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clemdallaway View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Why Are Good Drummers So Rare?
    Posted: February 07 2005 at 14:19

My old band had the biggest drummer problem, trying to find one with an electronic kit!!!!!!! lol

Trying to find a good one is hard enough but one with a good electronic kit was realy hard to find.

Don't eat the yellow snow!!!!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 02 2005 at 02:08
Originally posted by sigod sigod wrote:

Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

I don't know why, but in popular music today, the
prevalent drum sound is what i call "a big sound" in a pejorative way.

For example, i've been to a Soft Machine concert two years ago.
I found all the musicians to be good, except the drummer who had a big sound.
Nothing to do with the coltranian delicate touch of wyatt!!


It is a large sound but not as large as that huge Phil Collins sound that was everywhere in the 80's . I tend to prefer the Stewart Copeland sound. Very tight but with lots of bass to the kick drum.




Yes the 80's were typical and the worst for drum sound,in popular music.
But today, that's not much better
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 01 2005 at 11:08
There are so few good drummers because Mr. Neil Peart and Mr. Bill Bruford eat them for breakfast!!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 31 2005 at 19:22

Um, I play drums, and I think it's much harder to find a bassist.  I can think of at least five or six drummers that go to my school and are decent.  I also think the reason we're so hard to find is because there are people who play the drums, and people who are REALLY into playing them.  Anyone can hit a drum, but it takes skill and talent to play the drums well.

 

 

and cause some of us play too loud (Myself included, but I'm working on it!)

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 31 2005 at 17:55
Originally posted by grated_dominace grated_dominace wrote:

well, im a prog drummer, and i find it harder to find anything
else, ive been through two bands this year alone, but all the
musicians except for one of the guitarists were fairly
terrible....and now i cant find anyone:(:(   ah well, ill find people
soon


Hey you should hook up with Rob The Good who on this forum. He's about to start Uni in NZ and he might be up for playing.
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 30 2005 at 23:07
I'm lucky to have found a good drummer recently. He jammed with my friend and I for about 3 hours today. It was our first session, and we've already created an instrumental based off our improv jams.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2005 at 06:22
well, im a prog drummer, and i find it harder to find anything
else, ive been through two bands this year alone, but all the
musicians except for one of the guitarists were fairly
terrible....and now i cant find anyone:(:(   ah well, ill find people
soon
"You ignorant hetrosexuals are right to fear the gay comunity, they are the future"-Maynard James Keenan
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 28 2005 at 15:06

Good drummers are hard to to find because most drummers can't play anything not in 4/4 time. And when the song is in 4/4 time, the little ankle-biters just wanna hit the hi-hat and bass drum on every eighth note and the snare on the second and fourth beat of each measure. C'MON. You guys know what I'm talking about: bass-bass-SNARE-bass-bass-bass-SNARE. As Neil Peart put it, "Most drummers don't play drums--they play BEATS." Especially these Christian bands. Talk about a lack of musicianship. Their songs are all corny, but their image is wannabe-punk. Bands like Relient K or Jar's of Clay think they are real cute. I'm all for Christian music, but if these posers tried half as hard to master their respective instruments as they try to please Jesus and the Lord, maybe they would be more popular and earn the respect of the media. GOSH!!!

I've gotten a little off topic havent I?

Well, they don't call this a FORUM for nothin' do they?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 21 2005 at 13:17
Originally posted by K00l Prog Guruz K00l Prog Guruz wrote:

I liek Phiol COllins sound better then steve cokeland sound, but I know thats my own opiniopn and everybody has there own opinion. I have my own u have ur own opinion. so we cant disagree because we each have ourr own one. BUt I like Collins better (my opinion).

THis post would make a good essay.



that was deep guruz
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 21 2005 at 12:21

I liek Phiol COllins sound better then steve cokeland sound, but I know thats my own opiniopn and everybody has there own opinion. I have my own u have ur own opinion. so we cant disagree because we each have ourr own one. BUt I like Collins better (my opinion).

THis post would make a good essay.

"The world is in your hands, now use it." Good'ol Phil
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 21 2005 at 12:09
Originally posted by oliverstoned oliverstoned wrote:

I don't know why, but in popular music today, the prevalent drum sound is what i call "a big sound" in a pejorative way.

For example, i've been to a Soft Machine concert two years ago.
I found all the musicians to be good, except the drummer who had a big sound.
Nothing to do with the coltranian delicate touch of wyatt!!


It is a large sound but not as large as that huge Phil Collins sound that was everywhere in the 80's . I tend to prefer the Stewart Copeland sound. Very tight but with lots of bass to the kick drum.


I must remind the right honourable gentleman that a monologue is not a decision.
- Clement Atlee, on Winston Churchill
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 21 2005 at 10:48
I don't know why, but in popular music today, the prevalent drum sound is what i call "a big sound" in a pejorative way.

For example, i've been to a Soft Machine concert two years ago.
I found all the musicians to be good, except the drummer who had a big sound.
Nothing to do with the coltranian delicate touch of wyatt!!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 17 2005 at 06:59

Originally posted by notphilip notphilip wrote:

us drummers are rare because were so damn cool

 

I must remind the right honourable gentleman that a monologue is not a decision.
- Clement Atlee, on Winston Churchill
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 15 2005 at 22:37
us drummers are rare because were so damn cool
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 30 2004 at 07:02
Originally posted by penguindf12 penguindf12 wrote:

On the drummer thing, yeah they're real hard to find. Drum kits are LOUD. You have to find someone whose parents will put up with it, plus they have to be good and prog-oriented, and usually drummers are not proggers, but metalheads. That's really the reason.

When I was really young (back in the 18th century ) and before I had a kit to practice on, I used cushions as drums and I have to say it really helped to develop wrist strength and it was quiet too!! These days I have a Roland TD3 for home practice which are just about as close as present technology will allow to the real thing and at a controlled level 



Edited by sigod
I must remind the right honourable gentleman that a monologue is not a decision.
- Clement Atlee, on Winston Churchill
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 24 2004 at 14:26

Prog bassists are extremely easy to find. Prog guitarists are a bit harder, but not really that hard. Prog has a sort of converse to normal rock. While most rock bands have trouble finding a good bassist (meaning one who plays along and never embellishes) and they have one guy switch from guitar to bass, prog has too many bassists who end up switching to guitar! (that's probably what I'll be doing).

On the drummer thing, yeah they're real hard to find. Drum kits are LOUD. You have to find someone whose parents will put up with it, plus they have to be good and prog-oriented, and usually drummers are not proggers, but metalheads. That's really the reason.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 22 2004 at 15:39

Incidentally, I've had some incredibly good luck because some friends and I are in the first band we've been really serious about and our drummer is AMAZING!

Singers are hard to find if you want someone who sounds like someone else (e.g. Halford-clones), but it's definately best to go with what you have. I can't sing anywhere near as high as most metal singers, but I write music around the fact that I'm a bass/baritone and by all accounts it works very well (even/especially when I'm singing in 3 part harmony with myself ).

Pure Scottish Power Metal
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 22 2004 at 15:32

Originally posted by Jim Garten Jim Garten wrote:


Had that offer come from someone used to drinking good old British real-ale, it would have been tempting.

However, what you fail to grasp, Peter, is that the beer has to be good quality pre-regurgitation, not the fermented moose milk you routinely imbibe. The standard practice for disposal of - how can I put this - collonial beer vomit is to strain it, allow it to clarify, fizz it up again, then sell it to Australia, labelled as 'Fosters'.

Absolutely classic. I'm currently on holiday in Houston trying to come to terms with beer that actually tastes worse than Tennents. 

 

Pure Scottish Power Metal
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 14 2004 at 05:37
Originally posted by James Lee James Lee wrote:

In my experience, drummers tend to cause less trouble, too.

Ooh, are you sure???

 

I must remind the right honourable gentleman that a monologue is not a decision.
- Clement Atlee, on Winston Churchill
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 13 2004 at 23:54

To be completely honest, a good drummer isn't as rare as a good singer. Usually the trouble and expense of a drumkit weeds out the pretenders, but there's no such barrier for vocalists...any fool with a throat can start to think they're can sing.

In my experience, drummers tend to cause less trouble, too.

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