Studio Drummer – Be Industrious and Creative

*GO ON CRAIGSLIST AND KIJIJI FOR EXAMPLE AND ADVERTISE IN YOUR GEOGRAPHIC AREA OFFERING TO BE INVOLVED IN RECORDING SESSIONS FOR FREE.*

 

A bass player that I’ve done sessions with, Brian Manato got the Sarah McLachlan gig and still has it to this day by posting and answering an ad in a local music rag.  He’s ALSO played on all of her records.

 

Buy yourself 2 microphones and get a hold of a free version of an audio platform.  Pro-Tools offer a free version of their software on the net as do numerous other platforms.  With 2 microphones you can place one in the kick and the other on the snare drum or use it as an overhead mic so it’s picking up the entire kit.  Use this setup to practice all the studio abilities that we’re discussing here.

 

If you have no experience or very little experience the one thing that you absolutely don’t want to do at this point in your development is to stay isolated.  It’s very easy to stay isolated in this internet age.  You have to get in the same room as other players.  Preferably, this would be two other players that would normally comprise a rhythm section: a guitarist and a bass player, or a keyboardist and a bass player.

 

You need to record together even if it is only you who is being benefiting from the experience.  You need to start to understand the interplay and the cause and effect of what other players and their sense of time and interpretation can do to your sense of time and your interpretation, both in a positive and negative sense.  There are many effects that other players can have on your own playing.

 

For example these players may ask you to play something that you’re not comfortable with. 

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Studio Drummer – Getting Experience

GETTING EXPERIENCE


For many, acquiring experience is their famous “catch 22”!  How does one get experience when you can’t get hired without having experience?

 

*YOU HAVE TO CREATE SITUATIONS FOR YOURSELF.*

 

Of course the most obvious situation you can create is to join a band and get experience that way.  Joining a band that is much more experienced than yourself may or may not be a good thing to do.  It may push you to develop faster or it may be that the other band members may be on a different plateau in their experience level.  You might perhaps be better joining a band where all the members have relatively the same experiential level.

 

 If you are just starting out and you’re ambitious offer to play in any studio situation for free.  Don’t ask for money at this level!  As I mention in the book I did several years of sessions for free to get experience.  It wasn’t until several years later that I actually started to get paid in a studio setting.

stay tuned for more on this topic…

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Studio Drummer – The Morphing Continues!

*YET WORK IN THE MUSIC INDUSTRY KEEPS MORPHING AND INTEGRATING INTO DIFFERENT AREAS AND DIFFERENT STYLES.*

 

For example we’ve seen a fundamental change in the industry with the advent of the internet.  The digital download issue has drastically affected all the variants work in the music industry.  It’s killed some areas and yet opened up new avenues in others. 

 

Also the explosion of the home computer based studio more than any other single technological advance is responsible for the obliteration of an entire strata of traditional recording studios.  These days nothing but the large and extravagant recording studios survive in a general sense.  So what has that done?

 

*IT HAS MORPHED THE WORK AND PUSHED IT INTO DIFFERENT VICINITIES.*

 

The need and demand is still there for studio drumming or studio performances from all players in general.  This happening just changed the location and the method of where the work is and how the playing takes place.

 

With something as primal as music I believe that:

 

*THE ART FORM AND THE INDUSTRY WILL ALWAYS REINVENT ITSELF.*

 

Your job is to find your market, your unique angle and re-invention!

It’s a given that it will constantly morph so don’t be a follower.  Be a leader and a trendsetter!  Utilize existing technology to create work for yourself and even better think ahead!  Be willing to work for free when it comes to gaining valuable experience in regards to studio playing!

Experience is not only the best teacher regarding studio playing.  It is a prerequisite for getting hired to do sessions.  So you have to garner studio experience.  The best way to do this is to offer your services for free at the beginning.

 

*HOW CAN YOU CREATE NEW AVENUES FOR YOUR ABILITIES?*

 

 

I encourage you as you read on to explore your own avenues.  Simultaneously, think creatively as you read this book about how you can apply these skills and methods.

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Studio Drummer – Seriously Consider Music Colleges

*ALSO, CONSIDER MUSIC COLLEGES IN YOUR VICINITY.* 

 

I would always recommend the experience and the gained knowledge and contacts that result.  One thing I would say about music colleges though is that they are not trade schools.  In other words, because you’ve gone to a music college means very little when it comes to the working world.  It doesn’t mean necessarily that you’re going to have jobs when you finish.  You’re going to have to forge your own path in regards to working in the field.  Practically everyone I know who’s been to college would tell you that the guys and girls that ‘can play’ in college could ‘play’ before college too. 

Approach the experience as something that is going to greatly enhance your existing knowledge and playing ability, not create your foundation of knowledge and playing ability from the ground up.

 

In my experience at the time that I entered the music business, which was the early 1980’s, there was a lot of work in jingles and film.  And also because of the relative lack of technology which now exists, sessions in general were more abundant, whereas now many sessions take place in solitary home studios.  It was a thriving business at that time.  Without a doubt these are now different times. 

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Studio Drummer – Into the Present

*THAT BRINGS ME TO THE PRESENT*

 

My studio experience has been of great use even in live gigs that I do to this day. 

 

For example:

 

I do the Calgary Stampede Grandstand show otherwise known as ‘the greatest outdoor show on earth’ to 22,000 people a night.  It’s is a very intense show musically and features a live band of 30 or so hand picked musicians.  It is played totally live although the show also runs a pre-record of the same music simultaneously. 

 

We do the recording about 6 months prior to the show. The reason that there is a pre-record is that if the weather suddenly turns, which it can quickly do in Calgary, they have to stop the live aspect of the band in the show since someone can get electrocuted.  To the audience the band still appears to be playing though and the show suddenly goes to pre-recorded tracks seamlessly without the audience knowing it.

 

This is where my studio experience enters because for the entire show I am playing to a click track.  This is how the pre-record and the live show are synchronized together.  In fact aside from the conductor I am the only musician who is being fed the click track.  So in essence I am running the entire show of 30 musicians and literally hundreds of dancers and performers in front of 22,000 people a night! 

 

*SO DO YOU NEED TO BE CONFIDENT AND COMFORTABLE WITH A CLICK TRACK?  YES!*

 

And we will address this issue as well as many others in this book.

 

 

 

*REGARDING YOUR OWN MUSICAL JOURNEY.*

 

You should decide for yourself what your influences, loves and goals are surrounding your music.  I would say that if you don’t really have a spiritual connection to music, for example, if music doesn’t move you by exciting you, making you cry, making you remember nostalgically different events then perhaps you should rethink your ambition.  However if music does do all these things spiritually for you, which I assume it does, and you are deciding to pursue this further then it’s time to move on.

 

*YOU NEED TO LOOK AT WORK ISSUES.* 

 

In the area in which you live in you need to start evaluating where and what the work is and how best to pursue it.  How many live venues are there?  How many recording studios are there?  Where is there a perceived need?

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Studio Drummer – My Insights

*MY INSIGHTS:*

 

 

Being exposed to all types of music, including melody and harmony are more connected to being a successful drummer than most drummers realize.  This is true especially if you are going in cold to sessions and attempting to efficiently interpret a producer or songwriter’s music, all the while striving to bring your musicality and sensitivity to the material.

 

Of course the term ‘sensitivity’ to the material can also mean that your ‘interpretation of the music’ means that you shred your butt off.  However it may also challenge your lighter touch such as your use of space or brush usage etc.

 

This gets into the fine-tuning of song interpretation which we will discuss.

 

I was 14 when I seriously started playing drums. My personal road involved

many private lessons and some great teachers, as well as many, many hours of practice.  I start gigging professionally when I was 20.  The first gig I did was in a little pub and I look back and remember how nervous I was before that gig.  It’s funny to think about now.

 

From that point on I played in many local bands for a number of years doing 6 nighters, which unfortunately don’t exist anymore at least in this part of the world.  It was great experience and taught me many things that can only be learned ‘on the job’ from the repetition of doing long term gigging. 

 

Simultaneously when I was 22 I had the very good fortune of connecting with a small recording studio/record company.  The quality of the productions, which were all pressed to vinyl, was very low.  However that experience was invaluable for me.  This is where I first started to hone the craft of studio drumming.  The first projects I played on shone a blazing light on my lack of experience and my inconsistencies!  Even more blatantly it showed up my complete disregard for the music and my constant overplaying! 

 

But we all have to start somewhere and for me this little studio and all the projects I did for no charge of course, were my humble introduction to the art of studio playing.

 

A very long-time friend, a recording engineer that I met at that studio became one of my best friends and one of the most honest mirrors and helpful critics of my playing.  He was the first to point out to me that my meter and my time were in great need of study and practice. 

 

Hah!  That’s putting it nicely!  I remember his real words were “Your time sucks!” 

 

From those meager recording projects I was involved in, I could now clearly hear the issues I had to resolve in my playing.  My buddy made me an electronic metronome, which in those days was not something you could walk into a store and buy.  It pounded out an electronic pulse which was a painful spike to the ear drums but the device worked like a charm!

 

I spent many hours working out with this new tool.  I practiced everything I could with my metronome at every tempo. Fills that were giving me trouble I would spend hours working on until they were comfortable and sat perfectly.  This time in my development proved to be critical.

 

I became a part of a recording act at the age of 24 named Idle Eyes.  Here all my existing studio experience and long hours of practice paid off.  As I go on to mention elsewhere in the book the recording all took place on 24 track 2-inch tape machines back in the world of analog recording. 

No punching into tracks!  Complete full takes!  At times it was very stressful but we had a hit album and toured extensively on it doing very large shows. 

 

We did a second album and again hit the road touring.  We played with some great acts such as Bryan Adams, Toto, Tears for Fears, Loverboy, Sheena Easton, Kenny Rogers, Tom Cochrane etc. and played the opening gala concert for Expo 86 in front of Prince Charles and Lady Diana.

 

But as bands tend to do we had our disagreements and broke up in late 1986.  Part of my reason for leaving was that I didn’t want to spend my life on the road.  That can become very tired very quickly from my own experience.  I wanted to be more involved in session work.  I had done a fair bit of session work up to this point so I focused my attention on pursuing these ambitions further.

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