Michail Toomas Paiste and son Michail M. Paiste for the great Paiste cymbal company,
The great Johannes Link for starting the Sonor company, which is a huge connection to the Great, William F Ludwig and the start of the Ludwig drum company,
Michail Toomas Paiste and son Michail M. Paiste for the great Paiste cymbal company,
The great Johannes Link for starting the Sonor company, which is a huge connection to the Great, William F Ludwig and the start of the Ludwig drum company,
The most important people to drumming; our parents for putting up with all that noise, purchasing our first gear, paying for and taking us to private lessons. Had they not done that, there would be no drummers.
Too many individuals, too many companies all made invaluable contributions to the art of drumming. The most simple and obvious answer to the question is... Us!We keep drumming alive every time we play, every time we fix a drum so it's still around after we're gone, every time we teach a newbie something we know, that we learned from doing the work. We keep it 'alive' for the next generation. I can honestly say that I do my share by freely giving to others, the information and knowledge that I have accumulated and which was once freely given to me. It's a drum circle that is unbroken in time. So the answer is; us... we are the most important people to drumming.John
OH YEAH...US.
Maybe we didn't change drumming(maybe some of us did) but we make sure the younger guys know who did.
Thanx for pointin that out Purdie.
Too many individuals, too many companies all made invaluable contributions to the art of drumming. The most simple and obvious answer to the question is... Us!We keep drumming alive every time we play, every time we fix a drum so it's still around after we're gone, every time we teach a newbie something we know, that we learned from doing the work. We keep it 'alive' for the next generation. I can honestly say that I do my share by freely giving to others, the information and knowledge that I have accumulated and which was once freely given to me. It's a drum circle that is unbroken in time. So the answer is; us... we are the most important people to drumming.John
I can live with that!
Too many individuals, too many companies all made invaluable contributions to the art of drumming. The most simple and obvious answer to the question is... Us!We keep drumming alive every time we play, every time we fix a drum so it's still around after we're gone, every time we teach a newbie something we know, that we learned from doing the work. We keep it 'alive' for the next generation. I can honestly say that I do my share by freely giving to others, the information and knowledge that I have accumulated and which was once freely given to me. It's a drum circle that is unbroken in time. So the answer is; us... we are the most important people to drumming.John
The most important people to drumming; our parents for putting up with all that noise, purchasing our first gear, paying for and taking us to private lessons. Had they not done that, there would be no drummers.
John and Scott,
I agree. You guys have nailed it!
Bill
+1,Even though my Dad,went to his grave saying drums weren't a musical instrument,he put up with the "noise" ....well ,most of the time.Keep on Pl
Steve B
For me it was my Dad, the many clinicians I saw as a kid (thanks to my Dad) and my usual list:
Gene Krupa
Louie Bellson
Lionel Hampton
Max Roach
Joe Morello
Jack DeJohnette
Benny Greb
Florian Alexandru Zorn
Thomas Lang
Jojo Mayer
Ringo! He brought drumming to the masses, and made millions of drum fans out of kids that never knew who Gene Krupa and others were. He was the one that made drumming cool to everyone,and not just to drummers! Ringo!
Ringo! He brought drumming to the masses, and made millions of drum fans out of kids that never knew who Gene Krupa and others were. He was the one that made drumming cool to everyone,and not just to drummers! Ringo!
He is also one of only two drummers I can think of that the western world in general would recognize by only a single name. The other, of course would be Animal.
Too many individuals, too many companies all made invaluable contributions to the art of drumming. The most simple and obvious answer to the question is... Us!We keep drumming alive every time we play, every time we fix a drum so it's still around after we're gone, every time we teach a newbie something we know, that we learned from doing the work. We keep it 'alive' for the next generation. I can honestly say that I do my share by freely giving to others, the information and knowledge that I have accumulated and which was once freely given to me. It's a drum circle that is unbroken in time. So the answer is; us... we are the most important people to drumming.John
And history is in the drums, the drummer and, most importantly, the beat of the heart. Drums, if truth be told, are played from the rhythm of the soul, not the mind, nor the back, nor the hands. It has to have the rhythm of the heart to make it to the crowd. I am about 1/4-1/3 deaf. Yet I am still pitch perfect. How does that happen, unless it comes from the soul, the heart?
Are you sure you want to delete this post?
Are you sure you want to report this thread?