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Mostly some old rock 'n' roll drummers like Keith Moon, Stewart Copeland and Moe Tucker. Reggae and Dub drummer Sly Dunbar is pretty amazing, and Reni from The Stone Roses made most of their tracks sound 'real', if that makes sense. Even though I think that their music is an absolute pile of intolerable crap, I can't deny that Joey Jordison of Slipknot is pretty darn incredible.
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rob bourdon from Linkin Park is pretty decent in drumming. I think he'll be my number 1 drummer.
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Keith Moon
There are just so many great drummers to choose, Neal Peart and the list just goes on. But one drummer that stands out more than all the others to me is, Keith Moon. He was just absolutely phenomenal on the drums. The Who was one of the first "Hard Rocking" bands of their era, and Keith Moon was the soul of it all (Opera Rock, etc) you name it, the Who has done it musically.
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Yeah, Keith Moon's way up there. I'd say he was probably the first man to really make drummers noticeable and exciting, rather than the steady guy sitting at the back. There are way more skilled drummers around nowadays, but I think the pioneers are the real heroes, which is probably why I also included Moe Tucker up there. First female Rock drummer? Yes please!
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The chick from Autolux is a pretty good drummer too. I also like the chick from The Black Angels who drums. There is no doubt that Tucker has influenced this generation of female drummers in revivalist psychedelia.
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Danny Carey!
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Some of my other favorites are Ginger Baker, Stewart Copeland, Bernard Purdie, Bill Ward, Matt Cameron and John Bonham. |
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I mean.. look at someone like JoJo Mayer... While I, in no way, am stating that "good" drummers need to be able to do fancy tricks and crazy ass drum solos, it's usually the case that those that are capable of skillfully going beyond the standard deviations in drumming are the same that have long ago mastered the simple beat you happen to like. But, ultimately, I think a "good" drummer is a drummer that knows exactly what a song needs, when it needs it, and is able to do it unscripted, at any time, regardless of preparation, and with feeling. And that's relatively hard to really pinpoint in a drummer outside of free jams. It certainly can't be pinpointed in a studio recording. In a studio recording, all you're really left with is the drummer's choice of beats to judge, which have been worked on and whittled away at like an ate up drumstick wounded from practice after practice, show after show. I'm not really trying to pass any judgments here. I'm just giving my opinion on the matter, and, as a drummer myself, I feel pretty strongly about it. |
no order:-
John Bonham Keith Moon Drumbo (Captain Beefheart) Jaki Liebezeit Neil Peart Bill Bruford Jack DeJohnette Billy Cobham Ginger Baker Gene Krupa and special mention goes to Linus D-7 (drum machine) |
Jaki Liebezeit and Damon Che as far as rock goes...
Most jazz drummers are fantastic (Liebezeit was one before he joined Can), but I can't really name any off the top of my head Quote:
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Holy ****ing hell! |
Technically best around today
Check our Jo Jo Meyer on Drummerworld:bowdown:
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This guy is the best drummer. No not really you tards. He's just hilarious. I love Marco Minneman's drumming though, he'd be the first to pop to mind regards best drummers on earth. |
Meg White from The White Stripes is the best drummer.
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I've just recently watched DVDs from Brian "Brain" Mantia and Carter Beauford and they were both fun and informative. Really love Carter's sound, but I really love Brain's spazzouts...
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Tomas Haake from Meshuggah. Amazing drummer. Backs it up live too.
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Bill Kreutzmann without Mickey Hart
I'm curious you mentioned Bill Kreutzmann without Mickey Hart. Admittedly I'm not familiar with music of the Grateful Dead--Mickey Hart seems to have more press exposure, possibly due to his books on percussion history. Is Kreutzmann a more steady in-the-pocket time-keeper like Charlie Watts?
Thanks, PG Quote:
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Gene Hoglan is another great drummer.
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more favorite drummer candidates
As a non-musician listener, my baker's dozen of favorite drummers are (in no particular order):
1. Topper Headon (Clash) 2. Martin Chambers (Pretenders) 3. Bruce Gary (Knack, sessions) 4. Ginger Baker (Cream) 5. John Bonham (Led Zeppelin) 6. Bev Bevan (Move, Electric Light Orchestra, Black Sabbath) 7. Clive Burr (Iron Maiden) 8. Stewart Copeland (Police, Animal Logic) 9. Keith Moon (Who [pre-1974; Quadrophenia and before]) 10. Mark Brzezicki (Big Country, Pete Townshend, sessions) 11. Clem Burke (Blondie, Dramarama, various) 12. Pete Thomas (Attractions, sessions) 13. Gina Schock (Go-Go's) |
Man, Danny Carey is not getting nearly enough love up in here. Beyond just his technical skill, his compositional skills are far and away the most impressive of any drummer I've seen.
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The drumming on Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness is pretty kick arse.
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