

Zapp made their professional television debut on the first and only Funk Music Awards show.Ī year later, as Uncle Jam Records was forced to close, Troutman signed with Bootsy Collins under Rubber Band Music to Warner Bros. The original line-up consisted of Roger Troutman, Larry Troutman, Lester Troutman, Terry Troutman, Gregory Jackson and Bobby Glover. Within two years, Roger and his brothers were discovered by George Clinton, who signed the newly christened Zapp to his Uncle Jam Records label in 1979.

In 1977, he and the Human Body issued "Freedom", their first single. Troutman had formed various other bands with his four brothers, including Little Roger, and the Vels, and Roger and the Human Body. The band members were Rick Schoeny, Roy Beck, Dave Spitzmiller, and Denny Niebold. Troutman's band played in Cincinnati and recorded a single, "Busted Surfboard"/"Seminole". A graduate of Central State University, his first band was called the Crusaders however, they are not to be confused with the jazz group featuring Joe Sample and Wilton Felder. Roger used a custom-made talkbox-the Electro Harmonix "Golden Throat"-through a Moog Minimoog and later in his career a Yamaha DX100 FM synthesizer.Īs both band leader of Zapp and in his subsequent solo releases, he scored a bevy of funk and R&B hits throughout the 1980s and regularly collaborated with hip hop artists in the 1990s.īorn in Hamilton, Ohio, Roger was the fourth of ten children. Troutman frequently used the talk box, a device that is connected to an instrument (frequently a keyboard, but most commonly a guitar) to create different vocal effects. Roger Troutman (Novem– April 25, 1999), also known as Roger, was an American singer, songwriter, record producer, multi-instrumentalist and the founder of the band Zapp who helped spearhead the funk movement and influenced West Coast hip hop due to the scene's heavy sampling of his music.
