chad smith on classic rock records

Chad Smith

by Adam Budofsky

This summer MD got to hang out with Chad Smith at his apartment in NYC for a few hours, rapping about his recent Red Hot Chili Peppers, Chickenfoot, and Meatbats projects, all of which you can read about in the new issue of Modern Drummer. After a few hours, Chad treated us to lunch at a local eatery, where we picked up our conversation by talking about the records that influenced him as a young drummer.

Chad: My sister was five years older than me, and she was into Elton John, Three Dog Night, the Beatles…kinda soft stuff. I liked that music, but the Beatles weren’t Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple, which appealed to me more as a drummer. I remember staring at album covers and looking at what the guys were wearing, learning who played guitar…. As a musician, I was interested in learning all that stuff. I wanted to know who played on what, where it was done….

I was probably nine or ten when I started being aware of that stuff—’70 or ’71. Stones records—Sticky Fingers…. It was all these English bands, like Humble Pie, Pink Floyd, Black Sabbath with Bill Ward, Led Zeppelin, Keith Moon with the Who—Odds And SodsMeaty Beaty Big And Bouncy, Quadrophenia…. Robin Trower’s Bridge of Sighs—with drummer Reg Isadore. My brother Brad had Queen II—I remember before we moved to Michigan from Chicago, the older brother of a friend of mine said Queen was the next Led Zeppelin. So when Queen II came out in ’73, Brad was like, “I gotta have it!” It didn’t have any hits but it’s a really good record.

And then it was American bands like Grand Funk, the Doors, Aerosmith, Kiss in ’74, ’75, Credence Clearwater Revival…. In four years, Credence put out half a dozen albums—serious, creative records. I remember that picture of Doug Clifford on the ten-speed bike on the cover of Cosmo’s Factory.

MD: From a drumming standpoint, who did you first focus on?

Chad: Ian Paice from Deep Purple. Brad had all the hard rock and blues and English bands’ records, including Deep Purple’s Machine Head, which had “Smoke on the Water.”

MD: Were you taking lessons at that time?

Chad: No, I was playing along to the records, and not well. [laughs] Brad, God bless him, embarrassed me at my fortieth birthday party with a tape from my dad’s going-away party in Chicago in 1973. We had a band and we were playing “Gloria” and “Light My Fire.” We played “Fire” by the Jimi Hendrix Experience too, and every four bars there’s a bad fill. It was horrible—horrible! [laughs] But I loved Jimi’s Smash Hits record. I liked a lot of the guys from that time who had a jazz background, like Mitch Mitchell from the Experience. I tried to emulate Mitch and Bill Ward and John Bonham because they all had that jazzy swing. That seeped into my playing, and I’m thankful to this day. Later I got into Stewart Copeland and Neil Peart and other guys who were great drummers, but that swing thing is still what I love.

Then there’s Humble Pie. I got to talk to their drummer, Jerry Shirley, the other day—so sweet and nice, telling stories. He’s doing a book. One of a kind. He didn’t have any means when he was young. He joined the band when he was sixteen, and it was like, Boom, go! Records, touring. He was twenty-three when the band stopped. And he’s happy and grateful and not bitter.

MD: A while ago you were telling me about some Ted Nugent albums.

Chad: Cliff Davies from Ted Nugent’s band—I don’t know what happened to him, but he used to produce those records. I remember seeing that: “The drummer’s producing? Huh.”

Chad SmithMD: How about Alice Cooper?

Chad: Billion Dollar Babies—wore that thing out. Neal Smith was a good drummer, he had parts. And he looked so cool with that long, greasy hair. Big kit, double bass, mirrored mosaic.

MD: How about Bad Company?

Chad: Their first record—awesome. Simon Kirke: pocket, big drums. I’ve befriended Simon, who lives in the city and has a place on Long Island. I’ve done benefits with him for the Right Turn treatment center for musicians; we double drum at it. Simon’s got great stories—he’s got the Bonham stories. He was another one who started when he was like seventeen, in Free.

Another American band: Lynyrd Skynyrd. Artimus Pyle wasn’t the original drummer, but he’s on Street Survivors and the live album. Street Survivors is a good drumming record. It sounds very Simon Kirke-ish to me—no bullshit, powerful, confident, perfect for the song.

MD: What was your first concert?

Chad: Blue Oyster Cult, in 1974, when I was thirteen. I wasn’t a huge fan, but I was going to the concert because Kiss was supposed to open for them. I was a big Kiss fan at this time. Brad used to give me shit, but I was like, “They breathe fire, and the drumkit goes forty feet in the air!” I bought all that—hook, line, and sinker.

My buddy Brian and I were huge, die-hard Kiss fans. So we go to Pine Knob Music Theatre—where years later I rehearsed with this band—but Michael Quatro, Suzie Quatro’s brother, ended up opening up. It wasn’t quite Kiss. But it was my first concert and I dug the whole experience—the coolers, the girls…. It’s 1974 and I’m like, “This is awesome.”

Then Kiss came to Cobo Hall on May 16, 1975, and this was back when you had to write in to the Cobo Hall box office for tickets. Your mom gives you a check and you send it in. So Brad tells me that this friend of ours, Jackie Davidson, who used to go to every show—when he saw that Eric Clapton was coming he wrote this little note with his ticket request: “Please, I would like tenth row, on the aisle.” “Yeah, really? Okay, it’s worth a try.” So I write, “Dear ticket lady, Kiss is my favorite band. Please, if it’s possible, can I have four seats, tenth row, on the aisle?” Two weeks later—twelfth row, on the aisle! How awesome is that?! This was like two months before they were coming, and it felt like an eternity. My mom was like, “Okay, but you have to be really good.” I had to try not to get grounded for two weeks.

So we go to the famous Cobo Hall. And if you look at the back of the Kiss Alive album, there’s these two kids holding a homemade Kiss poster. And me and Brad and Brian and Jackie Davidson were all sitting in the twelfth row, and in the sixteenth row we see Fin Costello taking pictures of those kids. We watched the whole thing. So the album comes out, and that’s the back cover. I’m like, “I was there!” My friends are like, “B.S.!” “No, I swear!” And since then I’ve had people write to me, “I heard you were in the picture at Cobo Hall,” and I’m like, “No, no, I wasn’t in the picture—but I saw it happening….”

http://www.moderndrummer.com/site/2011/08/chad-smith-3/

 

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drummer to the stars

Ricky Lawson
Drummer to the Stars

 

Words by Adam Falik
Photos by Monique Carboni

“Drummer to the Stars” is one of the easy labels that has followed Ricky Lawson’s career. Considering the list of musicians Ricky has performed with – a resume that includes Phil Collins, Eric Clapton, Steely Dan, Michael Jackson, Whitney Houston, Al Jarreau, Stevie Wonder and Bette Midler, just to name a shy few – it’s an apt title.

As performer, composer, producer, and arranger, Ricky is one of the most in-demand musicians in the business. At Allmusic.com, the extensive (and extensive is an understatement) list of Ricky’s recordings prints ten pages long, spans almost four decades, and is a roadmap through the most exclusive landscape of vocalists, R&B pacesetters, and rock ‘n’ roll VIPs. He’s performed on several multi-platinum singles. He’s won a Grammy for a song he co-wrote for the Yellowjackets, the group he co-founded. He’s gone drumhead-to-drumhead in stadiums with Phil Collins, and has a solo album called Ricky Lawson and Friends, which features such talents as Donald Fagan, Sheila E. and Gerald Albright, friends who, as Ricky describes, “came to bat” for him.

That’s the outline, the calling card. It’s what I know of Ricky when I meet him on the stage of the Nokia Theater in New York City while he’s setting up his kit. As we shake hands, I immediately sense something luminous (I feel almost awkward using this word, but there is no other) about Ricky. He has the look of a man engrained with a deep, spiritually-rooted satisfaction. As he offers the photographer and me something to drink, a Steely Dan song from the Two Against Nature album is being piped through the theater PA system. “You see that snare?” Ricky says pointing at the Pearl Piccolo resting beside the kit. “That snare was played on this song.” It’s a statement that epitomizes Ricky’s career, a career of associations, allegiances, echoes, and musical journeys.

The stage is being set for the first concert of this year’s Guitars and Saxes series. A smooth jazz ensemble of sidemen funking it up with jazz and R&B standards, Guitars and Saxes is an annual tour that has seen a dozen incarnations. This is the second series featuring Ricky in the rhythm section. As this is the premiere show, the guys are a bit edgy, concerned that they’re under-rehearsed. They’ll have just an hour following sound-check to run through the set. Each face wears a look of controlled anxiety.

Except for Ricky. He’s ready before most of them even arrive, has already configured his kit and is listening to the songs they’ll be performing tonight on a personal CD player, making sure he has all the songs memorized. To be thoroughly prepared for any sort of gig is a fundamental of Ricky’s, a personal philosophy he appoints an almost moral value to.

“It’s a lifeline. It runs through my life. If you get me the information well in advance, I study. I just do what I like to have done to me. Because I write and produce and have guys come in, so I just study, study, study. You take a cat like Gerald [Albright, one of tonight’s saxophonists], he will compose a song, so what I want to be able to do is make the song feel the way that he feels about his song. Then he feels good about it, I feel good about it, and it just rolls. I just treat the song as if I’d written it, that allows me to play it with a little more conviction and a little bit more spirit.”

http://www.drumheadmag.com

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matt scannell on neil pert

Matt Scannell on Neil Peart
Artist P.O.V. 

 

Words by Mover

Matt Scannell, the lead singer of Vertical Horizon, knows the value of patience. It took more than six years for the band to finally release a follow-up album to their big 1999 hit, Everything You Want. Its delay was the result of a corporate purge at their label that left the Vertical ones out on the street of broken dreams without a record contract.

After much soul-searching, the band decided to defy the suits and work their way back — but it didn’t happen overnight. As part of their personal survival plan, each member set aside time for his own projects. Scannell worked with Richard Marx as a co-writer and lead guitarist in Marx’s touring band.

But besides that, Scannell slowly developed a personal friendship with drummer Neil Peart. Scannell’s association with “The Professor” was not originally based on music but on a chance meeting and discovery of similar interests. Mutual professional admiration aside, the two organically developed their friendship outside the artificial bounds of recording studios, tour buses, and other rock ‘n’ roll scenery. Cars, watches and hiking were the order of the day; not sound checks, video shoots, and trips to Guitar Center. For the two new friends, there was no Vertical Horizon and no Rush, either — just two guys building a friendship day by day.

But Scannell and Peart are not just two ordinary guys, and it was only a matter of time before the subject of music eventually surfaced. After their non-musical friendship had been established for a number of years, Peart, with his songwriter’s hat on, offered Scannell lyrics that sparked him to write a song; and then it was off to the races. One thing led to another until Peart put down his pen and picked up sticks to lay down drum tracks on their collaborate song, as well as two others penned by Scannell.

The enthusiasm with which they approached this project shows in both Scannell’s recounting of the genesis and recording of the song and Peart’s account of it, which can be found in his online diary. There may have been no rush to do this record, but it was obviously a rush for the two of them to do.

Matt Scannell: It was kind of an incredibly circuitous journey, it wasn’t like we got together to work; the work came last, actually.

Drumhead: There was a friendship?
MS: Yeah, we became friends.

DH: How so? Did Vertical Horizon open up for Rush?
MS: No. The main connection came through my girlfriend, funnily enough. The short version of the story is, Neil was selling a car to a friend of my girlfriend who owns a BMW dealership down in Texas, and he needed pictures of Neil’s car to put up on his website. So he asked if we would go over and take some pictures of this guy’s car.

So I went over to take pictures of Neil’s car. I had never met him before, and I was really excited because Rush was my favorite band growing up, and those guys are really the reason I play music. Then, as we opened the gate to say hello, I was thinking about what I could say to him to let him know how great this was for me to meet him, and he just shook my hand, looked me right in the eye and said, “You know what? I love your work.” I was like, wow, man, what a beautiful moment. I mean, how cool is that?

And it was funny, because we both love cars; we had all these similar interests. I was wearing a watch that he liked — that was a watch that he used to own — and we just started talking and hitting it off.

 

DH: So he’s based in LA now?
MS: Yeah, he lives here now. When so much of your life is spent on the road, there are some people who can understand it and some people who can’t. It’s kind of nice to hang out with people who have had that experience and you can just understand each other almost implicitly. I felt that way with Neil: that he and I just both understood where each of us was coming from.

DH: Instantaneous click
MS: Yeah! There’s no doubt about it that when I first met him I was really excited to be able to speak with one of the people who was most influential on my life and my career and my music. But very soon thereafter, it was just “my friend Neil.” And in some ways, I think the best thing about all this is that I have this great friend who just happens to be a monster, one of the greatest drummers of all time and an incredible lyricist.

A Way With Words
MS: Then somewhere along the way, we sort of talked about getting together. I can’t remember if it was me or him, but it probably was me who said we should get together and write some time.

We both sort of embraced the idea, and a couple of months later he just said, “I’ve got this idea that I think might be really good for you. Do you want to check it out?” It was a lyric called “Even Now.”

So he came over, and I took a look at the words, because he writes lyrics on his own and then brings them in. I looked at them and the music just flowed out instantly, and he noticed it. I remember he said, “Is this something you had, that you’ve been working on?” And I said, “No, it’s just coming out right now.”

DH: I wonder if having the opportunity to do this for you, outside of writing for Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson, (Peart’s bandmates) also affords him the opportunity to go in a different direction lyrically.
MS: (excitedly) Yeah, yeah, I think you’re right. He loved the subject matter for my voice. You know, I think he knows that what I’ve done as a lyricist and as a songwriter has tended to be sort of relationship-focused, relationship-based lyrics and that’s, well, a romantic relationship. A lot of his lyrics are about relationships, but they tend to be a bit bigger.

DH: Man and science, science and nature.
MS: Yeah, and the situation that we find ourselves in as human beings. I’m really sort of micro, looking at why some romantic relationships work and why some fail. So I know that he embraced the idea of working on a song that maybe had a little bit more of a direct connection between two people in a romantic way. And I gotta tell ya, I think he did a really great job.

Lyrical Drumming
DH: It’s interesting because he’s not only incredibly intelligent, but his choice of subject matter is usually so poignant and diverse… and quite important, as well. I can only imagine that somebody like you or Geddy must love working with him because rhythmically the stuff is just so dead on.
MS: I think it puts him in an interesting position as a drummer because he’s so tied into the words that the vocalist is singing — it makes him almost more invested in making sure that the drums serve the song and serve the lyrics. I always knew when I listened to Rush records that they were all working together as a whole, but I didn’t realize how much he plays for the lyric until we worked together, which was shocking. It’s really interesting because — at least in the case of our session — he wanted to raise the vocal up, lift it up to make sure that it was rising to the top of the music. He wanted all of the music to serve the lyric and the vocal. So much so that there were even times that I had to encourage him to play a little more, you know, “it’s ok to play more.”

DH: So he didn’t necessarily get any special treatment?
MS: If you had asked me that three years ago, when I didn’t know [Neil], I would have said yes, it would have been “whatever you want to play, it’s all going to be perfect.”

But it wasn’t like that. He just wanted to come in and do the best job. He would be the one who would say, “I think we can do that a little better, we can try that one again,” so he wasn’t at all tripping. It was the best.

You know, this guy is at the top of his game because he’s absolutely driven to be the best player he can possibly be, and he embraces all of those around him.

The Writing Process
DH: What was the process of putting the three songs together? From what I’ve read, lots of times Rush tends to send things back and forth to each other as a writing process, and they’re not always in the same room together actually working things out or feeding off of each other in a creative way.

MS: The writing process was interesting because once we had written “Even Now,” I said to Neil, “You know, we’ve got this song together and I sure would love it if you would play on it,” not knowing if he’d be into it or not. And he said, “Matt, no one else can play drums on it — I won’t let anyone else play drums on it. I have to play the drums on it.”

So, we wound up getting Capitol’s studio B for a day, and I’m thinking, Neil’s going to come in and bang that song out, and then we’re going to go to lunch or something. So I said, “How would you feel about maybe playing on a couple more songs?” And he said, “I’d love to hear the stuff.”

At the time, he was actually up in Toronto with Alex and Geddy working on pre-production for the new Rush record. I’d send him the songs and he would go and just rehearse to them. Alex was his engineer,and he would record Neil playing to those tracks and then email them back to me. So he and I developed a dialogue that way.

DH: Did the tracks that you sent him have a guide, like a drum machine?
MS: Yes.

DH: So your initial idea was in there for you to write to.
MS: Yes, I use BFD when I’m writing — either BFD or Reason. I sent him one version with the guide drums and one version with just the click. He’d send me back something, and we’d work with it from there.

The Sound Of Surprise
One of the things I was amazed about was his dynamic range. I’d never worked with somebody who had the ability to play so quietly and sensitively in certain places and then get so big and bombastic in others.

Neil had this way of playing closed hi-hat patterns in the verse or the pre-chorus and then opening the hi-hat up in the chorus. At first when I was listening to it, I would be thinking, shouldn’t we be going to a crash or something else here? But nothing was missing, in a way that I don’t think I really heard before.

DH: Well, your ears are trained for something else you’re used to.
MS: Yeah, and when I sat back and really listened to what he was doing, it was cool because he was opening up possibilities for me to bring in other guitar ideas and other musical elements that would add additional support to the chorus. But again, he wasn’t stepping all over everything else and making room for the drums, he was making the drums fit into the track in a really cool way.

DH: He’s very much a composer. He may be sitting on a so-called “non-melodic” instrument, but he’s very much a composer.
MS: Absolutely.

Making Tracks
DH: When you got into the studio with Neil, what was the recording process like? Did the whole band all play at the same time? Was he playing to scratch tracks that you did with a click, no click…?

MS: When we went into Capitol, Sean Hurley the bass player came, and Sean and Neil set up in the big room. The two of them were recording to scratch guitars, vocal, and a click that I already laid down. But generally, they spent most of the time with a little bit of vocal and a little bit of click.

 

DH: Was it multiple takes and you pick and choose what you want to do with them later?
MS: Yes, we did do multiple takes. I went in for the finest details and would maybe move a fill from one take to another, but we were being that picky only because I could.

It wasn’t like grim situations I’ve been in before where we’ve only got one bar for the verse that actually works, so we have to just loop it back and use it all throughout the song.

It wasn’t like that at all. The bar is so high with [Neil], it’s just really inspiring and really unbelievable. He just sits down and he’s absolutely giving you 100 percent, all day long. There’s no faltering.

DH: In regard to the kit and production, was it the Neil Peart signature sound? Or because this was a different environment than Rush, obviously being Vertical Horizon, did you go for something different?
MS: Mark Valentine was the engineer on it, and he and I were talking a lot beforehand about what we were going to try and go for with the sound.

On some of Neil’s records I’ve heard his tone be very succinct and very specific: very isolated microphones, with maybe a reverb added on top of that. I was hoping to get a little more room sound on this, as opposed to that real precise tone that I’ve heard on some of the records.

Big Jazz
Neil had all these awesome voices that he could use, but the really cool thing about it was that when I was sitting down there behind his kit, it’s very much oriented like a jazz kit would be. I could conceive of it that way: There’s the one tom in the middle, so you’re almost looking at an extended jazz kit. If you think about it that way, it’s not as scary.

DH: As opposed to the older kit which was double kick, four concert toms, three racks, two floors, and on and on.
MS: Right, with the two timbales, the wind chimes and crotales, wood blocks and cowbells. He still has the cowbell set up, but it never felt intrusive. In fact there was only one time, at the end of “Even Now,” where I was like, “Dude, we’ve got to hear that big…”

DH: The flurry.
MS: Yeah, that big roll — give it to me all the way from the top to the bottom. He was like, “Great, cool, I’ll do it.” And in the track it just sounds so beautiful. I remember when I first listened to “Vital Signs” from Moving Pictures, there’s this one fill that goes from the high tom all the way down (as he air drums the fill). You know, it’s so exciting, so I was so fired up to have a moment like that.

DH: You got his signature.
MS: Yeah, and it’s totally cool. Because with Vertical Horizon, I definitely have a vision of what I want the band to be, and part of that involved keeping songs pretty short. You know, not going too crazy and always wanting to leave people wanting more, or just not wanting to bore somebody.

DH: “Don’t bore us, get to the chorus.”
MS: Right, but as we were doing “Even Now,” I noticed it was something like six minutes and 30 seconds, which is two minutes more than most of the songs that I have been involved in in the past. But I wasn’t bored. I didn’t lose interest at all.I was captivated by the way it was all coming together. So there’s like a two-minute portion at the end of the song where Neil is just really playing. Everything’s building around him, the strings are coming in and all these other vocal parts are coming in and around, and the drums are the featured instrument as the song comes to a close.

CH-CH-CH-CH-Changes
DH: Which CD is going to come out first, this one or the new Rush?
MS: That’s a good question. I’m shopping for a deal right now because I’m leaving my label, so I don’t know where it’s going to wind up, but a lot of changes have been happening like that in my life. There was a time when I would’ve been really freaked out by that, but I’m not at all now.

DH: I find that if you embrace sudden changes, you’re one step ahead of the game. If you sit there and say to yourself, “Uh oh, now what, I feel lost”… then you are lost. But if you look at it as though one thing ending opens a door for something new to happen…
MS: Exactly, I’m totally open to embracing that. I don’t have all the answers, but it will all come clear as time moves forward.

Raising The Bar
DH: No disrespect to any of the other drummers you’ve played with, but you’ve certainly raised the bar for yourself quite a bit now. How will you maintain that, with or without Neil, and where do you go from here?

MS: That’s a really good question. I think that you’re absolutely right — the bar couldn’t be raised any higher. I’m not sure what comes next.

DH: Are there any other people on your list? Now that you’ve got Neil on your credits, I’m sure in some ways it will open up doors to you approaching other drummers that maybe you wouldn’t have approached before.
MS: You know, that’s a really good point. And Neil’s playing on the project was a real vote of confidence from him to me. That means a lot to me because it’s not something that he does.

DH: Other than Jeff Berlin, you might be the only other one.
MS: Right, Jeff Berlin and the Burning For Buddy stuff, and that’s it. So, it couldn’t be a more wonderful compliment. I’ve tracked with Gregg Bissonette and he’s an incredible player. You know who else I really love is Nate Morton, who did the rock star INXS show and now rock star Supernova. Also Gavin Harrison, who plays with Porcupine Tree. You know for me, the ultimate is the kind of player that can mix some of the real “out technique” stuff with the real fat, basic meat-and-potato groove playing. Simon Phillips is another guy I just have so much respect for. I had Protocol back in the day and I remember listening to that, and “Give Blood” is one of my favorite drum tracks.

DH: “Give Blood” is the quintessential rock drum track of our time. When I heard that track, I called Simon up and said, “Man, you’ve done it!” That track could not have been played any better.
MS: I know — it’s sick! With Gilmour on guitar. That’s kind of like a master class in tasteful technique. To me, it all starts with the drummer. If the guy who sits down at the kit owns it and has the ability to propel the music and make the music better, make the music greater, then everything else comes easily. If that groove falters or is hesitant, or if the time sense changes or rushes, then everything else falls apart. That’s why it’s so fun for me to do this interview: there’s nothing more important than you.

 

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.drumheadmag.com/web/feature.php?id=7

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Carl Palmer – Original prog drummer.

Carl Palmer

 

by “Pistol” Pete Kaufmann

MD recently spoke with the prog-drumming giant Carl Palmer while he was on tour with Asia. Palmer, whose career spans four decades, says he has no plans to slow down anytime soon.

 

MD: How do you prepare for a tour?

Carl: Once I know what the set is, I play it down three or four days straight, twice a day. That’s roughly four hours a day. That’s my learning curve. I practice on my drums with pads on them so they don’t make any sound. I hit as hard as I normally do to develop stamina and calluses. The day before I leave for tour, I chill and take the day off.

 

MD: How was it playing with Emerson, Lake & Palmer last year in the U.K. for the band’s fortieth anniversary?

Carl: We rehearsed for five weeks, which was far too much for me. I was already playing songs like “Pictures at an Exhibition” and “Tarkus” with my band. I was already “Rolls Royced up” from playing so often. We needed to rehearse, but five weeks was a bit much.

 

MD: Why didn’t you just tell the others to practice on their own and call you back when they had the songs together?

Carl: [Keyboardist Keith Emerson and bassist/vocalist Greg Lake] had already done some soft things as a duo but hadn’t really played full on. Even with a sufficient amount of rehearsals back at home, it takes the first few shows to really get it under your belt. I enjoyed the show very much, but it’s not something I’d want to do again.

 

MD: Why’s that?

Carl: My philosophy is very simple: If it can’t be as good as what it was, it’s a problem for me. If it’s as good as it was, I can deal with that. If it’s better than it was—ah! For me, that’s the top. I will carry on playing as long as I think I’m improving, or at least maintaining the standard I’ve achieved. The minute I can’t maintain it, I’m out.

 

MD: In your own group, the Carl Palmer Band, I noticed that the other members are all pretty young. Do you feel like a modern-day Art Blakey, taking these young musicians under your wing?

Carl: That’s the pure spice for me. These guys are so good at what they do, and they’re young. They’re so enthusiastic, and all that matters to them is how good they can get. I like being around them. Sure, I don’t make the same amount of money with my own band, but hey, there’s other ways of making money. I just have to be in two bands now. [laughs] It works out. I get to carry on the music I love. I don’t want to be blues, and I don’t want to be jazz. I’m a European drummer. I love Mussorgsky, Shostakovich, and Prokofiev. I want that because that’s me.

 

For more with Carl Palmer, including info about his brand-new instructional DVD, check out the September 2011 issue of Modern Drummer magazine. Photo by Michael Inns.

http://www.moderndrummer.com

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Keith Moon-The one and only

DOD_Keith-Moon-300x214.jpg

Few players have come close to the level of unpredictability and invention that Keith Moon exhibited between 1964 and 1978, when he manned the drumset behind the grandest, loudest band of rock’s golden age, the Who.

Moon’s drumming was an utter reflection of his personality—one of the most unusual and tormented in rock. The consummate goof-off, but also the most polite and warm person imaginable (it just depended on his mood and desires at the time), Keith played the drums with maximum passion: splattering offbeat crashes in surprising paces, injecting ruffs on the bass drum like a race horse in fast-forward, pounding out round-house tom fills—and in the early days, ending his assault by kicking the entire set into the front rows…or blowing it up with a cherry bomb! In the Who, Keith found possibly the only band able to withstand his boundless clubbing and caressing. And he took full advantage of the platform, in the process helping free rock drums from their previous major role of support. Keith was really a lead guitarist. He just happened to play the drums.

Everyone who crossed paths with Keith Moon seems to have a favorite story to tell. If one out of ten of these stories is accurate, Keith would still be the most colorful character Swinging London ever produced. In the end, though, Keith’s behavior wasn’t able to completely quell the insecurities and demons he fought daily; he died trying to battle the alcoholism that was one result of his extreme lifestyle.

But the drumming on classic Who tracks like “I Can See For Miles,” “Young Man Blues,” “Won’t Get Fooled Again,” and “The Real Me”…there have never been sounds more life-affirming, more joyous, more bursting with feeling. Nor will there ever be.

http://www.moderndrummer.com

 

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acdc drummer: keeping it simple

When many musicians and fans think about no-nonsense, rock-solid, play-for-the-song drumming, the first name that comes to mind is Phil Rudd. The Australian drummer played in several Melbourne bands, such as Buster Brown and the Coloured Balls, before joining up with would-be rock gods AC/DC in 1975. Over the next four years Rudd powered the band to superstardom with his dogged consistency and unshakeable backbeat on classics like “It’s A Long Way To The Top (If You Want To Rock ’N’ Roll),” “T.N.T.,” and “Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap.”

In 1980 original AC/DC frontman Bon Scott died as the result of alcohol abuse. Rudd was hit hard with the tragedy but continued on with the band—along with new vocalist Brian Johnson—to record their most successful record to date, 1980’s Back In Black.

In 1983, during the recording of Flick Of The Switch, Rudd left AC/DC, partly from his own substance abuse issues and partly from escalating conflicts with founder and rhythm guitarist Malcolm Young—conflicts that eventually became physical. For the next decade, the drummer lived a quiet life in New Zealand, where he purchased a helicopter company, raced cars, became a farmer, and played drums, as he said, “when I wanted to rather than when I had to.”

During AC/DC’s 1994 Razors Edge World Tour, the group called on Rudd to jam and soon after brought him back into the fold. Since then, Rudd has recorded a number of albums with AC/DC, including 2008’s Black Ice, the band’s most successful in nearly thirty years.

To the inexperienced, Phil Rudd’s drumming may seem rudimentary. But his unselfish style and humongous groove have earned him the adoration of generations of drummers. Rammstein’s Christoph Schneider said in the October 2010Modern Drummer, “AC/DC were my absolute heroes because they are simple and easy to copy—though soon you find they are not so easy to copy.” The magazine’s May 2010 issue also chimed in on the timeless rocker with the feature “Reasons To Love Phil Rudd,” in which drumming peers from Kenny Aronoff to Eric Singer sang the his praises, describing him as “the rock drummer” and his feel as “the heart and soul of AC/DC.”

 

http://www.moderndrummer.com

 

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Micky Dolenz rock n roll drummer

 

Micky Dolenz Up-Close

Nearly 40 years ago Micky Dolenz raided

America’s television screens as the

drummer for the new pop sensation the

Monkees.

To capitalize on the pop culture of the mid-

1960’s, a T.V. pilot was proposed for what

was to become television’s first rock ‘n roll

series.The Monkees auditions were similar

to that of casting a musical. Requirements

included playing an instrument or singing,

as well as acting and improvisation. Micky

had been a professional actor at the ripe

old age of 10, playing Corky in NBC’s

“Circus Boy”from 1956-1958.He also sang

and played guitar, beginning with classical

guitar training before moving on to folk

music. Prior to the Monkees he started a

rock ‘n roll band called “Micky and the

One-Nighters.”These talents combined

with his outlandish comedic ability won

Micky the role.

This set the stage for some of the most

popular music of all time, with Micky pro-

viding one of the most distinctive singing

voices in pop. Just listen to “Pleasant Valley

Sunday.”Put the top down on the convert-

ible, turn up the radio, cruise down the

Boulevard and enjoy!

Whether or not you’re a Monkees fan,

there’s no denying that many great songs

were written and recorded because of the

Monkees’existence. The songs were played

by professional studio musicians, and

within a short while, by the Monkees

themselves. On the concert front, the

Monkees silenced their critics.They played

competently in a garage-pop style that was

raw and appealing, certainly of a caliber

with the zestful energy of the early Kinks

and Beatles in concert. Without question,

their music as well as their T.V. series, had

a major impact on American culture of the

‘60’s and earns Micky a rightful place in the

annals of pop history.

VDM: Micky,how old were you when you

were cast as the drummer on the Monkees

TV show?

Micky: I was twenty years old. This was

1965.

VDM: Did you play drums at the time you

were cast?

Micky: No, I played guitar. It wasn’t until

after I was cast for the part,that I learned to

play the drums. I had played around on

drums a little, but had never taken formal

lessons until being cast as the drummer for

the Monkees.

VDM: Where you immediately given les-

sons?

Micky: Yes, I took drum lessons for a solid

year from a few different teachers in the

Los Angeles area.

VDM:What was the first drum set used on

the series?

Micky: The first set promoted for the show

was a (champagne sparkle) Gretsch kit. I

by Billy Jeansonne

had those drums for years and when I

moved,I didn’t take them with me.I wish I

still had that set. The black Rogers drums

were also used on the show.That is the set

I took on the road. I still have the black

Rogers kit.

VDM: Micky, at what point did you begin

playing on the Monkees’studio albums?

Micky: The first album that we did all the

playing on was “Headquarters.”Originally,

they didn’t want us to play on any of the

albums,but we revolted and won the right

to play and record all our own stuff. I do

not consider myself a studio drummer. I

play what I play and I do it okay, but I’ve

never played drums on any studio sessions

other than the Monkees albums. Jumping

ahead a bit, after the Monkees, Frank

Zappa called me up and wanted me to join

The Mothers of Invention,but I couldn’t do

it because I was under contract with

another record company. Right from the

beginning we were playing on some of the

Monkees albums.Mike Nesmith was insis-

tent about playing

on the albums. He

wrote a song on the

first album with

Carole King called

“Sweet Young

Thing.”But it was

very difficult to get

the opportunity to

play on those first

albums. All they

wanted me to do

was sing.

VDM: Did Hal

Blaine play drums on the earlier record-

ings?

Micky: Oh yes, the Wrecking Crew not

only did a lot of our early stuff, but played

on the Beach Boys,The Byrds,The Mamas

and Papas,and many more groups’albums.

I learned a lot from Hal in the early days,

not formally,but I picked up a lot from Hal.

VDM: Did you do most of the singing on

the albums?

Micky: Me and Davy did all the lead vocals

on all the singles.Mike did a few songs that

were album cuts. Peter did a couple of

tunes.But I had the majority of the hit sin-

gles.

VDM: Aside from Europe,have you toured

other foreign countries?

Micky: Yeah, back in the 60’s we toured

Japan. Davy and I toured all the Far East

countries.We went to Singapore,Malaysia,

Korea,Taiwan, and Japan. We even toured

Australia.

Live in Japan courtesy of Micky Dolenz

- 18 -

The Monkees were great to work

with! We made some good records

with them. They were certainly

another feather in our cap.

Hal Blaine

Legendary session drummer.

VDM: Do you still play drums on tour?

Micky: Well, when the four of us toured

England in 1997,we reconfigured the orig-

inal Monkees setup. I played drums and

sang lead,Mike was on guitar,Peter played

bass and keyboards, and Davy played

percussion and acoustic guitar.When Peter

left the group originally, Mike, Davy, and I

went out on the road (in 1969), it was not

practical to play as a threesome,so we had

other sidemen (Sam & The Goodtimers).

On tours where Davy,Peter,and I went out,

we had double drummers. Sandy Genero

and I played drums, but I only played on

some of the tunes. Over the years, people

wanted me to be more out front, since I

sang all the leads. It is a little boring visu-

ally for an audience when the lead singer is

behind the drums all the time.Davy sort of

convinced me to come down from the

drums because he was out front doing

background vocals and it didn’t really work

well with me being behind the drums.

VDM: Does Sandy Genero still play drums

with the band when you are on tour?

Micky: Sandy is one of our first calls. Max

Weinberg from the E Street Band played

with us back in 1986.

VDM: Were you influenced by any drum-

mers when you began playing?

Micky: Cozy Cole. Buddy Miles used to

come to our house and give me some

pointers.I suppose Ringo had an influence

on me because I was such a huge Beatles

fan. I still think to this day that Ringo is

probably the best rock and roll drummer

ever.He is not the fanciest drummer but he

had such a feel for the song.

VDM: What is your favorite Monkees

song?

Micky: I have a few,but the one that I tend

to keep coming back to is “Pleasant Valley

Sunday.”A Carole King tune. It just seems

to stand up real well over the years.

VDM: Did you write any of the Monkees’

songs.

Micky:Yeah, but I never wrote any of the

big hits. None of us did. Most of the hits

were written by Neil Diamond, Gerry

Goffin & Carole King,and Tommy Boyce &

Bobby Hart.

Micky is currently starring in a rock musical

on Broadway called Aida, written by Elton

John and Tim Rice. For information on

Micky’s live concert schedule and Aida,

visit www.mickydolenz.comand www.micky-

dolenz.com/aida/.

Cover photography by Billy Tompkins

www.billytompkins.com

212-249-2067

Gretsch drums supplied by John Sheridan

Micky was a wild,

madcap, zany kind

of guy. Always very

nice, very fun; a

great guy!

Bobby Dick, with

“The Sundowners”

who toured with

the Monkees

http://www.classicdrummer.com

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Great Grooves by Steve Jordan

Check out these grooves by Steve Jordan:

 

Steve-Jordan-Groovesbranam1.jpg

http://www.drummerworld.com/Videos/stevejordangrooves.html

 

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Analysis of Travis Baker

Here’s a diddy for all you punk rock kids.

A Muscle Makeover

  • By John Natelli
  • Published February 2009

Travis Barker

Only once in a great while there arrives a musician like Travis Barker, who possesses such a pronounced lack of self-awareness, such a blatant disregard for his own public image, and such a forgivable inability to be anyone other than himself, yet is so frustratingly good at what he does.

When Barker hit the scene in 1999, joining Blink-182 on their memorably titled Enema Of The State, the drum world collectively shook its head in disbelief at what it was hearing: phrases, beats, and ideas never before played on a drum set, performed with an energetic dynamism equally as astounding, all in the context of a punk rock band singing about taking their pants off. As Barker progressed musically, so did the band, and by the release of their universally acclaimed self-titled swan song, Barker had considerably raised the bar on punk rock drumming, and rock drumming in general.

As fans were left wondering what was to come, Barker immediately made it clear to all that he was just getting started on a long and storied career, at once unpredictable and hugely influential. While this article will show you a couple of his tricks along the way, ultimately, the only thing you can really do in emulation of our beloved, tattooed hero is to practice your ass off – just like he did.

Travis Barker

1. DON’T GIVE YOURSELF THE OPTION OF FAILURE (AND GET TATTOOS)

Now in his early thirties, Barker has already managed to shape himself a career of legendary breadth: membership in at least six groups ranging from the well-known to the ridiculously successful, countless recordings with a slew of esteemed artists such as Pink and the Black Eyes Peas, his own record label, fashion line, signature gear, television show, and plenty more. There arguably hasn’t been a drummer of such celebrity since the likes of Moonie or Ringo.

Taking all this into account, the mantra stated above is without a doubt the centerpiece to Barker’s way of thinking, and has been instrumental in his ability to successfully accomplish one goal after another. It’s well documented that the tragic passing of his mother a day before his first day of high school contributed significantly to his outlook on life. While such a tragedy can severely derail the course of any teenager’s life, Barker seems to have been impacted the opposite way, gaining self-discipline and focus from the event, strengthening his sense of purpose. It was, after all, his mother who initially encouraged him to pursue music. After that, Barker decided to lock the door and throw away the key, adorning himself top to bottom with extensive body art, once even telling MTV, “I purposefully tattooed my whole body so I wouldn’t have to be a perfect person in a perfect world working at a perfect job. I made it so I had to play music. I had no other choice.” (Don’t try this at home.)

 

 

Travis Barker

2. UTILIZE THE ENTIRE KIT

In most Barker performances, and in at least every Blink-182 song, there exist moments during which he succeeds in swiping every piece of his kit within a relatively short amount of time. Exciting to listen to and a lot of fun to play, these moments usually come in the form of ostinati – repetitive, composed parts that accompany a specific section within a song’s form.

Barker likes to flavor the verse of a song with one of these before launching into something more straightforward and focused. “Adam’s Song” (from Enema Of The State), whose legendary grooves have become a rite of passage for teen drummers of all persuasions, has Barker juxtaposing one of these all-inclusive ostinati against a simple, tuneful verse (Ex. 1a). The part features an assortment of cymbal colors showering the listener from all directions. The opening verse of “Anthem Pt. 2” (from Enema Of The State) features similar choreography with its unusual and syncopated placement of splashes and ride bells (Ex. 1b). For extra effect, Barker will sometimes play an ostinato with a half-time feel, returning to the original timing in the following section. Take a look at the funky half-time breakdown that leads into the final chorus of “Reckless Abandon” (Ex. 1c).

http://www.drummagazine.com/lessons/post/10-ways-to-sound-like-travis-barker/

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Keith Moon- When drummers had their own thing!

Few players have come close to the level of unpredictability and invention that Keith Moon exhibited between 1964 and 1978, when he manned the drumset behind the grandest, loudest band of rock’s golden age, the Who.

Moon’s drumming was an utter reflection of his personality—one of the most unusual and tormented in rock. The consummate goof-off, but also the most polite and warm person imaginable (it just depended on his mood and desires at the time), Keith played the drums with maximum passion: splattering offbeat crashes in surprising paces, injecting ruffs on the bass drum like a race horse in fast-forward, pounding out round-house tom fills—and in the early days, ending his assault by kicking the entire set into the front rows…or blowing it up with a cherry bomb! In the Who, Keith found possibly the only band able to withstand his boundless clubbing and caressing. And he took full advantage of the platform, in the process helping free rock drums from their previous major role of support. Keith was really a lead guitarist. He just happened to play the drums.

Everyone who crossed paths with Keith Moon seems to have a favorite story to tell. If one out of ten of these stories is accurate, Keith would still be the most colorful character Swinging London ever produced. In the end, though, Keith’s behavior wasn’t able to completely quell the insecurities and demons he fought daily; he died trying to battle the alcoholism that was one result of his extreme lifestyle.

But the drumming on classic Who tracks like “I Can See For Miles,” “Young Man Blues,” “Won’t Get Fooled Again,” and “The Real Me”…there have never been sounds more life-affirming, more joyous, more bursting with feeling. Nor will there ever be.

http://www.moderndrummer.com

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