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Benny Greb Clinic

November 13, 2009 in PASIC Blog by Dave Kropf

2:58 Kinda sparse crowd. But it looks like it’s filling up.

3:01 PAS-IC guy is out and intros Meinl guy.

3:03 BG takes the mic. Thank yous.

3:05 BG sits at kit tonplY 2 tracks from his record, Brass Band. Track one, a sloppy New Orleans groove with a big fat back beat. Very reminiscent of The Meters. Track 2 is a straight 8th funky upbeat thing. Imagine if Thomas Lang did covers of Stanton Moore, then you’d get this. HUGE drum break. Very tasty. Nice punches to get us back into the track.

3:17 BG takes the mic. Now he’s going to play a solo.

3:18 Free form solo. Starts with sd roll. Moves around the kit with a pseudo latin foot ostinato. He’s the cleanest player we’ve seen so far. Moves to just his hands keeping the kick pattern going. He’s hitting any and everything he can find on the kit. He’s even playing the click sound of toms touching! Back to sticks with a big rolling double kick ostinato. Solo ends with standing o.

3:33 BG takes the mic. Thank yous. Gives run down of gear.

BG: 2 things that are very important: groove and improv. We as drummers are mostly pattern oriented. We focus on the fill but not on how to play it. We often speed it up. Time is very important to us. (does a group clapping exercise – “football clave”). Now do a click sound and clap! Take things slowly and practice things with this internal click. A quarter note “chit” sound. I’ll take 1 question.

Q: How did a white boy from Germany get so funky?
A: I get that. When we listen to music – to the lyrics, to the way it was played and recorded. And listen for a long time! not this iPod, 12,000 songs. I tried and tried to listen to as much as I could.

3:53 Plays one last track. A piece from his first solo record, Grebfruit. It’s a band piece where BG has sung all the parts except for drums. Bass, horn stabs, etc are all BG singing. Lol!

Tobias Ralph Clinic

November 13, 2009 in PASIC Blog by Dave Kropf

1:02 Intro from Paiste guy. He keeps going on.

1:05 TR takes the stage. Dons headphones and plays to a drumnbass track. Man, this guy is fast! Blowing heat all around the kit, up and down the toms. Seems like there are drums on the track. Hard to tell what’s live or not.

1:11 Track morphs into chops solo. Moves in and around grooves. He’s doing this thing where he plays the hh with his right hand while making contact on the sd with the butt of the stick.

1:24 TR takes mic. Thank yous.

1:29 Demonstrates splitting up double strokes between surfaces. Then applies it to a groove. RLL sticking. Break it up between hh and snare

FP: now we’re gonna take that broken sticking idea and put it in a 16th pattern that creates a 3 over 4 feel. (demonstrated in various tempos). Before you get it fast, you want to make it feel good at a slower tempo. The whole thing is to keep people dancing. The other thing is what we call hh fill ins. Take the sticking of an inverted paradiddle and put any R and sub out the hh foot. The last concept is hand foot overlaps. When we’re playing with hh sd and bd, there’s a lot we can do. (plays overlapping rudiments across hh and sd)

1:45 Takes questions. One about seat height and one about double bass technique.

1:49 Thank yous

Felix Pollard Clinic

November 13, 2009 in PASIC Blog by Dave Kropf

11:05 PAS-IC guy comes out and drums up applause for sponsors. Next up, Meinl guy. We’re in for a “treat”!

11:07 FP Takes stage. There’s a huge Yamaha kit on stage with more xymbals than I can count. Plays to a track. Starts with his back to us playing a djembe.

11:10 Plays drumset to slamming gospel track. Lots of sick fills and licks.

11:15 Plays another track. Half time 6/8 shuffle sounding thing. Gospel style. The snares sound good but the toms and kick sound dull and thuddy. This is the 2nd or 3rd clinic where the drums in this room sound bad. I’m starting to wonder if it’s the sound team in here. FP is starting to solo around time.

11:20 Takes mic. Thank yous. FP: I hope to encourage you today and inspire you to just play. (talks about tunes he just played). I’m developing this thing called the ones and twos of popular music. Maybe not know the beat for every single song, but I had to develop a way to keep songs in my head. One simple bd pattern can dictate what type of music it is. The ones and twos are the first quarter on 1. Wherever the 2nd 2 beats are changes the style of music. Wherever I put the sn and hh changes the music drastically. By changing the kick pattern.

11:32 Demonstrates new kick pattern. I’m having a hard time following what he’s trying to establish with the idea of ones and twos. It feels like something that makes perfect sense I his head, but isn’t quite fleshed out enough to try and teach it to others.

FP: whenever I learn a tune, I try and relate the groove to another tune I already know. (demonstrates a shuffle type groove)

11:36 FP: The next thing is called 4 on the floors. A good groove to know is the disco. (demonstrates)

11:39 Plays several grooves all with quarter note kick patterns. I’m missing his point bc he keeps mixing up the tempos. So the idea that they all sound diff gets a bit lost.

11:41 FP: so there are a couple of examples of ways to learn lots of different kinds of music. Questions?

Q: How do you start learning tunes?
A: First, listen to all the music. Then I try to relate it to other music. I then categorize it by style. Motown, rock, etc.

Q: Can you isolate the hh patterns you’re using?
A: In general, I try and keep it straight forward or what the artists wants. Accented 16ths and 8ths mostly. Or quarter notes. (demonstrates)

Q: Double bass?
A: my doubles are pretty straight forward. Right over left. (demonstrates)

11:48 FP thank yous. Plays one more track. It’s a medley of Lionel Ritchie songs.

Steve Fidyk Masterclass

November 13, 2009 in PASIC Blog by Dave Kropf

10:02 Waiting for the clinic to start. There’s a slide on hlthe screen called “The Transcription Lab.”. A beautiful Ludwig bop kit is on stage. Pretty good turn out for a 10a clinic!

10:05 Intros from Remo guy. SF is on jazz faculty in Philadelphia.

10:06 SF takes the stage. Sits at kit very intently. Plays syncopated rhythms with hands around the toms. Plays the snares on the bottom of snare drum. Adds hh, cyms. Switches to mallets and plays around toms and cyms. To sticks. Jazzy type fills around the kit. The snare sounds amazing. Lots of Moeller strokes. Back to hands. Retrogression. Soft, delicate end.

10:12 SF takes mic. Welcome and thank yous.

SF: what I’m going to attmpt to do today is have every participate in transcriptions. We have a lot to do today. We’re going to look at solos, parts. You want to play musically, study music. Transcription also helps with form, reading, dictation. The tools: pencil, eraser, paper, patience. You don’t have to have manuscript paper. Every time I listen to a drummer, I tried to hear something new. I always talk about music WITH other musicians. It also helps to have something to help slow down the music. Headphones.

Method: listen to each limb independantly. The create a composite rhythm and read it on one surface. Finally, listen back to determine the voicing. We have to determne what texture the piece is.

Stevefidyk.com/fid-studio for transcriptions I’ve done.

10:23 Plays a piece with Tony Williams on drums. Slows it down to 75%. The tune is Nefertii by Miles Davis. SF goes to overhead and begins to transcribe the ride pattern. I really can’t hear the ride pattern here in the room though. He’s using the program, Transcribe. It’s loopoing the same 30 seconds of the tune. Looks like several people are starting to leave. Unfortunatly it looks like we’re just watching him transcribe the piece on the overhead. :( Like watching someone work on homework. Weird. He’s nit really explaining what he’s doing.

10:32 SF: That’s the easy part. Now we have to play it. It does no good to transcribe it and not play it. Do we have a volunteer who wants to play it? (guy goes up and plays it pretty well!)

10:36 SF gives tips to the player. They play it at speed.

10:39 SF: Lets move on to full kit. (the tune is Daytripper by the Beatles.). 3 textures-sd, bs, hh. This is a very simple beat. Drummers play beats for the benefit of the music. For the snare, incorporate some rim. On the hat, Ringo swung the hat hand like he was buttering a piece of bread.

10:44 Plays Art Blakey tune (Moanin) and claps out different parts of the groove and then puts it on the overhead. Can’t hear hear the bd, so he interprets his own thing. Asks for a volunteer. Gives tips and trys it again.

10:51 Plays groove Take 5 and transcribes it.

10:55 Plays Chameleon by Herbie Hancock with Havey Mason on drums.

Zoro and Daniel Glass Clinic

November 12, 2009 in PASIC Blog by Dave Kropf

5:17 We’re just now sitting down into the hall! Why are these last clinics always so late?

5:22 DW rep comes out for intros.

5:23 Zoro comes out on the mic and pumps up the crowd. Thank yous.

5:24 Daniel Glass takes the mic. They play Rock and Roll by Led Zep.

DG: who recognizes that? He didn’t write that! It’s from little richard’s Keep a knockin’. (it’s the same intro!). What you listen to today may have a lot more to do with things from the last.

Z: This clinic is about the lore of American music. It all has the swing pulse!

DG: Louis Jordan was a huge artist who was in the charts longer than Michael Jackson, Aretha Frnklin. He played jump blues which was the connection from big band to rock and roll. Here is “Choochoo Cha Boogie.”

5:31 Z: Here’s a tune 40 years later. (plays slamming tune, I didn’t catch the artist).

5:33 DG: you’ll notice the Jordan tune didn’t have any backbeat. Rock and roll was the first style to use a back beat all the way through. Here is wynini Harris, good rockin tonight.

3:36 Z: here’s a groove that everyone knows. Green Onions. It’s a quarter note shuffle.

3:39 DG: so that was stax records out of Memphis. They brought R&B into the mainstream. It was greasy and laid back. The other label that brought R&B into the mainstream was Motown. It was very polished and pristinly produced. Here is “Heat Wave.”

5:41 Z: here’s a groove from the 70′s where shuffles got big and fat. Here is the Lido Shuffle that features Jeff Porcaro.

4:42 DG: now we’re gonna jump back a few decades. The other thing that made rock and roll different was the shuffle feel moving to a straight 8th feel. During this period there are a lot of various shuffles out there. Here’s one right between straight and shuffle. Here’s Jailhouse Rock. DJ Fontana on drums n

5:45 Z: This is one of the anthems of funk – Stevie Wonder. Superstition.

5:47 DG: The next few grooves show how the shuffle started to creep out into other styles of music. New Orleans. Here is Joseph Smokey Johnson, “I Cant Help It.”

5:51 Z: this next tune is from James brown. Jabo Starks and Papa Dont Take No Mess.

5:53 DG: Another place where the swing pulse had an influence was Reggae. The main diff between American and Jamaican shuffle is the kick is on 2 and 4. Reggae is mix of rock steady and ska.

5:56 Z: this last groove is the Purdie Shuffle.

5:58 DG: Check out the commandments of early funk drumming. Z: we’re gonna end with an improvised solo. (go into a half time shuffle. Each player takes turns trading licks.)

Go into an up beat and licks continue.

6:06 trading licks ala drum battle. Solos end in huge unison lick and a standing O.

That’s it for today’s PASIC coverage. Until tomorrow!

Sergio Bellotti Clinic

November 12, 2009 in News, PASIC Blog by Dave Kropf

3:05 SB has already taken the stage. He’s taking about the imortance of knowing rudiments.

SB: we are gifted as drummers. When you hear something new, try to go for the sound. That’s what makes the difference. I want to go over the basic sounds (strokes) of the drum. Singles, aka tap. Means freedom and natural movement. It’s easiest to express yourself. How do you make singles musical without sounding like a machine? It’s natural motion. Next: the unison. We play more unison strokes than any other stroke. We play it every time we play a groove between the hh and sd. Harmony, power. Like playing chords on a piano. Next: the buzz roll. Long continuos sound. Smooth. Next: double aka diddle. Rebound, bouncing. Next: flam. Natural accent. Grace note before a loud note. Next: drag. These are the 6 main strokes. Concept to application. We’ll look at this on the drumset. First, pad or pillow? NEITHER!! You don’t play a pad on the gig, so when possible practice on the drumset. The rudiments are also great bc it teaches us subdivision. Notation, accents. And also the fact that you are forced to alternate. Spend twice as much time on the weaker limb.

Permutations. Practice slow. The slower you practice the quicker you learn.

You can also apply the strokes on the clave.

3:27 Moves to kit. He’s a lefty! About to play to a James Brown track.

SB: instead of using a metronome all the time, practice to music. You’ll find that you might find some really good ideas! Here’s a cool exercise to help with rudiments. Dr. Beat. Quarter bass. 8th on ride. 16th with hh. 8th Triplets on snare. This will help your inner pulse.

2 weeks per Rudiment. 52 weeks of work. Start on snare the begin to explore on the set. And use the bass drum! That’s what makes it drumset. (demonstrates singles around the kit.)

3:41 SB: with doubles, everybody’s fascinated. Make sure to take a breath. Once you get them faster the temptaion is to do this (blows heat). But let’s make it more musical. Inverted doubles: the second note is on the downbeat. (demonstrates).

3:48 Paradiddles. Mixing doubles and singles around the kit. Flamacue. (demonstrates several other rudiments around the kit and splitting hands and working the rudiments around grooves.

3:53 Wraps of the clinic and plays us out. Nice touch!

Chris Pennie Clinic

November 12, 2009 in PASIC Blog by Dave Kropf

1:00 No one up yet. There are swag bags on all the seats. Mapex is a big endorser. Decent crowd, but scattered.

1:02 PAS guy is out and still insists on pronouncing it PASIC as in gas-ic. Lol. More intros from Mapex guy.

1:04 CP takes mic. Thank yous. Gives brief history. Studied at Berklee for 2 years. Facinated by music technology. From there formed band called Dillenger Escape Plan. Played lots of shows. Threw in lots of styles into DEP. Cut to now. I wanted to change. DEP is fast and free, but I wanted to step away from that where there is a lot more space in the music. Coheed and Cambria allows that. Also in other projects including a production company that does scoring and electronic music. CP: I’m just gonna play now bc I don’t get the opportunity that much in a band setting.

1:12 Solo. Big rolls on the snare drum with Tom and kick accents around. Moves to floor tom. Lots of metric modulation. 3 over 4 over 2. Breaks out into Fool in the Rain groove. Plays different subdivisions over it. Lots of double kick action. Wow, the verb on the snare sounds like it’s in a sewer. Breaks out into quick DnB sounding thing. More heat around the kit. The solo is devolving into a bashfest. Lots of triplets and 16ths around the kit between kick and toms/snare. Solo ends with huge snare drum roll

1:29 Takes mic. CP: I like to deal with modulating and polyrhythms. If I’m doing an ostinatos with me feet or hands, I’ll keep something the same and shift the accents on another part. (demonstrates).

One other thing I like to do is to take doubles and creat polyrhythmic ideas by accenting different parts.
(demonstrates by accent every 3 or 5 or 7). Any questions?

Q: what’s your approach to polyrhythms.
A: approah it very slowly. Get comfy with feet, then add more in layers. My feet are on autopilot.

Q: Show us the hand patterns you were doing.
A: what it is is simply RRLL but I add accents every 3 notes. RrlLrrLlrRll. Eventually it resolves back.

1:41 CP: I’m gonna back seat that. I’d like to talk about a side project I’m working on. You should play with as many people as you possibly can. Everyone has something to offer. At the end of the day it’s all about commnuicating. It’s important for me to be creative. Writing. Writing orchestral music or another form of rock or metal. I’m always working on it to keep myself fresh. I’m going to play a track from the new project, Return to Tomorrow.

1:44 Plays to track. Sounds very Muse-y. Huge blast bear section!

1:47 CP: I want to talk about my sound. I always play a smaller kit. I keep it mixed up so I don’t get bored with playing inthe same space. (discusses gear I set up and thank yous.

That’s it for this clinic!