So I've been listening a lot to TYR by Black Sabbath recently. Love Cozy Powell ( in any band he's been ) Well tonight at practice I felt myself kinda doing a Cozy while playing certain parts of the songs. Wondering if anyone does this? Listen to a certain band / drummer and you find yourself doing their style at the next band rehearsal. Granted it works perfectly for the Hard Rock / Metal band I'm with.
Do you find yourself playing like.....
Not a Guru, just addicted to drums
- Jay
I wish I could. ;-)
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None of us invented drumming. We -ALL- steal licks and grooves from other drummers. The nice part is, no matter whose licks you're using they will always come out sounding like you... not the other guy. Steal away, it's one way we all help to keep those guys and the art of drumming alive. :D
John
I don't steal anything from anybody, rather, I borrow an idea. They borrowed it from someone else and so on and so on, no one "Owns" a lick or idea.
I think most artists in any field use and borrow to some extent. You can generally tell one's influences. And what I meant wasn't so much taking a specific part. But rather the way of playing, the movement, the style. Now I know it sounds like me, but I can tell the variation while playing. Because it's a way that typically I wouldn't do it. If that makes any sense.
Not a Guru, just addicted to drums
- Jay
I find it a lot in my playing depending on what style of music I have been listening to more. Whether it is jazz, classic rock, metal, folk I seem to find my nuances of style shifting toward whatever I am "in to" at the time. Of course I have favorite drummers in just about every genre so naturally I pick up on fills and licks similar to how they play them.
Of course, it could all be in my head too.... Mind Blowi
Sure have.
Saw Michael Walden and Rayford Griffin and at the next rehearsal I'm trying to emulate their style.
Two very big influences in my playing at one point.
I don't steal anything from anybody, rather, I borrow an idea. They borrowed it from someone else and so on and so on, no one "Owns" a lick or idea.
I agree, no one alive "owns" a lick. Bun E. puts on a great workshop about this very subject... how certain licks or fills can be traced back from song to song. Of course, there are early "trap" drummers who are long gone who could probably take credit for inventing or originating a lot of techniques. I'd like to know who was the Dixieland or Ragtime trap drummer to first "ride" on a cymbal.
Mike
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