Studio Drummer – Less Is More

*LESS IS MORE!*

 

It’s often hard to understand this until you’ve played sessions for a long time.  But take my word for it.  It is the biggest rule of studio playing that you must learn to embrace.  

 

Listen to David Beal lay it down on Unchain My Heart by Joe Cocker.

Fantastically solid playing.  No frills and un-needed bells and whistles.

Just exactly what the song requires!

 

Listen to all the greats here.  The execution, the groove and effect of their playing is top shelf and yet most often you’ll find that there is very little going on.  You’ll notice the space.  The air in their playing.  The simplicity of the fills.  Yet what they’re playing is highly refined and perfect for the song.

 

Knowing what not to play is what takes the years of experience and refinement.  Of course this is not always the case and you’ll hear more complexity at times for differing types of music but it is the general rule.  I highly advise you to not try to reinvent the wheel here. 

 

 

Practice a state of mind when you listen to a song where you are truly listening to all aspects of the song.

Listen intently to the lyric of the song, the emotion of the song, the key points of emotion in the song.  Listen to the dynamic or the ebb and flow of the song.  Where does the song rise in emotion or intensity?  Are there points in the song that move you emotionally or where certain chord changes or melody or lyric move you that you could support, enhance or subtlety mark in your playing.  Very important!  Listen to the vocal and make note of key moments such as emotions, fills or entries where you don’t want to ‘walk on the vocal’ as they say, meaning that you don’t want to clutter or distract the listener. 

 

*YOU WANT TO SUPPORT AT ALL TIMES.*

 

Make note of rhythmic phrases that other melodic instruments are catching and understand and internalize the rhythmic phrase and make note of them on your chart.  For example make a musical decision in this case whether you’re going to strongly mark that rhythmic phrase or perhaps just catch elements of it.  Instead of adding crashes you could just catch the phrase with your bass drum while still grooving over top of it.  You might decide to allow the upper structure instruments to catch it and play right through it, which also may be the appropriate decision to make.  There are times when if everybody jumps on a phrase it becomes ponderous.

 

The more you think this way as a studio musician the more in step you are with the music, the artist and the producer.  This brings up another fact that

Share : facebooktwittergoogle plus
pinterest

Studio Drummer – Be A Lover Of Music

*YOU NEED TO BE VERY WELL VERSED IN ALL MAJOR STYLES OF MUSIC AND THEIR DISTINCT DRUMMING STYLES AND TUNINGS.*

 

If you’re a rock drummer start listening to the top country drummers.  Are there great country studio drummers?  You better believe there are, they’re killer!  Study the style, what makes them authentic? Remember! What you play means nothing if it’s not connecting intimately with the music.  It also means nothing if what you’re playing is stylistically wrong for that particular type of music.

 

 

What does that require of you? 

 

 

*YOU HAVE TO BE A STUDENT OF MUSIC, A LOVER OF MUSIC!*

 

You have to be, there is no other way.  You can’t short cut your way to being very spiritually connected to music that you’re suddenly involved with in a session.  You have to connect at a spiritual level and a great deal of that is just simply this: be a music lover.  

 

Notice I didn’t say a drum lover.  I said a music lover.  My personal belief is that you’re love of music should supercede your love of drumming.

 

You should also experience this on a session and I hope you do get to this point.  You should be able to say to the artist or producer, “I hear very little of my own involvement on this track or.. I don’t hear drums on this at all.” The reason being is that you’re listening to the song and in tune with what the song requires.

 

Again the song and the artist always come first.  The drum kit can be forefront and deserves to be at the appropriate time, but in the right context and the right musical situation.  When that is authentically the case it’s a very powerful experience and the instrument again comes into it’s own.  But when we’re supporting a song or an artist we are also powerful.

 

When I was in the touring band Idle Eyes I learned this lesson clearly.  It was near the end of the bands existence and I knew it.  I was getting bored having done so much road work.  I started to overplay.  The band we were touring with, Tom Cochrane and Red Rider had a great session drummer who came out on the road with them named Jorn Andersen from Toronto.

He came up to me after a show and said something very memorable to me that I never forgot. 

“Don’t try to make it something that it’s not!”

I knew immediately what he was saying!  He heard the overplaying and he heard me trying to play this pop music like a fusion drummer.  I decided at that point to take that to heart for the rest of my musical career.

 

The biggest golden rule of all…

Share : facebooktwittergoogle plus
pinterest

Studio Drummer – The Music Comes First … Always!

THE MUSIC COMES FIRST

 

 

I feel I need to be very straightforward here and say flat out that drummers tend to have a problem in general with this concept.  But it is at the very core of being a successful studio drummer. 

 

*THE MUSIC COMES FIRST… ALWAYS!*

 

Drummers unfortunately spend a great deal of their development as players disconnected from music.  They are concerned with technical issues and prowess.  This is one disadvantage that we have to work to overcome.  The music has to be integral to the drummer.

 

I highly recommend playing a melodic instrument as well to develop your musicality and sensitivity.  In my case I played brass for 10 years prior to playing drums and also sang and that has been foundational for me.  I was also raised being exposed to many types of music.  I feel that one of the best influences on me was a large exposure to classical music, which gave me a great appreciation for melody and harmony.  There’s almost no musical style that I can’t appreciate in a very real way.

 

If you want to be a successful studio drummer you need to be listening and emotionally connected to all types and styles of music including music that you may not initially be attracted to.  Look for the good in all music as a general rule. For example if you’re a rock drummer and hate country you’re doing yourself a disservice.  If you are an R&B drummer and you hate blues you are doing yourself a disservice etc.

 

stay tuned for more on this topic…

Share : facebooktwittergoogle plus
pinterest

Studio Drummer – DAW Recording – Beware of Editors

*YOU’LL RUN INTO EDITORS THAT ‘KNOW JUST ENOUGH TO BE DANGEROUS’ WHEN IT COMES TO DRUM EDITING.*

 

 I’ve had songs and performances sent back to me that were slaughtered by someone editing the drum performance who didn’t know enough about what they were doing. 

 

Drum editing is almost an art form. There are many ‘ins and outs’ pertaining to it.   I’ve had engineers or editors edit my tracks that have slightly shifted things out of time and made entire performances sound stilted and awkward if not just plain terrible at times. 

 

Other common mistakes that occur in editing are cymbal decays being cut off, bass drums being cut off or lost because they often fall just a fraction before the downbeat of the click.  These are most common since editors

   edit drum performances on ‘a grid’ so that the tracks align to a certain  beats per minute or bpm.

 

These editing mistakes were committed by professional people quite often too.  I’ve even had them come back at me afterwards saying that it was my fault in my performance!

That’s a terribly frustrating situation since it is completely out of your hands at that point.  A bad editor has the ability to destroy your performance and sully your reputation at the same time.

 

*SO TAKE PRECAUTIONS TO GUARD YOUR PERFORMANCES.*

 

I would recommend a couple of things here.  If you’re going into an unfamiliar studio to record bed tracks bring with you one or all of these things.  A blank CD, a blank DVD, a cassette and a hand held recording device.  Once the song is recorded ask the engineer or producer if they’d mind if you had a rough mix copy of the bed tracks. 

 

One of these formats they are bound to have.  And if they don’t have that capability use your hand held recording device.  That way you have a record, you have evidence if you will, of the track and your performance as you left it.

 

I always keep rough copies of the tracks I do for people these days for this very reason!   I’ve had a number of occasions where this has not only saved my reputation but has helped to narrow down the cause of the problem. 

One very memorable occasion of this happening was the result of a very good musician who happened to be a really bad editor. He was skewing my tracks without realizing it.

 

FINALLY…

 

I would recommend that if it’s a performance that you really care about or if you have concerns about then ask if the engineer/producer/ artist would mind if you sat in on the editing session. 

 

Often times they won’t have a problem with it if you’ve shown yourself to be respectful and low maintenance and your concern is for the ultimate good of the material.

 

Either way these approaches give you some insurance against the editing sabotage that can unwittingly occur.

Share : facebooktwittergoogle plus
pinterest

Studio Drummer – DAW Recording – Increase Your Studio Ability

*AS A RULE, RECORDING FULL TAKES WILL INCREASE YOUR STUDIO ABILITY.*

 

I find that most producers today, given the ease and the speed tend to record in sections instead of entire takes.  As a result there are a whole generations of players, studio players included that have never been subject to one of the toughest skills that a session player was once required to have and still should possess.

 

This of course means your utmost execution and musicality throughout the entire piece of music. It also means precision against a click track and correct reading and interpretation of the chart in front of you.  And on top of this it means that bringing the fifth element, the quintessential element being your outstanding style and interpretation.

 

And don’t forget that tape has not gone away completely especially on very high end productions. 

 

*THERE ARE PRODUCERS AND ENGINEERS THAT STILL SWEAR BY THE SOUND OF TAPE.*

 

 They swear by it because of what’s called tape distortion, a certain tape compression and distortion that happens with analog tape that sounds sonically huge to the ear.  So as a studio drummer you should have the skills needed to play entire takes if you’re called for one of these sessions!

 

*LET’S TALK ABOUT DRUM EDITING.*

 

Of course with the advent of extremely powerful digital recording platforms many borderline performance issues can be adjusted or rescued with time shifting and quantization.  This can work well in your favor although as I was saying earlier you wouldn’t have had that luxury 20 years ago and nor would you if you were called into an analog recording situation today!

 

Digital editing, as well as having many advantages also has large and inherently dangerous disadvantages to you as a player that you need to be aware of.  This is something I’ve encountered many times in my business.

 

See coming post with more on this topic…

Share : facebooktwittergoogle plus
pinterest

Studio Drummer – DAW Recording – ‘What You Played Is What You Played’

*WHAT YOU PLAYED IS WHAT YOU PLAYED.*

 

In fact, on most formats of tape machine, especially the highest end of multi tracking tape machines, you couldn’t ‘punch in’ either or there were very limited areas where one could punch in to a track.  It would have to involve silence or an actual pause in the music.  It was often a very pressure filled setting.

 

I was working with Bob Rock the famous producer/engineer, recording drums for the second Idle Eyes record at the infamous Little Mountain Sound studios in Vancouver.  It was the center of the world for rock recording in the 80’s.  Bryan Adams, Aerosmith, Motley Crue, Bon Jovi, David Lee Roth, the Cult etc recorded huge albums there.

 

 

It was also a world famous studio for drum sounds.  Fantastic drum sounds, so much so that artists would come from around the world just for that sound.  But Bob didn’t like to punch at all.  It had to be full takes for him.  That shows you just how much things have changed in the world of recording.

 

A funny little story there – we were just finishing up that record when a bunch of very rock and roll looking dudes show up at the studio and Bob says to us “Yea that’s this band Bon Jovi, I have to record their record next week and I just feel burned out right now.”  That ‘album’ was Slippery When Wet which sold about 10 million copies and launched Bon Jovi and Bob Rock into the stratosphere.
 

On this topic of full takes, I remember on an album for WEA records we were having trouble with a certain tune that just wasn’t feeling the way the producer wanted.  Again it was entire takes of the song over and over. 

 

Today it would just be done in sections and edited together or by punching in on sections, but not in those days.

 

It was an added dimension of pressure that the session musician had to learn how to handle.  The anxiety at times could be literally overwhelming.  However, it is a very good exercise even today to at least practice playing songs as entire takes.  If you’re in a recording situation I would strongly recommend that you push to record this way as well. You may very well be expected on a recording session to be able to read down and play an entire take.

 

Of course the producer and the artist are going to ultimately dictate how things get laid down.  But if you are given a say in the matter and are comfortable with it then I would recommend doing it this way.

 

Stay tuned for more posts on this topic!

Share : facebooktwittergoogle plus
pinterest

1 8 9 10 11 12