Posts Tagged ‘Max roach’

I’m not looking at this as a “best of” list, but more of a list of drummers I really
enjoy. I limited my list, but there are so many more that could have been mentioned.

Drummer:

Hamid Drake (Jazz, various artist): When thinking about the top drummers in the
world past or present, Hamid is the first one that comes to mind. I’ve witnessed
Hamid play over a dozen times and his drumming abilities never cease to amaze me.
His style is effortless and something that really needs to be experienced first
hand. (photo below)

hamid

Paal Nilssen-Love (Jazz, various artists): Paal should be considered the Ironman of
drummers, he hits very hard but in contrast creates the most suitable melodies to
compliment the performers he’s playing with.

Dale Crover (Melvins, various side projects): Pure ability, pure power is the only
way to sum up Dale Crover. Sometimes he’s completely on key, sometimes timed off,
he is amazing.

Keith Moon (The Who): I can not kid myself to believe I was never in complete awe
of Keith Moon as a drummer and a rock and roll personality, but we’ll only need to
focus on drumming. The slap-happy, sloppy presence of Keith Moon was an element of
the Who that really made them that something special. The sound of his licks added
a complexity that made their sound completely unique. Just listen to the last
portion of Happy Jack.

Max Roach (Jazz): My first exposure to Max Roach was through my disc Rick vs.
Roach. With Rich coming through one channel and Max coming through the other, over
a little bit of time is was clearly distinctive who was who. Yes, Buddy Rich was
fast and accurate, but Max had soul. He hit the groove. Max Roach was one of the
greatest.

Earl Hudson – Bad Brains. Punk rock/reggae drummer with style. Earl cements the
songs together. He sounded like a free jazz drummer in many ways.

Han Bennink (Jazz): I was fortunate to see Han play live, although he played only a
snare that night. Han was an amazing contributor to the European Free Jazz movement
that changed the world of Jazz everywhere. His drumming was outside the box, and
within the box, and around the box and the box… etc. A true legend. (photo below)

han-bennink

Coady Willis (Melvins, Big Business): When Coady first started playing with the
Melvins alongside Dale Crover, my first thought as well as I’m sure everyone who
never heard of the guy) was WHYY??? would they need to add an additional drummer??
HOW??? can anyone play next to Dale Crover? Is this going to be a disaster? Not at
all. The combination of Coady and Dale playing the duel drumming kit creating what
I like to call the abyss… was a perfect combination of the drumming. Drumming
being recognized as a key element to every track and song. The Melvins were even
more complete. (photo below)

untitled

Joey Baron (Masada, John Zorn, additional projects) Joey’s drummer always came to
the forefront for me, his drumming stands out. He’s quick, he’s accurate, it makes a
statement. Solid.

Tony Williams (Jazz): Love his style and vibe as well as his music as a band leader. (photo below)

Tony Williams

Jim Black! I absolutely adore the work he did with Tim Berne!

Oh, and the Incredible: Charlie Watts, the leader of the popular band, The Rolling Stones!

charlie1

charliewattsisking

Honorable mentions:
Elvin Jones, Frank Rosaly, Chris Corsano, Tim Daisy, Guy Lombardo, Neil Peart, Jeff Nelson, Buddy Rich, Michael Zerang, Ginger Baker, Ronald Shannon Jackson, John Bonham, Neal Smith, the list could go on and on and on…. and I’m sure I’m missing a lot!

I kinda stayed away from most of the most obvious (Dylan, Bowie, Radiohead, etc) assuming other here may well pick these up. Not all are personal favorites (although some are) but examples of bands/artists taking the “Leap” into new a territory.

Albums

1)  We Insist! Max Roach’s Freedom Now Suite

Max Roach and Lyricist Oscar Brown Jr. bring forth an incredible blast of rage and protest. Abbey Lincoln lends an unparalleled vocal performance.

2)  Joanna Newsome (Y’s)

Joanna produced two self-released ep’s (Walnut Whales and Yarn & Glue) which were rerecorded along with new material for her debut for Drag City (Milk Eyed Mender) making her the darling of the “new folk” movement. She would leave them all behind with her next effort the “Y’s”. As I’m sure you all know  Y’s was arranged by Joanna and Van Dyke Parks, Recorded by Steve Abini,  and mixed by Jim O’Rourke. In 2005 she was the darling of the small “new folk” community…in 2006 she was rightfully mentioned in the same breath as Joni, Patti, and perhaps even Bob.

3)  Violent Femmes (Hallowed Ground)

The second effort by the Femmes’ left the adolescent angst behind. Hallowed Ground moved in a distinctly Country/Americana direction. The first track is called Country Death Song for god’s sake! Gordon Gano liberally peppers the entire album with lyrics from his Baptist upbringing lending it quite a somewhat dark spiritual quality.

4)  Boredoms (Super Roots 3)

Born of Noise and Punk aesthetics the Boredoms always had a large portion of art in what they did (albeit with humor).  See (Soul Discharge, No Core Punk, & Cory & The Mandara Pyramid Action Or Gas Satori). Following the Warner Brothers “Chocolate Synthesizer” (1994) the Boredoms largely retreated to independent Japanese labels releasing a string of EP’s Super Roots Volumes 1-7 (Volumes 2&4 do not exist). A few of these eventually saw domestic release in the US. As a huge Boredoms fan in the 90’s these were always great fun to find and devour.

1994 saw the release of Super Roots 3 which was a single 33:30 minute blast “Hard Trance Away (Karaoke Of The Cosmos)”. I assume the skip of Super Roots Volume 2 is to lend the consistency in numerology here (Volume 3 – 33:30 minutes of grinding riff terror). I don’t pretend to know the significance of the numerology in Boredoms releases but assume (perhaps incorrectly) that it has deep significance to EYE et all.

While the “punk” is front and center the repetitive riff is repeated over the course of the EP stretching out in a Krautrock manner. This set the tone for the next decade and more (for better or worse) as EYE continued to explore a  riff/rhythm driven muse chasing the SUN culminating in the Live 77 Drum Boredoms event on July, 07, 2007 under the Brooklyn Bridge.

5)  The Damned (Machine Gun Etiquette)

The Damned arguably fired the first shot in the English Punk explosion with the single “New Rose” in 1976. The rock solid LP Damned, Damned, Damned and the uneven “Music for Pleasure” soon followed in ’77.

The Damned promptly disbanded. Captain Sensible formed KING (Baby Sign Here With Me, My Baby Don’t Care), Rat Scabies formed the White Cats (Junkyard Angel, Second Time Around), which allowed them to develop songs outside of Damned Guitarist Brian James’s influence. These songs would appear in different arrangements/names in subsequent Damned releases (MGE/The Black Album).

The Damned reunited in 1979 with the release of MGE without Brian James. The result was a much more polished, and melodic outing (Smash It Up) incorporating organs, piano( Melody Lee), and revealing the Detriot (Looking At You), and Psychedelic influences previously buried.

6)  Fleetwood Mac (Tusk)

How do you follow up perhaps the most critically acclaimed and bestselling album in history?

If you are Fleetwood Mac (Lindsey Buckingham in particular) you vomit forth 6 sides of unbridled creativity.

7)  The Stranglers (Feline)

Hints of this warmer direction were sporadically released by the Stranglers Walk On By, Duchess,  and La Folie. There is a sense of warmth over the entire LP starting with the cover art. The Black on Black image of a cat has these very soft (warm) outlines.   Filled with “Spanish” guitar and less of a reliance on the trademark keyboards and bass the tracks on Feline have a uniformity and flow (The European Female, Golden Brown). A distinct break with the Stranglers great and sometimes cold output such as Tank and Burning Up Time.

8)  Prince & The Revolution (Purple Rain)

As with I assume most suburbanites Purple Rain was my introduction to Prince. However, I doubt even those who witnessed & were versed in the naked funk of Prince’s first 5 LP’s expected this massive crossover effort (I first heard this in Des Moines, Iowa). I was going to go in another direction with Prince but stuck with the most obvious example.

9)  Talk Talk (Spirit of Eden)

Mark Hollis & Tim Friese-Greene leave the 80’s synth pop behind with the Spirit of Eden. These compositions are quiet, organic, and demand a close listen. This is an effort by a band no longer concerned with placing songs in the pop charts but rather following an inner muse.  Mark Hollis would continue in this vein through “Laughing Stock” (New Grass) and the almost perfectly fragile S/T Mark Hollis (A Life 1895-1915) and then promptly retiring from music.

10)  Kate Bush (The Dreaming)

Kate’s chart success afforded her unprecedented (to her) control of her recording in 1982 allowing her to run rampant with her ideas in “The Dreaming”.  I believe MadHerb would term this 20th Century Art Song? Suggested cuts The Dreaming, There Goes a Tenor, Pull Out the Pin, etc.

 

SONGS

1)  Public Image Limited (Theme)

How do you escape the bondage of being the savage punk savant?

From the first moments of “Theme” this is clearly a different animal than the Pistols and within 9 minutes the Pistols have been made almost irrelevant.  Where are the microphones…in the other room? Keith Levene’s  guitar is certainly not double tracked…what is he even playing? Is that a beat…why does it keep plodding along…make it stop! No wait…Please Don’t!

2)  The Flower Travellin’ Band (Satori Part 2)

Born as Yuya Uchida and the Flowers in 1968 with the lp “Challenge” (A Combination of the Two) they released two more albums of assorted covers and originals in the blues rock tradition with varying degrees of success (Black Sabbath) before stabilizing with lead singer Joe Yamantaka as The Flower Travellin’ Band and releasing the fantastic original “Satori – Saravah For Café Après-Midi” in 1971.

3)  Current 93 (Oh Coal Black Smith)

David Tibet had reached a personal dead end with regards to his industrial output by 1987’s “Swastikas For Noddy”. Swastikas sees Tibet taking a left turn with acoustic instrumentation and nods to an English folk past.  At times this sounds positively ancient to me. This is clearly the first in a new direction that would come to fulfillment in later works as “Black Ships Ate the Sky”.

4)  Psychic TV (The Orchids)

Throbbing Gristle had come to an end leaving Genesis P-Orridge, Peter Christopherson and Cosey Fanni Tutti to form Psychic TV. 1983’s “Dreams Less Sweet” featured a more acoustic take on the industrial theme which ran through the Throbbing Gristle catalog along with this gorgeous tune. Also a very nice Califone cover – HERE

5)  The Wire (French Film Blurred)

In case there was any doubt that The Wire were more than your everyday punks (12XU) the sophomore effort showed that they were willing and able to move in new directions and would continue to do so for 36 years and counting (Keep Exhaling).

6)  The Fall (Hotel Blodel)

Picking a “leap” from The Fall’s vast catalog is admittedly a leap itself. If anyone has been consistently inconsistent it’s Mark Smith and his revolving cast of band support. The Fall’s” Perverted by Language” saw Mark Smith’s wife Brix included in the band with a somewhat crisper sound and look (for the fall)including her in lead vocal on many tracks. This would lead to a vital 2-3 album run including “The Wonderful and Frightening World Of The Fall”.

7)  Pink Floyd (The Nile Song)

Although Pink Floyd were certainly no strangers to HEAVY music “The Nile Song” stands out on the “More” soundtrack like a mongrel diseased dog in a litter of cuddly puppies. A pretty straight cover by The Melvins in ’93 and it still sounds fresh  – HERE.

8)  Yo La Tengo (Tom Courtney)

With “Electro-Pura” Yo La Tengo seemed to merge the feedback, improv, and pop songwriting into a more cohesive whole. This is typified with the track Tom Courtney which is simultaneously a calculated mess and a perfect pop song at the same time. Acoustic version just for fun – HERE

9)  Los Lobos (Colossal Head)

David Higaldo had been veering into more adventurous musical territory with Mitchell Froom and Tchad Blake in the band Latin Playboys. Mitchell Froom and Tchad come on board as co-producers with Los Lobos here and certainly had an effect on the final output. BTW this sounds awful on you tube.

10)  Boomtown Rats (I Don’t Like Mondays & House On Fire)

I always think I should appreciate the Boomtown Rats more than I do. They did produce this duo of my favorite tracks which stand out (to me) as huge leaps on otherwise forgetful albums in an otherwise (for me) forgetful catalog. I wish I could find the official video for house on fire as I remember it was pretty darn good.