Studio Drummer – Foundations!

Miles Davis was once asked what were the raw essentials of having a great band. Miles replied, you have to have a great drummer. The interviewer then asked, what if you don’t have a great drummer? Miles replied,
YOU DON’T HAVE A BAND!

At e-studio-drummer we like to break down important aspects that are often overlooked. Often these aspects are overlooked to looked for different reasons. Inexperience is the first stumbling block. Trying to prematurely look ‘cool’ is often the biggest culprit. While sometimes this can work in your favor more often it’s an impediment.

YOU are the foundation of the music. Of course this works in concert with the rhythm section as well. But think of it as building a house. You are the framer. But first and foremost you are the creator of the foundation. The foundation is literally and figuratively the ‘bottom line’.
Very precise! In e-studio-drummer mentality, you are ‘framing a house’. Inches and fractions of inches matter, akin to the literal foundation and co-framer of a house.
If you alone, are out by an inch or less creating this foundation, by the time you get 2 stories up in the framing of a house you’ve got major problems.
For eg. If you screw up the measurement or the cut of an important structural beam, you’ve screwed up the house’s structure exponentially as the construction above this mistake continues! In our case, the ‘construction’ above us are the live band members and/or overdubs that are being added on top of the foundation you’re creating.

Of course we are human and not perfect. But we all continue to strive for more precision AND more creativity. Great creativity and fluidity is not that far off from plum lines, leveling and measuring.
But it all starts at this foundational level.

Give a lot of attention to note length. Discover and practice note duration. If you’re underpinning a large band for example and you have pauses and rests in the music you have to understand note length. I played brass for years before drums which was a great foundation for this aspect. Be aware of this very important aspect.

Being second nature with a click track or metronome is the bedrock of this. Burning note length into your head is not only when you’re playing and controlling a band large or small. It’s also when you’re resting for 2 beats, a bar or more. Learn how to perhaps mark enough time for the band members if necessary. If someone tends to rush or drag for example, mark time with perhaps a light hi hat to keep everyone on the same page

For starters, a physical aspect,

Thinking of our focus on foundation you have to have a solid throne. Have you ever observed a pianist and how they will meticulously adjust their throne/stool height and positioning so as to maximize their performance, endurance and musicality?
We have this very important foundational issue as well. When we have 4 limbs in motion often with a huge amount of physicality you have to have this obvious but so often overlooked piece of gear nailed.

ONCE YOU HAVE A VERY SOLID UNDERSTANDING OF THIS FOUNDATIONAL LEVEL YOU CAN START TO ‘MOVE’ ASPECTS OF THE INSTRUMENT WITH FULL INTENTION, AS IN ‘BACKBEATS’ETC

More discussion on this aspect coming from e-studio-drummer.com!

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Studio Drummer – RADAR High End Studio Recording Platforms

If you’ve ever had the privilege to record onto RADAR digital recording platforms you’ll know what a sonic treat it is.  The hardware is second to none as well as their beautiful preamps!  For a digital platform it has a true analogue richness and creaminess without the noise floor of analogue.  And without the degradation of tape storage.  Anyone that’s had to ‘bake’ a 2 inch reel or a 2 track reel knows exactly what I’m talking about.

RADAR is the bomb!  Be sure to go to @radarrecording on twitter and instagram and read my tips and thoughts on modern recording!

Cheers!

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Studio Drummer – Tricks For Tendonitis

We musicians and studio players are all prown to have repetitive motion issues!  Guitar players have it bad as well.  I had an issue with my shoulder for a couple of years.  It was very painful to play anything above shoulder height.  Since then I’ve had very deep tendonitis in my right forearm.  It’s been a constant bother.

I did find an answer though.  It was not a medical centre, pills or anti-inflam’s.  For me it was topical extra strength Voltarin anti-inflamatory cream that my doc recommended I try.  There is a light version and an extra strength version.  It made a remarkable difference right away!  And by using it on an ongoing basis it helped my body get ahead of the inflamation and eventually correct itself.   I highly recommend it.  It’s not expensive and it’s not perscription.

Another trick to try if you’re in a bind and you have to play but the pain is taking over.  WD40!  Yup sounds crazy.  A great guitar player friend of mine told me about it.  Spray some of it on the affected area an hour or so before you play.  I don’t recommend using it ongoing being a petroleum product but it might help you through a one time emergency…

Cheers and good health!

 

 

 

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Studio Drummer – Livin for the City

It’s a crazy world for people in the arts!  Not surprising that all throughout history musicians and artists have been subsidized either by the wealthy or by government.  Why?  Because cultures that had any intelligence knew that a strong arts community was good for their civilization and their country and for their countries’ intellect and IQ.

Yes!  It’s generally a hard life for arts related people in this era, more so than perhaps even in the past.  The devaluing of the arts in general is almost hard to believe.  I can look back 25 years to a different time, a literally different time and experience when I would say the arts were much more revered than they appear to be now.

But here is the upside.

You and I have to remember this…You are doing exactly what you want and exactly what you were put on this earth to do.   So take heart!  Any stories welcome..  What’s it like living in your community as an artist?

More on this to come…

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Studio Drummer – Samples for Stylus RMX and Kontakt

I”m excited about the samples of my kits being released by Sampleholics for Stylus RMX and soon to be released on Kontakt!  I did this work about 4 years back.  It was a fairly exhaustive process of individual hits at different velocities and placements.  One of the things I feel good about is that the processing such as EQ’s, compression, verbs etc are my own and they wanted to capture my sound, the sound they’d been impressed with represented in performances and grooves in my website audio.

Stylus RMX is an amazing loop program firstly but it is also a great sample platform.  By using RMX one has access to their list of effects which are extremely cool, high quality (as is everything that Spectrasonics does!) and varied.  And with the release that is coming on Kontakt the library will see a much larger audience since Kontakt is the premier platform in the world for many varied sample libraries including melodic instruments whereas RMX is only a percussion/loop platform.

Another great tool in the arsenal on either platform!  If you’re interested in seeing or purchasing the sample library it’s available on my site at the bottom of the home page or go directly to the purchase page with this link…

http://www.sampleholics.com/page1.html

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Studio Drummer – Know When Not To Be Overruled By A Producer

I’m going to be short and sweet about this but let me say this.  You have to know when to stand your ground as a player.  This is especially relevent if you’re in a band.  Don’t get me wrong, producers are a necessary and vital element in a music production.  There is a constant issue that arises though.  The issue is that producers often like to change things, change ideas for the sake of change and also to be able to lay claim to those changes.  A producer may usually have the final say and it’s important to respect that.  However you may have times when you feel strongly about a musical issue, or a concept that you’ve worked out that you want to contend for.  Times happen when you have to stand for those ideas, as uncomfortable as they may be.
I’ve been in band situations where parts and musical ideas have been very worked out.  They also hold a certain band dynamic, an energy if you will, that embodies the song or at least the version of the song that you’ve collectively created.  I’ve seen situations and been a part of them where a ‘producer’ will come in and run roughshod over everything you’ve worked on.  The problem that also arises is that there’s times when these producers have been brought in at good expense.

There does come a time when you have to contend for your ideas, your vision and concepts.  That can be like running into a brick wall at time when you’re trying to bring your most harmonious performance without and blockage and bad energy..

There lies the rub as they say..  It’s a balance of maintaining creativity against the machine in a sense.  The ‘machine’ can be the producer, the ego, the overbearing domination at times but .. that’s what I leave you to think about.

How much do you trust your concepts, your ideas and also equally important, how much are you willing to be a student, to have open ears and be willing to accept change and adapt and incorporate others ideas?

It’s a challenge isn’t it?  I’ve experienced it and it’s still a challenge to this day.  However there are times that I strongly contend for my position when I feel it’s in the best interest of the song and the artist, even if it is uncomfortable.  The song and the integrity of the project have to override not only the players views but also the producer’s at times as well.  A great producer will accept a contending viewpoint, at least as an alternative if it is presented properly and respectfully by you as the musician.

 

 

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