarist Pete Comita, future Ozzy Osbourne/Mötley Crüe drummer Randy Castillo and ex-Pezband guitarist Tommy Gawenda. His USSA-era composition “Reach Out” was recorded by Cheap Trick and appears on the 1981 Heavy Metal movie soundtrack.

By late 1982, he had left USSA and returned to Los Angeles where he remained active throughout the remainder of the 1980s and early 1990s as a songwriter and performer, before turning his focus to mechanical engineering, engineering management, and real estate investing. After nearly three decades of professional silence, in July 2013 James filmed a music video for his original composition "Diamond in the Rough", which can be seen on YouTube. His son Brendan Willing James (born 1979) is the bassist and vocalist with the band Grizfolk.

In early 2021, album format videos for "Dusk Summons the Sky" by Shatterminx and "The Lost Album" by Swan, showcasing Bob's pre and post Montrose recordings, were posted to YouTube.

Bob died in February 2021 at the age of 68.