Monday, 11 December 2017
Go Fund Yourself
Fingers were pointed at the increasingly absurd and ever more irrelevant Lily Allen the other day. The multi millionaire was experiencing some difficulty with tenants in her Notting Hill home as they were allegedly refusing to leave and were claiming diplomatic immunity. This turned out to be overblown and ridiculously exaggerated as is so often the case when a waning star seeks to make ink in order to revive a distinctly flagging career. Expect a Great American Songbook album any day soon. Anyway, quite a few wags and wiseacres got on board with this suggesting a social media whip round to shore up poor Lily's diminished circumstances. Last I heard she was down to her last four million.
How we laughed.
Then, as if on cue, over here in our little corner of 'the industry' a prominent figure fell prey to genuine tragedy. A legendary and highly regarded fellow drummer who I don’t know personally lost his home and posessions in a wild fire in Ventura County, California.
It's hard to imagine how you would so much as start to deal with a crisis on that kind of scale. Anyone who has ever tried to make even the smallest insurance claim will know that the companies seem hell-bent on moving heaven and earth to wriggle out of any sort of settlement, to say nothing of process moving at a glacial pace once a pay out has been grudgingly agreed.
In what was a remarkably level headed and really quite entrepreneurial move our man set up an appeal on the Go Fund me Platform. I sent him thirty dollars, it's a slow week. Although an undisputed monster player I don't have any of his records and have never been influenced by him but I donated what I could afford, which more than anything is about our little community looking out for one another.
Not everybody feels the same, and there have been one or two outbreaks of high dudgeon at the effrontery of a <quote> 'very rich musician' seeking to enrich himself, one assumes, at the expense of the good-natured paupers who buy his million selling records and subsidise his private jet and mansion habits. <Insert dictionary definition of irony here>
As I said earlier in the post I don't know this gentleman personally but I can tell you something that he and I have in common, along with the vast majority of those who have made a career out of producing sounds from musical instruments.
We all earn a great deal less than you might think.
Don't get me wrong, by no stretch of the imagination have we 'got it tough'. To be able to spend your life pursuing music as a profession is a gift in direct proportion to the requisite gifts that make it possible in the first place.
Consider this: just because he is considered (rightly) to be a big name on the drum scene doesn’t mean he is worth a fortune, not even a small one. A lot of recordings with strong 'muso appeal' that are known to very many of us actually sell in miniscule quantities to the point where the bean counters at the major records labels long since shut the door. Much of what gets out there does so at the behest of small, enthusiastic outlets who value artistry over profit. A very large percentage of the best recordings of your musician heroes fall very squarely under this subheading. Conversely there are musicians out there you never heard of who played on stacks of hit records back in the 70s and 80s; records that still get played on mainstream radio as a result of which the musicians get a very small royalty, but if you were on enough of the right sessions way back when people used to all gather in the same room to record stuff (nostalgia!) a decent income stream from PPL (look it up) is still very possible.
It's a common misconception that musicians, especially those with any kind of individual profile are making out like footballers whereas the reality is that visibility is in no way a reflection of turnover. Some weeks you do really well, some weeks are just passable, and then there are those weeks when you earn absolutely nothing at all. If very fortunate there might be some income from songwriting or airplay (my PPL averages about two quid a week) but being dependent on playing exclusively is a very hazardous path at the best of times. Even household names have lean periods. I remember in the early 90s I had become friends with the great British jazz drummer Martin Drew who had an international profile at that time on account of the best part of two decades as a member of the Oscar Peterson trio. He invited me round to his house to hang out and my mental image of a six bedroom Georgian detached house with a carriage drive turned out to be slightly wide of the mark, which brings us to the other misconception that stellar skill on your instrument somehow equals big paydays. It doesn't.
All the virtuoso chops in the world won't get you anywhere close to Queen's Roger Taylor for having written 'It's A Kind Of Magic', and if you are a named artist on a record receiving mainstream airplay you can do very well too. When Radio 2 played one track off my Upswing album and I got almost forty quid I couldn't help but extrapolate that to what Adele must be clocking up.
Anyway, I hope our man gets back on his feet quickly and completely. In any event perhaps if he raises way more money than anticipated (which is looking entirely possible) he might then be minded to pass any excess on to other deserving parties in our community, and having been able to produce creative work of my own this year via crowd funding I know first hand how it feels to be on the receiving end of support that makes things happen.
In the myriad complexities of human nature I like to think that our default setting is to help people in times of need, without always choosing to ascertain how they got to that place. I know a couple of fellow musicians who have experienced extremely straitened circumstances and have been on the receiving end of all kinds of help, money, a place to live and often a place to play. All done without judgement when you consider how one or two characters spent much of the 80s and 90s propping up the GDP of a certain Central American republic.
But really it's all about proportion isn't it?
If a billionaire donated a million pounds to a good cause it would have an impact as a proportion of his nett worth equivalent to me giving a few quid to a homeless person (or thirty bucks to a fellow drummer who lost everything in a house fire for that matter).
Money by itself is worth nothing.
It's what you do with it that counts.
Sunday, 5 November 2017
60 Minutes That Changed Drumming Forever
The arrival of the VHS machine changed drumming forever. Its impact was as far reaching as plastic heads, the lifting of restrictions on imports from the US into the UK (of not just products but famous musicians too) and the breathalyser in the change it brought to the lives of players of all ages and ability levels.
We got one in about 1980, rented of course, as most machines were in that bygone era of DER, Radio Rentals and Visionhire, largely because I had begun to appear on television from time to time and it was nice to be able to record these things for posterity. Even better than that was the opportunity to record tv appearances by the greats, and I soon began to assemble a formidable visual reference library of the players I most admired. It quickly became apparent that watching and rewatching this material was a great way of picking up ideas and improving one's own playing. It was no surprise when a couple of years later adverts began to appear in Modern Drummer magazine to the effect that Drummers Collective in New York City had similarly identified the potential in video tuition and were releasing their own material. I bought them all, and the first ones I recall featured Ed Thigpen, Louie Bellson and Lenny White.
In addition there was another one.
It was called Steve Gadd Up Close.
I had become increasingly aware of Gadd's prowess over probably the previous four or five years, and his presence in my record collection was rapidly increasing but other than a fleeting glimpse on the Simon and Garfunkel reunion concert (broadcast on a mainstream TV channel, there weren't any others back then) I hadn't really seen him do his stuff.
So I put the bulky cassette in the the cumbersome top loading video recorder and pressed play.
An hour or so later I pressed the eject button a changed musician.
Unencumbered by visual effects, backing tracks or showboating, I had just witnessed undiluted mastery clearly explained. No mystery, no secrets, no smoke and mirrors. In conversation with Rob Wallis Steve explains key concepts and talks about his development as a player. There's nothing commercially oriented about this at all, just sharing knowledge and information gathered over an entire career.
More than any of the other video releases of the time Up Close was a game changer, and it created the opportunity for drummers from Antarctica to Zimbabwe to learn from a master. A trickle became a deluge over the next few years as all the biggest players of the day (with one very obvious exception) added to the drum video education canon. Then came drum performance videos, and if you were in for the long haul you could watch the entire Modern Drummer festival from the comfort of your own home. I'm not even sure if the Modern Drummer festival still goes on. Maybe so many people stayed at home waiting for the video to come out that nobody went to the gig any more. Think about that for a moment.
The other huge change that this brought about was access to information, to a point where the average drummer has an ability level unimaginable a few decades ago. Apparently skiing was one of the first areas to benefit from this approach to learning. More than half a century ago someone came up with the idea of filming expert, naturally talented skiers and watching the footage in slow motion.
Then of course along came the internet and incredibly affordable cameras, to say nothing of the first iPhone 10 years ago, and all of a sudden it was open season on drum video education.
Every day my Instagram feed is filled with video snapshots of often similar and worringly average playing. Just because you've got some drums, a camera and a wifi connection doesn’t necessarily mean..............(complete this yourself). Anyway before I get swept away on a tsunami of cynicism it has to be said that social media provides a great platform for upcoming players to make an impact. Not only that but it provides an opportunity for those of us of a certain age who have been around the block a handful of times to share some of the experience we have picked up along the way.
As many of you know I crowdfunded a video education project earlier this year and it is getting very close to the time when I shall unleash it on an unsuspecting world.
Having been so inspired by the Gadd video all those years ago I have done it on a similarly low budget as many of you reading this will know as you helped to finance the production.
No visual effects, no 9 minute backing tracks in 13, nor 13 minute backing tracks in 9 for that matter. I chose not to include any tracks given that we had an upper limit of 120 minutes playing time and I was eager to get as much information across as was possible, and that just to play would run the risk of self indulgence. Also (confession time!) I really only play my best when there is either a) a band, or b) an audience. With neither one present I struggle to summon up the necessary adrenalin rush without which a worthwhile performance is a struggle to attain. That's a big part of why my favourite part of my work as a musician is to play for people, and anyway, this is about sharing ideas. There's quite sufficient of my playing on Youtube already.
I tried to steer clear of information that is already freely available, things we've all heard dozens of times before. Over a lifetime of musical development but especially in the last two decades I have evolved a few key concepts that have revolutionised my playing, and unless you have studied with me on a one to one basis you won’t have seen them before.
Nor am I doing this to 'raise my profile'. I am quite satisfied with whatever profile I may already have. My fifties have happily freed me from the yoke of ambition and the quest for glory. These days I play music purely for its own sake.
The intended outcome is for the viewer to actually gain something from watching the programme, not to be impressed/intimidated by the content, as we all know how closely connected those two are. I approached this just like any other drum clinic (because essentially that's what it is), where the aim is to send the audience home with one thing they didn't have when they arrived (as long as it's not an infectious disease of course). One bit of demystification makes the process worth everybody's while.
As with most of my output I have one foot in the past, and I have decided to release this as a physical product, on the now rather quaint DVD format. It won't be available in the shops or on Amazon. The only way to get it is by mail order or at any of my clinics or other personal appearances.
Only 500 are being produced and over half that quantity are already spoken for. If you would like a copy too send an email you don't have to part with any money just yet and we will be in touch to arrange all that at the appropriate time, because you can't put a digital download on a bookshelf.
Friday, 13 October 2017
Reciprocal Motivation
Sometimes these blogs posts deal with highly specific topics relating to drums and the music industry. Sometimes the posts have a much broader implication and serve as metaphors for the wider a world and the essence of human nature itself. This is such an instance.
Yesterday (October 12th 2017) was a busy and often frustrating day. Several times during the day I was beset by unnecessary triviality which need not have even occurred if other people were on top of their designated tasks. Incompetence in other words. An upcoming industry event in which I was scheduled to participate got cancelled and a first year student described me as 'old'. So really very much a 'why do I bother' sort of a day. I get about four or five of them a year so on the balance of probabilities I'm free and clear until just after Christmas.
Then I looked in my phone and found a messenger request from someone not in my social network.
This is 'why I bother'.
Hi Pete. I'm a young drummer from
Dublin. Sorry to be spamming your personal page but I couldn't find a way to
direct message your music one. I felt the urgent need to drop you a line and
thank youfor all the invaluable resource material and wisdom you have made
publicly available online. I know by the depth of your knowledge and sincerity
of your delivery that you haven't come by any of these lessons cheaply. Thank
you for sharing the fruits of a lifetime investment of time without any promise
of a return. Your stories and guidance, not to mention the success of your big
band, are of huge benefit and a source of inspiration to a young player like
myself, unsure of how to go about moulding or shaping a brand or identity as a
musician. Not to mention whether or not the risk of typecasting oneself into a
particular style or scenario is even a good idea in a market as small as
Dublin! If you made it this far then thanks again. Can't wait to get my hands
on the DVD! All the best, Ben Cooper
So Ben got some inspiration and motivation from some of my music, and in sending his message inspired and motivated me right back.
It's a good strategy. Give it a try.
Sunday, 8 October 2017
A Long Time Ago
About a week ago a very old clip turned up in a YouTube suggestion.
The clip, although low in quality captured the big band on very good form from a particularly busy and artistically fruitful period from 1999, where we managed to get a pretty substantial tour together with the help of a small grant from the Arts Council.
The aim of that tour was to take a lot of the repertoire from the Playing With Fire record, plus a selection of material that had become key parts of the live shows, and to present it to a wider, general audience aside from our dedicated London hard core who had unfailingly supported us since the band's debut four years previously.
Right from the beginning I had decided I wanted to do something a little bit different. There was/is a long history of musicians getting together to play big band jazz for pleasure, where bands play music they enjoy. If an audience happens to enjoy it, that's a bonus. Traditionally this has taken place in pub function rooms and clubs, whereas 'professional' engagements by big bands have been more geared towards an axis of Glenn Miller/Rat Pack formulaic nostalgia, complete with smiling vocalists and penguin suits for all, or worse, the abomination that is middle aged to elderly men dressed up as WW2 boy soldiers.
In the mid 90s and my early 30s I was still idealistic enough (and still am incidentally) to believe that it might be possible to take the 'musicians' music' out of the pub rooms and present it on a proper platform. I had managed to source a lot of scores from the USA that no other bands were playing at the time, together with a selection of Bob Mintzer and Thad Jones charts. Some bands played one or two of these but nobody had attained the precision we had on account of hundreds of hours of rehearsal. Perhaps most importantly a number of musicians began to contribute original material, and it was thanks to Matt Wates, Matt Regan and particularly Frank Griffith that we were able to assemble our own, recognisable repertoire. Frank and I collaborated on a version of Monty Alexander's 'Regulator', I borrowed a chart from the repertoire of the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra, one from Peter Herbolzheimer's band and with that we had enough material to record a well-paced, balanced debut album. Added to which the cover photo (all leather trousers, big hair, bare feet and pout) was a deliberate and tongue-in-cheek attempt to present an image as far removed from the somewhat reactionary 'blazer-and-flannels' face of mainstream British jazz in the 90s. Years later an American radio presenter said that he had picked our record from the 100s he would regularly receive specifically because it (I) looked so different.
So it was with a look, as well as a sound that was different, and owed more to the youth jazz orchestras where most of us had had our start that we went boldly into the grown up world of theatres, concert halls and jazz festivals. Jazz festivals which were, I hasten to point out, largely untouched by major arts funding and more often than not the result of small scale local sponsorship and hours of unpaid work by seemingly tireless volunteers. I had tireless volunteers of my own without whom I could not have made all this happen. One of them once made an ill-judged phone call that managed to close an important, opening door but by and large they worked minor miracles between them.
Trips to Jersey in 1998 and again in 99 (big band booked two years running and not doing a tribute show of some kind-unprecedented!) are particularly fondly remembered, but it was an appearance at Murray Paterson's 'Rendezvous In Britain' festival in 1999 and again in 2000 that really made the most impact.
Here was an audience who totally 'got' what we were about.
Nobody said "Big band is Glenn Miller", "They look like students" or "How can you listen to that?" three genuine quotes.
This generated enough momentum to top a few polls, get a bigger record deal and do more playing. What with one thing and another by 2005 the tide was well on its way out. At that time I was interviewed as part of a major feature about British big bands for the now defunct Jazz UK magazine. On publication they gave over almost all the column inches to bands who were playing 'tribute' music and we were totally omitted from the published article. It was my anger at this snub that was the stimulus for our third album, and when the following year I received the first request to present an evening of music made famous by Buddy Rich it was a pragmatic (though by no means overnight) decision to respond in the affirmative.
I miss the excitement that comes from doing something new; playing music that people have never heard before, and I seldom see any of the great players who were such an essential part of this creative period. I just found the entire 1999 Rendezvous In Britain concert on an old disc and uploaded it to YouTube so if you have an hour or two to spare and you like this sort of thing you may wish to take a look.
I took a look, and as a result am feeling that it may be time to do it all again.
Part 1
Part 2
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Saturday, 30 September 2017
Drummer Wanted. Must Have Amazing Left Hand
I answered the phone the other day,
"Hi Pete, I don't know if you can help me. I need a drummer for a show next month who can play eighth note triplets in his or her left hand at 160 bpm. It needs to be traditional grip though. Are you available?"
Said no one. Ever.
OK; it's a lot of fun to work on some of the more intricate aspects of drum technique. I should know, I've spent a great deal of time pursuing these goals over the years, but I learned a long time ago that practice is an investment of time, and like any investment I want the maximum return for the minimum possible outlay.
The traditional left hand reference at the top of the post makes me think of Buddy Rich, whose centenary has just passed this very weekend. Buddy and Joe Morello were the two undisputed masters of this particular type of technical facility and it would take a steward's enquiry to get between them. Joe was arguably a shade faster but Buddy was ahead on control and endurance. As these two legends were my first and most enduring major influences it's not surprising that this is an area of playing I find fascinating.
That said I have no time for YouTube uploads with titles like 'Buddy Rich's Left Hand Technique Explained' as he is the only person who could possibly explain it, were he still here, and the chances are he would avoid the issue, as anyone who ever heard Jim Chapin's "I willed it to happen" anecdote will concur.
What is interesting about the proliferation of tuition videos of varying merits is that their abundance has made this kind of technique, once seen in only a very few players, now by comparison commonplace. Either that or drummers have been doing it for years but now we have smartphone cameras and the internet it's much easier to bring our efforts to wider attention.
'Look at me' drumming, in other words.
I'm all for a bit of 'look at me' playing in the right context, although a six snare tribute at a well-known drummer's funeral was once compromised by one of the players deciding that he was going to play as many notes as possible in spite of the sombre mood of the piece, then went on to drop a stick, and ended up looking a little bit silly.
The key to having strong technical facility is knowing when not to use it. There is nothing whatsoever 'wrong', with having technique to spare if it is used sparingly, thus leaving the listener wanting more. Buddy Rich reference once again; so many times I saw his band play live where the total time on stage would be a little under two hours, of which rarely more than ten minutes (work out the percentage for yourself) would be of the maestro going it alone.
I still smile at the memory of the moral superiority of a gas fitter and part time drum tutor from Bolton who once lectured me about the benefits of 'playing for the song', the inference being that for me to have the temerity to get my chops out in public was somehow 'inappropriate'. There's probably an aggrieved minority who consider drum solos to be 'micro aggressions'.
Anyway, back to the plot. Let's all continue to be inspired by the greats of yesterday, today and for that matter, tomorrow. Dismantle the ideas of the players you admire, and recast them in your own image. I was recently flattered when I watched another drummer play and he included an attempted replication of a key idea of mine, which I had arrived at by mixing a selection of other players' ideas. Whilst the acknowledgment of my influence was undoubtedly a compliment I'd prefer him to put his own slant on it, but he's got years ahead of him so hopefully he will. Similarly I teach in such a way that every player comes back with their own personal interpretation of the study material rather than the "three beats to learn for next week" approach which leaves little scope for finding your own voice.
So, back to the practice pad and that cool left hand stuff. Going 'diddleiddleiddleiddle' on the pad is a far cry from making this kind of stuff work in a musical context, as those we admire the most undoubtedly could.
If you have to stop, change the shape of your grip and then go for it, you're probably just as well off balancing a beach ball on the end of your nose.
"Hi Pete, I don't know if you can help me. I need a drummer for a show next month who can play eighth note triplets in his or her left hand at 160 bpm. It needs to be traditional grip though. Are you available?"
Said no one. Ever.
OK; it's a lot of fun to work on some of the more intricate aspects of drum technique. I should know, I've spent a great deal of time pursuing these goals over the years, but I learned a long time ago that practice is an investment of time, and like any investment I want the maximum return for the minimum possible outlay.
The traditional left hand reference at the top of the post makes me think of Buddy Rich, whose centenary has just passed this very weekend. Buddy and Joe Morello were the two undisputed masters of this particular type of technical facility and it would take a steward's enquiry to get between them. Joe was arguably a shade faster but Buddy was ahead on control and endurance. As these two legends were my first and most enduring major influences it's not surprising that this is an area of playing I find fascinating.
That said I have no time for YouTube uploads with titles like 'Buddy Rich's Left Hand Technique Explained' as he is the only person who could possibly explain it, were he still here, and the chances are he would avoid the issue, as anyone who ever heard Jim Chapin's "I willed it to happen" anecdote will concur.
What is interesting about the proliferation of tuition videos of varying merits is that their abundance has made this kind of technique, once seen in only a very few players, now by comparison commonplace. Either that or drummers have been doing it for years but now we have smartphone cameras and the internet it's much easier to bring our efforts to wider attention.
'Look at me' drumming, in other words.
I'm all for a bit of 'look at me' playing in the right context, although a six snare tribute at a well-known drummer's funeral was once compromised by one of the players deciding that he was going to play as many notes as possible in spite of the sombre mood of the piece, then went on to drop a stick, and ended up looking a little bit silly.
The key to having strong technical facility is knowing when not to use it. There is nothing whatsoever 'wrong', with having technique to spare if it is used sparingly, thus leaving the listener wanting more. Buddy Rich reference once again; so many times I saw his band play live where the total time on stage would be a little under two hours, of which rarely more than ten minutes (work out the percentage for yourself) would be of the maestro going it alone.
I still smile at the memory of the moral superiority of a gas fitter and part time drum tutor from Bolton who once lectured me about the benefits of 'playing for the song', the inference being that for me to have the temerity to get my chops out in public was somehow 'inappropriate'. There's probably an aggrieved minority who consider drum solos to be 'micro aggressions'.
Anyway, back to the plot. Let's all continue to be inspired by the greats of yesterday, today and for that matter, tomorrow. Dismantle the ideas of the players you admire, and recast them in your own image. I was recently flattered when I watched another drummer play and he included an attempted replication of a key idea of mine, which I had arrived at by mixing a selection of other players' ideas. Whilst the acknowledgment of my influence was undoubtedly a compliment I'd prefer him to put his own slant on it, but he's got years ahead of him so hopefully he will. Similarly I teach in such a way that every player comes back with their own personal interpretation of the study material rather than the "three beats to learn for next week" approach which leaves little scope for finding your own voice.
So, back to the practice pad and that cool left hand stuff. Going 'diddleiddleiddleiddle' on the pad is a far cry from making this kind of stuff work in a musical context, as those we admire the most undoubtedly could.
If you have to stop, change the shape of your grip and then go for it, you're probably just as well off balancing a beach ball on the end of your nose.
Labels:
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Vater drum sticks,
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Thursday, 14 September 2017
No 2 the O2.
Living in the country I seldom go to live shows; in fact I'm struggling to remember what was the last such occasion. There have been many notable events down the years, and the recent passing of Walter Becker reminded me of a great show by Steely Dan in 2007 at Hammersmith. That venue has been rebranded so many times but to those of a certain age it will always be Hammersmith Odeon. Once upon a time a venue like Hammersmith was considered high capacity for pretty much any touring band, irrespective of how big the name. There have been festivals and fields full of people seemingly forever of course, but over recent times bigger and bigger venues have become much more the norm.
So where and when did the change begin. Was it Shea Stadium? Are The Beatles to blame?
I've been to one or two arena gigs over the years and quite honestly I really get very little enjoyment from them for a number of reasons.
When still living in London we went to see Lionel Ritchie at the O2. Having worn out the corny joke about whether or not he would play 'All Night Long' we headed off to the peninsula, took our designated places about two thirds of the way back in the arena, and watched five tiny little dots in the middle distance run through Lionel's back catalogue.
I didn't hang around to hear him play All Night Long in the end, as having been detained for what seemed like hours in a post Barbara Streisand gridlock a year or so previously I knew what to expect. I like venues where you can walk out of the door, straight into the street and go your own way. They're a lot safer too as has been proved by recent tragic events, and I certainly have no wish to be corralled just attempting to leave an event.
A well-worn formula that was trotted out regularly for many years was 'Glenn Miller tribute plus firework display'. I did a great many such shows with several of the bands and the objective always was to break those drums down and make a run for it before the audience began to mobilise, otherwise you would be stuck in an enormous jam on the cramped exits roads of properties curated by the National Trust before it became obsessed with diversity.
My rule of thumb is that if I need a big screen image to confirm that that tiny dot on the horizon is the person I have paid £85 to see, I'm better off watching a DVD at home. In my house there's never a queue for the lavatory and we don't drink out of plastic glasses.
Cadogan Hall just off London's Sloane Square is a particular favourite venue to play. This will come as a surprise to nobody as it has been the setting for a number of concerts by my big band over the years. In addition I have worked there for other people and sat in the audience for several shows. The auditorium has a capacity of about 900.You can see everyone and more importantly, they can see you. If you don't want your interval drinks on site you can walk to The Botanist, or any number of other establishments. You have freedom to choose something other than overpriced fizzy lager or tepid chardonnay to be found in the 20,000 capacity venues from which there is no escape until it's time to leave. A non-captive audience is my kind of audience.
One of the more recent live shows I attended was at Pizza Express, Soho, with a band that included the legendary Steve Gadd on drums. To be able to watch this titan of the drums at super close range (not for the first time I might add) makes for great education as well as entertainment. Dean St Pizza is a favourite venue both to watch or to perform. Its near neighbour Ronnie Scott's ranks very highly too.
Having dealt with the visual aspect it's also worth considering sound.
I like to play as acoustically as possible. I don't like having my drums close mic'd if at all possible, and I would always prefer to play without a monitor wedge deafening me on one side. There's nothing quite as 'real' as being able to hear the natural sound of one's fellow musicians. Acoustic performance gives you optimum control over dynamics, balance, intonation and a whole lot more. I have no wish to be thirty yards from my rhythm section cohorts; I want them where we can communicate effectively.
Just like my earlier comment regarding video screens I would rather hear the sound being created by the players as opposed to the front of house engineer. In even the smallest of rooms a modicum of re-enforcement is often needed, but I still like to be able to hear the natural sound as created by the artists on stage.
Music is not football or athletics, it can be performed perfectly in a relatively small space. Think about it for a moment, putting a concert on featuring a four piece band in an 80,000 seat sports arena makes about as much sense as holding the FA cup final on the stage of the Amersham Arms. Sadly corporate greed tends to trump artistic integrity almost every time. Artists making a comeback doing stripped back 'acoustic' shows are often doing so because of declining box office numbers rather than a desire to get closer to the paying audience.
If I ever found myself in the somewhat unlikely circumstance whereby my band could fill an arena I simply wouldn't do it.
Ten dates filling a 30,000 capacity venue is roughly 350 shows in an 850 seat venue. I know which I would prefer to do. Think of all the diaries full of gigs for 14 musicians (plus the odd dep) and I'd get the chance to play at peak form, because there's only one way to do that, which I'll share on a future occasion.
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Saturday, 26 August 2017
Close, But No Rock Star......
There are no gold discs on the wall of my study, and a friend who claimed to have seen me on a retro Top of the Pops from the mid 80s was definitely mistaken. I dread small talk sometimes; hairdressers, dental hygienists, friends of friends, their neighbours, and random relatives, all of whom inevitably ask the dreaded question;
"Have you worked with anybody famous?" which invariably elicits a one word answer, "Yes" (although in the case of the hygienist it was more like "Hauwughah" as I recall).
Recently I wrote about expertise and how it's a quality conferred upon us by others (rightly or wrongly) and to a great extent I tend to think that the same could be said of success, although it is in many ways a far more abstract commodity. In our industry and elsewhere there are over-achievers too numerous to mention, who are portrayed to us as the epitome of success, by dint of having achieved wealth or fame, more often than not the yardsticks by which much of success is (in my opinion incorrectly) measured. Money and adulation are very nice things to have in your life, and I feel happy for those who have them, but I suspect the definitions of success are far more varied and nuanced than these two rather broad points of reference. After all, history is littered with all kinds of casualties from the ranks of the rich and famous who to the casual observer might appear to 'have it all', but fail in their search for lasting contentment. So really it's in the eye of the beholder and far more to do with the outward perception than how we feel inside. So it's fair to start with the premise that the endless feed of celebrity vacuity might not be everything it's cracked up to be, and that success can manifest in many forms other than mansions, limos and eight digit bank balances, so it might be worth thinking about what it is you are truly after, and furthermore recognising it as and when it arrives.
It's no secret that I have been playing drums since infancy, and by the time I was in my early teens I had sufficient ability and experience to hold down grown up gigs with grown up musicians three and four decades my senior. Interestingly this made me sound a little bit middle aged myself. Check the video link for what does not resemble the typical teenager drumming style of the late 70s and early 80s.
This is of course the renowned Midlands Youth Jazz Orchestra which was such a pivotal chapter in my development as a player but even before joining the band I had been doing local gigs for quite some time.
This was a much bigger deal altogether though and this clip dates from early 1980 when I had won the Jack Parnell Drum Award in the much missed BBC national big band competition, which was unceremoniously scrapped about a decade ago. I was actually working in the band at an international circus at the NEC Birmingham when the BBC called there to tell me I had won this prestigious trophy. I thought this would be the beginning of everything, and even have an old pocket diary in which I wrote a note on the train home from my gig (too young to drive even) about how excited I was about the news. I was interviewed on local radio a couple of times, appeared in several local papers, did the TV appearance above and rounded it all off with a Radio 2 broadcast from Golders Green Hippodrome.
The band won the competition again the year after, and though I didn't win another drum award, here nevertheless is an extract from the broadcast, as the producer in my winning year cut my feature from the subsequent transmission as they were over on time. A free-form trombone solo feature (imaginatively titled 'Bone Free') remained in the final programme. I'm not bitter though.
Listen here....
So anyway, doors remained shut and I stayed where I was. A brief brush with notoriety soon died down and what I had hoped to be the gateway to pastures greener found me pretty much in the same place as previously.
Why?
All sorts of reasons why but having learned over the intervening years to take responsibility for my own actions the truth is
a) I wasn't good enough to progress a whole lot further than I had already got at that point, and didn't have sufficient range as a player to excel at a whole lot outside of the big band/mainstream jazz sphere, which brings with it another problem...
b) There wasn't really any kind of a viable career path for a teenage big band and mainstream jazz drummer at the time. There were, in fact, fewer opportunities to play that sort of music professionally than there are now, and perhaps more significantly far fewer opportunities to study.
Also, in my adolescence I was foolish enough to overestimate the power of luck and the value of merit. Being the best young drummer in your street, neighbourhood, town might have been all very well but at that age I had little understanding of what it would take to get a foothold in the big, bad world of the professional musician.
If you are reading this and you, or a member of your family is in this same situation, find as many good musicians you can and ask their advice. If only there had been social media and the internet back in 1979!
So, anyway, I stayed right where I was and slowly, by trial and error, continued to broaden my skill set in whatever ways I could in order to be more useful to as broad a range of people as possible. The noted Birmingham drummer Garry Allcock, known to many as one of the founding fathers of the vintage drum 'scene' in the UK, had a big band but he liked to front the band rather than play, so he gave me the drum chair which was a great grounding in the high end function gig scene, and it would be some years later that a two week relief band gig for Garry on the QE2 would mark the door into the upper leagues finally opening. That's not to say that there weren't fleeting glimpses of success prior to this, about which more later. About the same time I got hooked up with a lot of very good traditional/mainstream jazz musicians and again my playing range and musical knowledge would broaden with each new experience.
The big band jazz thing was still at the forefront too, and I was playing with 10 different bands of one sort or another by the time I took my first steps as a bandleader in 1982.
It might surprise you to know that there were quite a few originals bands too, both back then and after I moved to London. Some of these had great potential (Hearts and Minds) some were awful and way beyond parody (Strange Behaviour) but these recollections will have to wait for another day. Suffice to say the one thing common to them all was that none of them made any impact, as was the case with about 99.8 per cent of such bands at the time. The internet and more recently social media have changed all that forever, but again, for another day.
One originals project from the Birmingham years which is particularly fondly remembered was a couple, Jenny and Dave, who cohabited and wrote (some extremely memorable and catchy) pop songs and called themselves The Salamanders. If ever there was a band that could have gone the distance this was probably the one. Rehearsals were easy, efficient and effective with none of the grinding pointlessness and tedium that comes with the intuitive sense of being involved in yet another project that's going nowhere. A&R man Gordon Charlton (I think was his name) from CBS/Epic came all the way from London just to watch us rehearse, he was particularly complimentary about the rhythm section. I still have a cassette of a demo recorded straight to eight tracks, but following Jenny and Dave splitting up the band ground to an immediate halt, so that tape contains a couple of potential pop classics that never were. Anytime You Need A Friend was probably the best of the bunch and genuinely could have been a floor filler/pub chucking out anthem but it never happened, so we move on, like so many that for one reason or another don't go the distance. Of course with everything else that was going on I wasn’t left without options when the band broke up. No matter how much you love your originals band don't let it be your only roll of the dice where a music career is concerned.
Also, The Salamanders came with a surprise unintended consequence. We rehearsed and recorded at a popular Birmingham studio called Outlaw, run by a guy called Phil who had a rag tag, no brand house drum set that he could make sound fantastic, and always had a big spliff on the go. He liked me and I started doing a few jingles there, as well as booking some of the players. One time we did an up tempo, surf tinged piece for Unit Sales DIY store. The drum part was quite busy as fills and energy were required. The following day Phil called in a panic as there had been a fault on the snare channel and it looked likely that the whole track would have to be redone. However I managed to save the day by going back in and overdubbing an exact duplicate snare part, leaving the remainder of the existing drum track intact. Playing just the snare segments of the previous day's drum fills was a fun challenge to say the least, but we pulled it off and the track was saved. And in one take too!
I think Phil thought he owed me a favour, and not long afterwards he had his chance. Out of the blue he called me to say that Dexy's Midnight Runners were in residence in the studio recording demos for their third album and were having drummer problems. The problem was they couldn't find anyone they liked and the average duration of auditions was approximately 90 seconds before Kevin decided he had heard enough.
Phil put me forward for the gig, and when the day came I turned up at the appointed time. Expensive cars were parked outside. Bear in mind the band was huge at the time and with Come On Eileen they had just had one of the biggest chart hits of the era; a floor filler/pub chucking out anthem even (!)
Kevin Rowland had a reputation for being difficult and autocratic. Throughout the entire day I spent with the band he was never less than warm and friendly, and his suggestions for what he wanted to hear from the drums were both constructive and complimentary. The session wasn’t recorded in the studio but I do recall it was being documented on a cassette recorder. Somewhere, therefore, (if only in landfill) there are versions of several tracks from the album Don’t Stand Me Down that have me playing on them. The album was not well received, but is today considered a lost classic. Much of the day was spent on a lengthy composition at the time called 'What's She Like' (released with a slightly altered title). The only other tune I can remember was called 'The Waltz'. Helen (fiddle) commented that my playing on this sounded "a bit like Take 5", which I don’t think was meant entirely as a compliment.
About 4pm Kevin decided that we had done enough and called proceedings to a halt, thanking me very kindly.
I never heard another word.
Phil told me later that they really liked what I had done, but KR wanted to try someone who used two bass drums. All they had to do was ask. As far as I know the eventual album had a number of drummers on it and Dexy's opted not to have a band member per se.
So, my journey into the upper echelons of the 80s pop scene stopped right there. If the outcome had been different I often wonder where life might have taken me. Maybe one or two gold discs and even a nice portfolio of buy-to-lets in suburbs of North London.
Who knows?
Had things been different I very much doubt that I would have developed as a player to the extent that I have, and by now quite possibly might be out of music altogether.
It is of course entirely possible that significant success early in my career could have oh-so easily being sacrificed in an unguarded moment of post-adolescent arrogance. Maturing past this disposition is one of the key markers that will keep you busy and working for years to come. The one big lesson I did learn from this and a disproportionately long list of early life disappointments is the maturity that comes from adversity. Getting overlooked countless times just made me try harder.
So what's the point of this little trip down a part of memory lane you probably thought I had never travelled?
If your first single charts at number 47, your second is less successful and the best you can do performance-wise is a second support, that studying when you could have been partying might not seem like a bad idea after all when you contemplate having to do something only to pay your bills.
So you have it within your grasp to maximise the possibility of doing something in the industry that you will find satisfying, and in order to do so it's worth remembering the old saying to do with eggs and baskets.
It's good to be confident and to believe in what you are attempting to achieve, but why not have a contingency plan? You know what sod's law is like...if you've got it you'll probably never need it, but to know harmony and theory, write, record and produce your own (or someone else's) material as well as broadening your instrumental skills to add the greatest possible range to your playing, and thus maximise your employment opportunities, is shortening the odds on you having a long and satisfying career.
If you are thinking about studying why not come and join us at LCCM, where we'll give you a real-world skill set which will equip you for the modern music industry.
There are a quantity and range of music courses available now that offer something for virtually every player. I would have loved to have the opportunity to do something similar, but in the early 80s there were far fewer openings, and a place at Berklee had to be declined due to lack of sufficient funds. That said things have worked out completely fine even if the route I ended up taking was a touch circuitous, and this autumn I will be ticking a few more boxes which serve to remind me of why I got into all this in the first place. The childhood dreams of half a century ago have become reality a number of times previously, and are doing so again.
It may not be millions and mansions, but whichever way you look at it, it's a kind of success.
"Have you worked with anybody famous?" which invariably elicits a one word answer, "Yes" (although in the case of the hygienist it was more like "Hauwughah" as I recall).
Recently I wrote about expertise and how it's a quality conferred upon us by others (rightly or wrongly) and to a great extent I tend to think that the same could be said of success, although it is in many ways a far more abstract commodity. In our industry and elsewhere there are over-achievers too numerous to mention, who are portrayed to us as the epitome of success, by dint of having achieved wealth or fame, more often than not the yardsticks by which much of success is (in my opinion incorrectly) measured. Money and adulation are very nice things to have in your life, and I feel happy for those who have them, but I suspect the definitions of success are far more varied and nuanced than these two rather broad points of reference. After all, history is littered with all kinds of casualties from the ranks of the rich and famous who to the casual observer might appear to 'have it all', but fail in their search for lasting contentment. So really it's in the eye of the beholder and far more to do with the outward perception than how we feel inside. So it's fair to start with the premise that the endless feed of celebrity vacuity might not be everything it's cracked up to be, and that success can manifest in many forms other than mansions, limos and eight digit bank balances, so it might be worth thinking about what it is you are truly after, and furthermore recognising it as and when it arrives.
It's no secret that I have been playing drums since infancy, and by the time I was in my early teens I had sufficient ability and experience to hold down grown up gigs with grown up musicians three and four decades my senior. Interestingly this made me sound a little bit middle aged myself. Check the video link for what does not resemble the typical teenager drumming style of the late 70s and early 80s.
This is of course the renowned Midlands Youth Jazz Orchestra which was such a pivotal chapter in my development as a player but even before joining the band I had been doing local gigs for quite some time.
This was a much bigger deal altogether though and this clip dates from early 1980 when I had won the Jack Parnell Drum Award in the much missed BBC national big band competition, which was unceremoniously scrapped about a decade ago. I was actually working in the band at an international circus at the NEC Birmingham when the BBC called there to tell me I had won this prestigious trophy. I thought this would be the beginning of everything, and even have an old pocket diary in which I wrote a note on the train home from my gig (too young to drive even) about how excited I was about the news. I was interviewed on local radio a couple of times, appeared in several local papers, did the TV appearance above and rounded it all off with a Radio 2 broadcast from Golders Green Hippodrome.
The band won the competition again the year after, and though I didn't win another drum award, here nevertheless is an extract from the broadcast, as the producer in my winning year cut my feature from the subsequent transmission as they were over on time. A free-form trombone solo feature (imaginatively titled 'Bone Free') remained in the final programme. I'm not bitter though.
Listen here....
So anyway, doors remained shut and I stayed where I was. A brief brush with notoriety soon died down and what I had hoped to be the gateway to pastures greener found me pretty much in the same place as previously.
Why?
All sorts of reasons why but having learned over the intervening years to take responsibility for my own actions the truth is
a) I wasn't good enough to progress a whole lot further than I had already got at that point, and didn't have sufficient range as a player to excel at a whole lot outside of the big band/mainstream jazz sphere, which brings with it another problem...
b) There wasn't really any kind of a viable career path for a teenage big band and mainstream jazz drummer at the time. There were, in fact, fewer opportunities to play that sort of music professionally than there are now, and perhaps more significantly far fewer opportunities to study.
Also, in my adolescence I was foolish enough to overestimate the power of luck and the value of merit. Being the best young drummer in your street, neighbourhood, town might have been all very well but at that age I had little understanding of what it would take to get a foothold in the big, bad world of the professional musician.
If you are reading this and you, or a member of your family is in this same situation, find as many good musicians you can and ask their advice. If only there had been social media and the internet back in 1979!
So, anyway, I stayed right where I was and slowly, by trial and error, continued to broaden my skill set in whatever ways I could in order to be more useful to as broad a range of people as possible. The noted Birmingham drummer Garry Allcock, known to many as one of the founding fathers of the vintage drum 'scene' in the UK, had a big band but he liked to front the band rather than play, so he gave me the drum chair which was a great grounding in the high end function gig scene, and it would be some years later that a two week relief band gig for Garry on the QE2 would mark the door into the upper leagues finally opening. That's not to say that there weren't fleeting glimpses of success prior to this, about which more later. About the same time I got hooked up with a lot of very good traditional/mainstream jazz musicians and again my playing range and musical knowledge would broaden with each new experience.
The big band jazz thing was still at the forefront too, and I was playing with 10 different bands of one sort or another by the time I took my first steps as a bandleader in 1982.
It might surprise you to know that there were quite a few originals bands too, both back then and after I moved to London. Some of these had great potential (Hearts and Minds) some were awful and way beyond parody (Strange Behaviour) but these recollections will have to wait for another day. Suffice to say the one thing common to them all was that none of them made any impact, as was the case with about 99.8 per cent of such bands at the time. The internet and more recently social media have changed all that forever, but again, for another day.
One originals project from the Birmingham years which is particularly fondly remembered was a couple, Jenny and Dave, who cohabited and wrote (some extremely memorable and catchy) pop songs and called themselves The Salamanders. If ever there was a band that could have gone the distance this was probably the one. Rehearsals were easy, efficient and effective with none of the grinding pointlessness and tedium that comes with the intuitive sense of being involved in yet another project that's going nowhere. A&R man Gordon Charlton (I think was his name) from CBS/Epic came all the way from London just to watch us rehearse, he was particularly complimentary about the rhythm section. I still have a cassette of a demo recorded straight to eight tracks, but following Jenny and Dave splitting up the band ground to an immediate halt, so that tape contains a couple of potential pop classics that never were. Anytime You Need A Friend was probably the best of the bunch and genuinely could have been a floor filler/pub chucking out anthem but it never happened, so we move on, like so many that for one reason or another don't go the distance. Of course with everything else that was going on I wasn’t left without options when the band broke up. No matter how much you love your originals band don't let it be your only roll of the dice where a music career is concerned.
Also, The Salamanders came with a surprise unintended consequence. We rehearsed and recorded at a popular Birmingham studio called Outlaw, run by a guy called Phil who had a rag tag, no brand house drum set that he could make sound fantastic, and always had a big spliff on the go. He liked me and I started doing a few jingles there, as well as booking some of the players. One time we did an up tempo, surf tinged piece for Unit Sales DIY store. The drum part was quite busy as fills and energy were required. The following day Phil called in a panic as there had been a fault on the snare channel and it looked likely that the whole track would have to be redone. However I managed to save the day by going back in and overdubbing an exact duplicate snare part, leaving the remainder of the existing drum track intact. Playing just the snare segments of the previous day's drum fills was a fun challenge to say the least, but we pulled it off and the track was saved. And in one take too!
I think Phil thought he owed me a favour, and not long afterwards he had his chance. Out of the blue he called me to say that Dexy's Midnight Runners were in residence in the studio recording demos for their third album and were having drummer problems. The problem was they couldn't find anyone they liked and the average duration of auditions was approximately 90 seconds before Kevin decided he had heard enough.
Phil put me forward for the gig, and when the day came I turned up at the appointed time. Expensive cars were parked outside. Bear in mind the band was huge at the time and with Come On Eileen they had just had one of the biggest chart hits of the era; a floor filler/pub chucking out anthem even (!)
Kevin Rowland had a reputation for being difficult and autocratic. Throughout the entire day I spent with the band he was never less than warm and friendly, and his suggestions for what he wanted to hear from the drums were both constructive and complimentary. The session wasn’t recorded in the studio but I do recall it was being documented on a cassette recorder. Somewhere, therefore, (if only in landfill) there are versions of several tracks from the album Don’t Stand Me Down that have me playing on them. The album was not well received, but is today considered a lost classic. Much of the day was spent on a lengthy composition at the time called 'What's She Like' (released with a slightly altered title). The only other tune I can remember was called 'The Waltz'. Helen (fiddle) commented that my playing on this sounded "a bit like Take 5", which I don’t think was meant entirely as a compliment.
About 4pm Kevin decided that we had done enough and called proceedings to a halt, thanking me very kindly.
I never heard another word.
Phil told me later that they really liked what I had done, but KR wanted to try someone who used two bass drums. All they had to do was ask. As far as I know the eventual album had a number of drummers on it and Dexy's opted not to have a band member per se.
So, my journey into the upper echelons of the 80s pop scene stopped right there. If the outcome had been different I often wonder where life might have taken me. Maybe one or two gold discs and even a nice portfolio of buy-to-lets in suburbs of North London.
Who knows?
Had things been different I very much doubt that I would have developed as a player to the extent that I have, and by now quite possibly might be out of music altogether.
It is of course entirely possible that significant success early in my career could have oh-so easily being sacrificed in an unguarded moment of post-adolescent arrogance. Maturing past this disposition is one of the key markers that will keep you busy and working for years to come. The one big lesson I did learn from this and a disproportionately long list of early life disappointments is the maturity that comes from adversity. Getting overlooked countless times just made me try harder.
So what's the point of this little trip down a part of memory lane you probably thought I had never travelled?
If your first single charts at number 47, your second is less successful and the best you can do performance-wise is a second support, that studying when you could have been partying might not seem like a bad idea after all when you contemplate having to do something only to pay your bills.
So you have it within your grasp to maximise the possibility of doing something in the industry that you will find satisfying, and in order to do so it's worth remembering the old saying to do with eggs and baskets.
It's good to be confident and to believe in what you are attempting to achieve, but why not have a contingency plan? You know what sod's law is like...if you've got it you'll probably never need it, but to know harmony and theory, write, record and produce your own (or someone else's) material as well as broadening your instrumental skills to add the greatest possible range to your playing, and thus maximise your employment opportunities, is shortening the odds on you having a long and satisfying career.
If you are thinking about studying why not come and join us at LCCM, where we'll give you a real-world skill set which will equip you for the modern music industry.
There are a quantity and range of music courses available now that offer something for virtually every player. I would have loved to have the opportunity to do something similar, but in the early 80s there were far fewer openings, and a place at Berklee had to be declined due to lack of sufficient funds. That said things have worked out completely fine even if the route I ended up taking was a touch circuitous, and this autumn I will be ticking a few more boxes which serve to remind me of why I got into all this in the first place. The childhood dreams of half a century ago have become reality a number of times previously, and are doing so again.
It may not be millions and mansions, but whichever way you look at it, it's a kind of success.
Labels:
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Saturday, 5 August 2017
Mister Lucky
The entertainment industry has a long tradition tied in with various superstitions and traditions. we all know about the 'Scottish Play' and whistling in the wrong location. Such transgressions are rumoured to bring ill luck to a production.
Personally I figured out a very long time ago that luck is something largely under our own control and to run your life along the lines of "if I don't do A, then B won't happen" is a symptom of denial, and the most positive progress I have ever made in my career path of choice has been when I have taken as much responsibility for my circumstances as possible, grasped the nettle and gone after what I wanted. You can do this without either hurting other people or being unscrupulous. Of course it's not always the case that we are free to pursue our desires right away. For instance if you have three children in school and a very hefty mortgage, the idea of handing your notice in at your well paid job in order to pursue your dream of playing avant garde jazz might not be quite as thought through as one might hope.
But at the risk of abusing an old cliche a journey of a thousand miles starts with a single step, though latterly I favour the analogy of a pilot altering course by just four degrees at the beginning of his journey, which of course will result in him ending up at a completely different destination.
Toss a coin or turn a card if you must (own up, we've all made at least one key life decision that way) but starting with a wish list of what you want (aim as high as you like) will give you something a lot more tangible than merely a nebulous and ever so slightly desperate wish that things might be better.
The self help industry is massive, and has made a lot of money for quite a few writers of motivational literature, but a lot of this is pure hocum and much of the rest of it fairly logical common sense.
The first step is to take a metaphorical broom to your life and sweep it clean of all negativity, and on the subject of negativity a favourite anecdote of mine concerns a concert in Wales on a wet Sunday evening, and whilst I perfectly like Wales it was a long drive back to Elstree in the pouring rain: a long drive which gave me plenty of time to reflect on the evening's work and reach what turned out to be a life changing decision, and one of the best I have ever made.
That night I decided that I would do my level best to avoid any professional situation wherein I would return home liking music less than when I left the house.
It hasn't been completely foolproof and there are only very occasional slip-ups, but I seem to call it right somewhere in the upper nineties percent. It wasn't an easy decision to make as this was 1997, a year in which my regular, bill paying, 120 plus shows per year touring jazz show came to an abrupt halt, and I had found workload and income had taken a bit of a hit and for many months had been at a far lower level than that to which I was accustomed. I think I had been in a bit of a state of denial and had contented myself with the assurance that 'something will turn up'. This was easy to do and a common default setting for many musicians of a certain age because we came up at a time when there was all sorts of professional work out there and it wasn't necessary to plan in the way we do now. Nobody talked about 'networking' when I got started.
So was there more work about than now? Possibly not. The market was different though. There was still a relative abundance of freelance studio work compared to today. 'Session work' as it used to be, and in the four years or so since I had pitched my tent in outer London I had done enough stuff sufficiently well to be in the middle order of a few fixers' phone books and would pick up stuff if all the usual suspects were unavailable. These days a lot of the top guys have studio facilities in their houses. That was all but unheard of back then; top players just had houses, lots and lots of them in some instances.
These days if someone introduces or describes themselves as a 'session musician' you can be reasonable confident that they are not.
Back in those days even with no reputation at all you could put a small advert in the classified section of The Stage and if you chose your wording carefully could have your pick of work all year round. Mostly cruise ships and summer seasons, some of it not the greatest stuff ever but solid, dependable work which paid appropriately and almost always on time. This had been my route out of the local scene in the Midlands exactly ten years earlier in 1987. This was a time don't forget when the general average standard of musicianship was nothing like it is today. The virtuosi, superstar instrumentalists and the professional elite will always be there, but truly the last three decades have been an age of enlightenment for the average musician. The incredible resources at our disposal mean that average standards of playing ability and musical knowleedge are at unprecedentedly high levels. I run across great musicians (not just drummers) in all kinds of places on a regular basis. The bittersweet irony being that in spite of this boom in talent, appreciation of musicianship is quite possibly at an all-time low.
Funny, innit?
So, how did the inevitable twists and turns of my stream of keyboard consciousness get us here?
Ah, yes, superstition.
As previously stated the closest I get to superstition these days is depping on covers bands from time to time.
Having said that, I have got a bit of a thing about years that end in a '7'. I've already mentioned a couple of them earlier in this post and it isn't a coincidence.
Having been born with rhythmic DNA thanks to my parents I've been at this since before I could stand unassisted (sometimes I still can't but that's a slightly different matter).
I think that worked out as planned, suffice to say that the ensuing decade has ticked all those boxes that remind you why you got so excited about learning to play in the first place.
As for 2017? The DVD crowdfunding initiative has been a huge success for which many thanks full details here, I'm about to record a quartet album which promises to be special, and there are one or two other things coming down the track about which more in the coming months.
So in short, get out there and make your own luck, and in so doing seek out people who will help you to do that.
For details about any of my bands, guest appearances, private lessons, masterclasses etc, contact me here.
Personally I figured out a very long time ago that luck is something largely under our own control and to run your life along the lines of "if I don't do A, then B won't happen" is a symptom of denial, and the most positive progress I have ever made in my career path of choice has been when I have taken as much responsibility for my circumstances as possible, grasped the nettle and gone after what I wanted. You can do this without either hurting other people or being unscrupulous. Of course it's not always the case that we are free to pursue our desires right away. For instance if you have three children in school and a very hefty mortgage, the idea of handing your notice in at your well paid job in order to pursue your dream of playing avant garde jazz might not be quite as thought through as one might hope.
But at the risk of abusing an old cliche a journey of a thousand miles starts with a single step, though latterly I favour the analogy of a pilot altering course by just four degrees at the beginning of his journey, which of course will result in him ending up at a completely different destination.
Toss a coin or turn a card if you must (own up, we've all made at least one key life decision that way) but starting with a wish list of what you want (aim as high as you like) will give you something a lot more tangible than merely a nebulous and ever so slightly desperate wish that things might be better.
The self help industry is massive, and has made a lot of money for quite a few writers of motivational literature, but a lot of this is pure hocum and much of the rest of it fairly logical common sense.
The first step is to take a metaphorical broom to your life and sweep it clean of all negativity, and on the subject of negativity a favourite anecdote of mine concerns a concert in Wales on a wet Sunday evening, and whilst I perfectly like Wales it was a long drive back to Elstree in the pouring rain: a long drive which gave me plenty of time to reflect on the evening's work and reach what turned out to be a life changing decision, and one of the best I have ever made.
That night I decided that I would do my level best to avoid any professional situation wherein I would return home liking music less than when I left the house.
It hasn't been completely foolproof and there are only very occasional slip-ups, but I seem to call it right somewhere in the upper nineties percent. It wasn't an easy decision to make as this was 1997, a year in which my regular, bill paying, 120 plus shows per year touring jazz show came to an abrupt halt, and I had found workload and income had taken a bit of a hit and for many months had been at a far lower level than that to which I was accustomed. I think I had been in a bit of a state of denial and had contented myself with the assurance that 'something will turn up'. This was easy to do and a common default setting for many musicians of a certain age because we came up at a time when there was all sorts of professional work out there and it wasn't necessary to plan in the way we do now. Nobody talked about 'networking' when I got started.
So was there more work about than now? Possibly not. The market was different though. There was still a relative abundance of freelance studio work compared to today. 'Session work' as it used to be, and in the four years or so since I had pitched my tent in outer London I had done enough stuff sufficiently well to be in the middle order of a few fixers' phone books and would pick up stuff if all the usual suspects were unavailable. These days a lot of the top guys have studio facilities in their houses. That was all but unheard of back then; top players just had houses, lots and lots of them in some instances.
These days if someone introduces or describes themselves as a 'session musician' you can be reasonable confident that they are not.
Back in those days even with no reputation at all you could put a small advert in the classified section of The Stage and if you chose your wording carefully could have your pick of work all year round. Mostly cruise ships and summer seasons, some of it not the greatest stuff ever but solid, dependable work which paid appropriately and almost always on time. This had been my route out of the local scene in the Midlands exactly ten years earlier in 1987. This was a time don't forget when the general average standard of musicianship was nothing like it is today. The virtuosi, superstar instrumentalists and the professional elite will always be there, but truly the last three decades have been an age of enlightenment for the average musician. The incredible resources at our disposal mean that average standards of playing ability and musical knowleedge are at unprecedentedly high levels. I run across great musicians (not just drummers) in all kinds of places on a regular basis. The bittersweet irony being that in spite of this boom in talent, appreciation of musicianship is quite possibly at an all-time low.
Funny, innit?
So, how did the inevitable twists and turns of my stream of keyboard consciousness get us here?
Ah, yes, superstition.
As previously stated the closest I get to superstition these days is depping on covers bands from time to time.
Having said that, I have got a bit of a thing about years that end in a '7'. I've already mentioned a couple of them earlier in this post and it isn't a coincidence.
Having been born with rhythmic DNA thanks to my parents I've been at this since before I could stand unassisted (sometimes I still can't but that's a slightly different matter).
Early days were filled with toy drums, Dad's practice kit, the arm of the sofa and a whole lot more, all to a soundtrack of the Dave Brubeck Quartet, followed by the Buddy Rich big band from 1967 onwards.
As far as 1967 goes there aren't a whole lot of career milestones with which to entertain you but a decade later it was a whole new ball game and it is the approach of a particular anniversary about a week ahead of the time of writing that inspired this.
The upcoming anniversary is of my first grown up, professional engagement, with grown up musicians for a grown up fee. Fourteen pounds, I've written about it before. It was at the Manor Hotel, Meriden, Warwickshire on the middle weekend of August 1977 and it marked a shift from tagging along with my Dad and sitting in for a few tunes to actually being mature, capable, and trusted enough to handle the gigs.
I was back there a couple of years ago and it had changed relatively little.
The other milestone in '77 was a concert at my school by the Midlands Youth Jazz Orchestra. They had played a concert the previous year which I had found out about after it had taken place. Had I known I could have potentially started that chapter of my career fully a year earlier, but I didn't, and 77 was the year that particular door got opened and would be a huge part of my life until late 1984.
1987 I already mentioned, and it was a two week relief stint on the much-missed Cunard Queen Elizabeth 2 that provided a glimpse into a whole world away from the Midlands scene; a scene from which I had learned and grown so much but by my early 20s the musician's wanderlust had formed an explosive mixture with burgeoning ambition and this was the year in which I began to make it happen.
1997 I have already documented as well, but that was the year when things dried up somewhat and I did have to live off my savings. (Savings, ha!! how funny that sounds now) so what was so good about that year you may ask.
What was good about it was this slightly unexpected downtime brought with it the opportunity to develop the big band, formed two years previously, to the point where we were in every respect ready to go into the studio and record the debut album 'Playing With Fire'. Had I said yes to the offer to enter the world of musical theatre the previous year I simply would not have had the time, and without the technology and resources that we take for granted today could not have masterminded the production of a big band record if I was living in theatrical digs in Darlington, or wherever.
So that was '97, and it continues the pattern of years in which I do groundwork that seems to stand me in good stead. That's not to say that I only achieve once in a decade but the pattern is there and 2007 did it again, as this was the year that Jason Keyte persuaded me to present an evening of Buddy Rich's music and Ian Palmer invited me to participate in the inaugural World's Greatest Drummer event. In my then 44 years that was probably the first time I had truly prepared for a live performance and knowing that we had legendary players including Steve White and Ian Paice on the bill I was determined to give the best possible account of myself to a sold out audience including much of the great and the good of the UK drum industry, hardly any of whom had any real idea who I was.
I think that worked out as planned, suffice to say that the ensuing decade has ticked all those boxes that remind you why you got so excited about learning to play in the first place.
As for 2017? The DVD crowdfunding initiative has been a huge success for which many thanks full details here, I'm about to record a quartet album which promises to be special, and there are one or two other things coming down the track about which more in the coming months.
So in short, get out there and make your own luck, and in so doing seek out people who will help you to do that.
For details about any of my bands, guest appearances, private lessons, masterclasses etc, contact me here.
Labels:
big band,
British Drum Company,
creativity,
drum solo,
drumming,
drums,
friends,
jazz,
music,
musicians,
performing arts,
Remo drum heads,
swing music,
Vater drum sticks,
Zildjian cymbals
Sunday, 30 July 2017
Buddy Rich 1917-1987
This year marks the centenary of the birth of Buddy Rich, a musician who was a key formative influence and to whom I owe my lifelong affinity with big band music.
The following is a piece I wrote for the American publication Not So Modern Drummer and is reproduced with permission of the copyright holder.
The following is a piece I wrote for the American publication Not So Modern Drummer and is reproduced with permission of the copyright holder.
BUDDY RICH
Buddy Rich’s playing
is something that goes beyond subjective appraisal. Even to the man in the
street with no knowledge of drums or jazz music it was self evident that you
were witnessing greatness. This alone puts him in a very special category;
virtuosity which can communicate with a mass audience.
Let’s get one thing
clear right from the start. If you play the drums and were not even slightly
influenced by Buddy Rich there’s a strong possibility that you inadvertently
took up the wrong instrument. Don’t be too despondent though, as a great many
drummers are influenced by Buddy without even being particularly aware of it.
As with Krupa he influenced a whole generation of players who in turn went on
to inspire the next generation of players who in turn influence the players of
today. These musicians wrote the DNA code of drumming which is common to us
all, and don’t you forget it.
For me it all started
very early. My parents were in their early 30s when I was born in 1963, and
they had been raised on a musical diet of big bands, jazz, and popular singers
of the Sinatra school. Their tastes were fully formed well in advance of Rock
Around the Clock. They had no time for the new musical trend and found it
simplistic by comparison to what they were accustomed to. Don’t be fooled by
the history books; regardless of the fact that Elvis’s baby left him, all the
established musical styles continued much as they had done. They whole world
didn’t suddenly re-tune to rock and roll overnight despite what the
revisionists may want you to believe.
Having being born into
a family where the popular jazz of the mid 60s (Brubeck, Oscar Peterson and the
like) was very much at the top of the playlist was one of those lucky flukes of
circumstance that go on to shape your destiny, added which my father was a very
good semi professional drummer who had studied with a legendary Birmingham (UK)
based Rich disciple named Tommy Webster. Added to which my mother came from a
huge Irish family all of whom played instruments and sang, as is the tradition.
It was in early 1968
that the perfect storm broke.
Having taken the UK by
storm the previous year (measured by audience reaction rather than ticket sales
it has to be said) the Buddy Rich big band became staple listening fare for
musicians of my father’s generation, and in order to listen to his LPs in the
highest possible fidelity he spent £150 (a huge amount of money then) on a Bang
and Olufsen ‘Beogram 1500’ record player. I had just turned five and had never
heard anything quite like it. Speakers that stood as tall as I did at the time
exploding with music reproduced with an immediacy, power and clarity the like
of which I had not previously experienced. From that moment Buddy’s name was
added to my list of identifiable jazz drummers that already included Joe
Morello, Shelley Manne and Cozy Cole.
Seeing is Believing
The exact date is
unclear but the intensity of the moment is as powerful as it was roughly
forty-five years ago, when quite unexpectedly Buddy appeared on a talk show on
British television. It was called ‘Magpie’ and was broadcast on ITV, then the
UK’s only commercial network and was aimed at hip youngsters, (the squares were
watching ‘Blue Peter’ on BBC). No band, just some chat and a drum solo.
Ka-boom!!
I ran upstairs and
started woodshedding and haven’t stopped. There’s a profundity about those
formative influences when your knowledge is in its infancy, and you’re still so
youthfully idealistic to believe that you can achieve anything, and whilst I had
been listening to jazz drumming on records since my earliest days the impact of
the moving image closed the deal. Later that evening my mother, who had
witnessed my enthusiasm, commented to my father, “That’s it, he’s going to be a
drummer”, more with resignation than enthusiasm if I’m honest.
I invested a
disproportionately large percentage of my teenage years trying to come up with
ideas that resembled the kind of things I had heard Buddy play. At that point
not the greatest reader of notation and never having seen the merit of
transcribing I set about this Herculean task by listening only, as this was
just prior to the VHS/Betamax explosion, and all I had to check my work against
was fleeting glimpses of Buddy’s hands seeing him on television or playing live
a couple of times each year. Adolescence brought with it the chance to play big
band jazz for real and I was afforded the opportunity to put my hours of
practice before an audience. My fellow drummers all talked about Buddy, but
players of other instruments would talk about Mel Lewis, from which I concluded
that to occupy a hypothetical middle ground between their two contrasting
styles might be a good plan.
It was/is.
Many times I have
wondered, if Buddy had played a genre other then the big band jazz for which I
knew him at the time, would the impact have been quite as strong?
Much as I was
massively in awe John Bonham and particularly Ian Paice, the musical context of
their playing didn’t move me half as much, and whilst my playing influences and
wide ranging and almost incalculable, it is Buddy Rich and Buddy Rich alone to
whom I owe my lifelong affinity with big band music. Rock and pop got me
excited about the industry, but jazz, especially of the big band variety, made
me want to play.
It’s worth remembering
that the 70s produced a great deal of very good big band music. It was a time
before post-modernism and forward thinking leaders and arrangers were keeping
the music relevant. In addition to Buddy I soon discovered the then current incarnation
of Woody Herman’s Herd, Maynard Ferguson, Stan Kenton, Thad/Mel, Don Ellis,
Toshiko Akiyoshi, and a whole heap of top drawer American college bands from
North Texas State One O’Clock Lab Band on downwards, but it was the music of
the Buddy Rich Big band from 1966 onwards that provided the all-important
gateway. That’s not to say that I didn’t develop an appreciation of Rich’s
earlier work, but that would come later, and for all the excitement generated
by the 1950s Verve imprints (play along with Verve Jam Session Vol 7 some time
if you want to get a handle on swinging hard) for me it all begins with
Swinging New Big Band.
The opening title,
Bill Holman’s ‘Readymix’ is not so much an opening tune as a statement of
intent. There’s almost a feeling of anger in Holman’s counterpoint and you hear
a fresh, new orchestra with a point to prove. Buddy’s playing on this track in
particular is like an accelerant, and sets fire to everything it touches. I
love how he can sit on the front of the beat without speeding up (most of the
time), but it’s a skill that big band drummers should use judiciously, and is
perhaps best held in reserve for those days when you are meeting the band
payroll yourself: suffice to say it doesn’t lend itself to an evening of
melodies from the Glenn Miller era.
Now, let’s take a step
further back in time to another Rich-led big band record date, ‘This One’s For
Basie’. More than ten years prior to Swinging New Big Band but the 1966 Buddy
Rich is a wildly more contemporary and hip sounding drummer then a decade
previously. None of us can definitively say why (just like nobody knows quite
how his left hand technique worked-videos with titles like ‘Buddy Rich’s Left
Hand Technique Explained’ leave me somewhere between despairing and murderous;
how Buddy’s left hand or for that matter any part of his playing worked is not
the point, about which more later). The modernisation of style is self-evident.
Was it the ascendancy of the likes of Joe Morello and Sonny Payne that made him
dig deep into that vast reserve of talent to remind the young Turks of the
status quo? (More than once I’ve heard it said of the Rich vs Roach session
that Max finished in third place}. With nobody to answer these questions we
have no choice but to resort to conjecture, but a listen through recordings of
Buddy with Harry James between 1962 and 1966 clearly display a new stage in his
evolution. The sound changes (thank you Remo!) and the unrelenting virtuosity
of tracks like ‘Explosion’ (Chicago Opera House, October 2nd 1955)
remains, but seems somehow tempered with space, more considered, (‘Caravan’
August 1961) and becomes even more dazzling as a result. There’s a live
recording of King Porter Stomp recorded at Chicago’s Holiday Ballroom with the
James band that epitomises rhythmic hipness by today’s standards. What that
must have sounded like to the ears of 1964 we can only imagine.
Key to all this
though, is whatever modernisation, self-reinvention, or whatever you want to
call it took place, he’s still unmistakeably Buddy Rich. Only once briefly was
this not the case, the truly dreadful Buddy-Rich-Plays-Disco abomination ‘Speak
No Evil’ possibly BR’s sole significant lapse of integrity as a recording
artist. In fairness he was by no means alone. Jazz musicians were fair game for
record labels looking for a cash-in; records like this could be recorded
quickly and relatively inexpensively and who knows? Surprise chart success
couldn’t be entirely ruled out. In case you don’t know this recording and I’ve
piqued your curiosity I say one word to you. Avoid. Others may cite the MCA
record from the early 80s, but I actually rather like the chart of Never Can
Say Goodbye, even if Buddy’s tom sound is such that he could have probably got
a similar result from playing the empty cases.
Similarly, with only
slight and usually short-lived variations he stuck to the same, no-nonsense,
simple drum set layout. I remember in about 1980 some friends had been in New
York and came back to the UK having seen Buddy at the Bottom Line. We were told
that he was “using concert toms” and nightmarish images haunted my young mind
of a marine pearl Quadra Plus outfit replacing the much-loved ‘Krupa’
configuration (for that’s what it was). Having being previously alarmed by Roy
Haynes’s flirtation with concert toms could Buddy have gone down the same
pathway? Happily, not.
This brings me to
another point, and it’s an important one.
Rich’s virtuosity was
often a soft target for the self appointed jazz intelligentsia, the British
journalist (and sometime drummer) Richard Williams is amongst the worst
offenders, and many such chin strokers have wasted much copy bandying about a
relatively limited repertoire of clichéd, unfounded and shallow barbs, so allow
me if you will to take a moment to torpedo a handful of these right now.
‘Buddy Rich didn’t
invent anything he played, he merely took from others’.
The great
consolidator, Buddy took the best of everything that his late 1930s peer group
could do, rolled it all into one and did it better. His playing of that era is
full of all kinds of influences, from Krupa to Chick Webb, Tony Briglia to Jo
Jones. Philly Joe Jones did something similar a couple of decades later where
he tool all the best bits of bop’s
founding fathers and assimilated them in his own recognisable style. We all do
this; it’s called being influenced. Not only that, in later years there are a
number of things that appear in his playing that are his alone, and owe little
or nothing to what went before.
Groove playing.
How many times have I
heard drummers say;
“Buddy Rich couldn’t
play rock”.
My recollection is
that I never heard him play anything other than jazz with jazz musicians. If
there exist bootlegs of him jamming with Jimi Hendix, Moby Grape, or the 1910
Fruitgum Company for that matter I am happy to be enlightened. The self
proclaimed ‘too hip for Buddy Rich’ brigade of drummers of the time (I could
name names!) were quick to accept the received wisdom about this aspect of his
playing, a point of view which history has comprehensively disproved. Like much
of the jazz/rock crossover drumming of the late 60s there is a strong element
of improvisation in the time feels, an unrelenting straight beat would have
been way too vanilla for the context of the music. And as for some of those
breaks, just check out the call-and –answer shout chorus on ‘Love and Peace’. I
know those two bar phrases inside out and they still sound incredible.
Testimony to this is the amount of times Buddy’s breaks and fills have been
sampled by more contemporary artists.
The Jazz Waltz
Undoubtedly the Shaw
and Dorsey orchestras would have played in 3/4 for dancing but the jazz waltz
came into vogue from the late 50s. Having a far from encyclopaedic knowledge of
the Harry James repertoire I can’t be completely certain but it’s a fair bet
that Buddy probably didn’t play a jazz waltz until his late 40s. Jazz drummers
of the day, tended to play jazz waltzes like ‘Alice in Wonderland’ and ‘Someday
My Prince Will Come’ with space and a lightness of touch. Contrast this with
Buddy’s four-limbed turbocharged approach. It’s like harmony on the drumset
rather than time with a few left hand comments. You can hear it in development
on ‘Willowcrest’ (that eight bar solo would change beyond recognition on later
versions) and it was fully formed by the time of recording ‘Preach and Teach’, 'Goodbye Yesterday' and ‘Ode to Billie Joe’
just a year later.
Right until the end
there was ongoing development. The last time I saw him play on his final UK
tour in late 1986 he came onstage and rather than setting the tempo for the
opener on the hi hat, he began to play the ride cymbal instead. Then with his
left hand he unleashed continuous eighth notes with syncopated accents. It was
breathtaking and he had proved the point yet again before anyone else on stage
had even played a note.
Imitate then innovate
Over the years I’ve
seen a number of players who had Buddy’s style down cold, which is without
doubt an extraordinary achievement however you look at it. For myself I’ve
always had enough trouble sorting out my own solos never mind playing anyone
else’s, but listening to Buddy and other early influences instilled in me the
habit of reverse engineering, whereby I would strip back an idea I liked in
order to get to the root of it, and then look at all sorts of different ways in
which the idea could be extrapolated. I remember mixing a Buddy idea with one
of Gary Chaffee’s concepts years and years ago and I still haven’t worn it out.
Listen first, the listen some more and then learn how to learn. That’s the
point.
I’ve never tired of
those great big band records of the 60s, 70s and 80s considering that some of
that music has been part of my life for nearly half a century. There isn’t much
music that many people listened to through their childhood and adolescence that
is still so cool. After he passed I didn’t listen for a very long time until
the Pacific Jazz reissues appeared with all the missing tracks that we had
known about for years, but that all changed about a decade ago.
Having a long
established track record as a big band leader myself there had often been
requests to play ‘hit’ tunes associated with other bands, and Buddy’s
repertoire was always very close to the top of that list. Always I had resisted
as my modus operandi as leader was to showcase new musicians playing and
recording work by new or little-known writers.
That all changed in
2006 when I got calls to appear on a couple of drum shows, the condition being
that the content would include some of ‘Buddy’s Greatest Hits’. So well
received were these performances that Tony Bennett’s former manager Derek
Boulton offered me a UK tour headlining in theatres if I was prepared to do
something similar. How long do you think I took to consider that decision?
For my own amusement I
ditched the double bass drum pedal and secondary ride cymbal and got hold of a
period correct set of Slingerlands for that cool, classic look. I don’t
consider myself a ‘heritage’ player and big band accounts for probably only
about fifteen percent of my work as a freelance professional but to have been
gifted with opportunities like these helped me to connect with all the reasons
I wanted to learn to play in the first place, something which every player
should always keep in mind.
In conclusion a
personal reminiscence
Years ago the BBC used
to run an annual big band competition, and as well as winning bands there were
prizes awarded to individual players, so it was quite a coup aged just 16 to be
awarded with the Jack Parnell prize for best drummer. This was quite
prestigious and I was featured in the newspapers, on television and radio. A
few months after all this palaver Buddy’s band were playing in the UK and I
went to the concert in Nottingham. The promoter knew me because of my recent
glancing brush with success and arranged for me to meet Buddy prior to the
concert. To my embarrassment the concert promoter proceeded to regale Buddy
with full details of my recent achievements and alleged prowess. Buddy very
graciously congratulated me, and asked if I would like to sit in (!)
I knew he had hung one
or two over confident young players out to dry so thinking quickly I responded
thus;
“Oh no, these
people have come to listen to you, they don’t want to hear me”.
He gave me that
look, wished me luck in the industry and then went out and played with a
casual, almost nonchalant virtuosity, which no one who ever saw him at the peak
of his powers will ever forget.
Thank you Buddy Rich.
If it hadn’t have been for you, I wouldn’t be me.
Labels:
big band,
British Drum Company,
Buddy Rich,
creativity,
drum solo,
drumming,
drums,
friends,
jazz,
music,
musicians,
performing arts,
Remo drum heads,
swing music,
Vater drum sticks,
Zildjian cymbals
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