Grab your free transcription of the exercises in this video (it will be emailed to you).
The jig is kind of up on “modern drum whatever that’s suddenly everywhere.”
As it was with the “tom reversal”, so it is with this week’s phenomenon: you can find clips of Art Blakey doing it back in the ‘60s. Which is to say it’s not exclusively modern.
But that doesn’t mean it isn’t seeing a big resurgence.
Bring it in, you guys. Super quick “stoner thought” - for all the chaos it’s wrought, for all the “homogeneity” it’s encouraged among musicians, social media has poured 100 years of drum innovations into a large hadron collider, allowing the pace of innovation to skyrocket.
That might be why, when one speaks of today’s innovation, you can say Art Blakey “did it”, and Bill Stewart “did it”, and Virgil Donati, Dave Dicenso, and Keith Carlock “did it”, but Marcus Gilmore and the modern generation of drummers “did it and did it and did it”.
(The “did it” thing was ironically originally a joke about Marcus’ grandfather, Roy Haynes, and triplets.)
The lick, of course, is dotted 8ths in the left foot. Something that, once you notice, you can’t “unhear”, and which has a funkiness that’s difficult to fully explain, and my final stoner theory of the day is that that’s because ultimate it comes from West African drumming, and that we as humans find intersecting rhythms inherently funky.
If you feel like joining me today on a journey that includes all those drummers we mentioned, with honorable mentioned Tony Allen and Danny Carey, and not incidentally a pretty intensive lesson on how to get started using these rhythms in your drumming, I invite you to watch.
