Smokey Dacus: Pioneer of Western Swing Drumming: Pt. 1

Smokey Dacus: Pioneer of Western Swing Drumming: Part 1
by Scott K Fish

Introduction

William
William “Smokey” Dacus

This unpublished phone interview with William Smokey Dacus (pronounced Day-Cuss) has been on my mind for 35 years. In my view, it deserves publishing. It should be available to music historians and drum historians — especially, but not exclusively, to country music historians.

Smokey Dacus was the first drummer to play in a country band. Legendary bandleader Bob Wills had the idea, in Smokey’s words, to add oomph to Wills’s fiddle band. “So he hired me,” says Smokey.

Smokey went from working in bands and orchestras where everything he played was written, to Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys where nothing was written. Plus, Smokey had no role models. No other drummer was asked to do what Bob Wills asked Smokey to do. How Smokey adapted is a key piece of drumming history.

I was working on a five-part feature series for Modern Drummer magazine in1981 called The History of Rock Drumming. One part was called “Country Drummers.” I was originally talking with Smokey for some basic information on Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys’s influence on the early rock-and-roll musicians like Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Roy Orbison who created their brand of rock from a country music foundation.

While I was interviewing Smokey I realized what a pivotal drummer he was. So I kept the tape rolling, thinking I would have little trouble, if any, persuading MD Founder Ron Spagnardi that Smokey Dacus was worth a feature interview.

I was wrong. Yes, I did include Smokey in my Country Drummers segment, but the full interview has been sitting in a box since 1981. I found it again about two weeks ago, thankful I have a venue with Life Beyond the Cymbals where I can publish this interview myself.

As sometimes happens, looking back I wish I was more familiar with Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys’s music at the time of this interview. But sometimes ignorance produces interview questions I might not have asked.

Enjoy!


Scott K Fish: Maybe you could give me a little biographical sketch of yourself up to the time you joined Bob Wills.

Smokey Dacus: Well, I’ll be as brief as I can, Scott. The only thing terribly important is a common thread that runs through the period before I went to work with Bob. It was this:

When I graduated from high school in Blackwell, Oklahoma I had no thought, no intentions to go to college. I had the desire, but there was no way I felt I could go. Of course, I had a choice of maybe going to [the public] University of Oklahoma (OU) down in Norman. I’d have to work and pay my way through school. OU in Norman would be about my only bet because it was a State college and you had no tuition to pay. But that was really out of the question.

So I took a job at a local glass plant there in Blackwell. One day at noon I was sitting out on the loading dock eating my lunch out of my little lunch bucket. This fellow by the name of Roy Smith came out. He was all well-dressed, which would’ve meant he wasn’t a local boy. He was from Tulsa University (TU). He set down and told me they were organizing a Tulsa University dance band. An eight-piece band they were going to call the 8 Collegiates.

They were going to make this thing up out of different youngsters [from] across the State. They had heard that, for a high school graduate, I was probably the best dance drummer they had heard about. So, [Roy Smith] was looking for a drummer.

Well, he explained to me the 8 Collegiates would get all the school dances, and [Tulsa] University would serve as a sort of booking agent for the civic clubs in town. They had their occasions, their parties, their annual dances — this and that. [TU] figured they could get us enough work in Tulsa — plus getting paid for the school dances — that we could pay our way through school!

I never will forget the first Semester’s tuition was $114.00. Which seemed to me like quite a bit, anyway. Plus your room and board and all that stuff. But, it was a chance for me to go to college. If [Roy Smith] was right, it would be great. If he was wrong, I really hadn’t lost anything. If it didn’t pan out the way he had it all drawn up, Lord, I could come back home and go to work at the glass plant.

I went to Tulsa in August. [Smith] was a Phi Delta member and I lived at the Phi Delta house.

I don’t know how they got information that I was probably the best dance drummer. I graduated high school in 1915. I had been playing weekly for a couple of years with the local city band — a bunch of grown men. Every Wednesday night, why, we’d rehearse marches and whatnot in the basement of the Elks building. Then every Friday night, [at] the little round thing [gazebo], you know, down in the City Park, we had a free concert. Remember! This was back in the Thirties. 1929.

So I was able to read. I could read snare drum parts, bass drum parts, and so on. That was evidently where they got [their information].

Then I was playing around locally whenever I could at the Eagles Hall and whatnot.

But, anyway, I went to the University [TU] and everything worked out real fine. In the second Semester, one night, I went down to a dance by [Joe Lindy’s] local band — just to hear somebody else play. They had a drummer that was one of these stick twirlers, you know. He was a showman! He could twirl stick in both hands and everything else, but… when they’re up in the air, you’re not playing rhythm. You know?

My whole enjoyment from playing was to play a goodsolidrhythm for the other boys on the bandstand playing lead. The brass section, the reed section, or whatever. I never did care about showmanship. I cared about playing a solid beat.

So, this kid — oh man! — he was really showing off. Well, I was known, at least. They wanted me to sit in. I sit in and played about 30-minutes. And I didn’t twirl sticks. I didn’t do anything. I just played solid rhythm for the other boys.

Joe Lindy worked for an oil company and [worked] on the side playing trumpet. It was his band. He fired his drummer that night and gave me a job! They liked that rhythm instead of a show. That was where I started really [drumming] professionally.

But then I wound up playing with a hotel band there playing luncheon and dinner music. And we played three dances a week in the hotel.

Well, sufficient to say — well, Lord — I was making so cotton pickin’ much money then, I don’t feel like I needed an education. Besides, playing was more fun than going to school.

SKF: What were you studying at TU, Smokey?

SD: I was majoring in English and Psychology. TU was really a petroleum school. Tulsa’s the oil capitol of the world. But, I had been raised up there in the oil fields around Blackwell and ThreeSands. I didn’t care anything about [oil], so I majored in English and Psychology.

So I was playing in this hotel band in tuxedos. But the common thread I mentioned was: everything I played — luncheons, dinners, or dances — was written. That was when you used to go to Jenkins Music Store [and] pay 75-cents for an orchestration. The cotton pickin’ thing was at least a half-inch thick. There was a piano score, scores for at least four violins, a full reed section, three trumpets, the trombone — the whole bit!

Well, we didn’t have all those [instruments]. So we would just take out the pieces we needed for our group. But everything we played was read. Okay.

Original Sheet Music
Original Sheet Music

The arranging was cut-and-dried and very distinct. On occasion it would be an 8 beat, designed to give a shuffle rhythm to the sax, the trumpet section, or whatever. In other places it would be what we call a 2/4 [rhythm]. That was “Dixieland,” but it was still in 2/4 because we used — not bull fiddles — we used bass horns. When you’ve got a tune like Song of India, Chinatown[, My Chinatown], or China Boy, when you really got up and really wanted to get with it — your bass drum was written four beats to the bar. What we called a “4 beat.” If you really wanted to swing and get with it.

So there were different types of rhythm. There was 4 beat. There was 2 beat. There was Dixieland — which is a 2 beat on the bass and like a rimshot or a woodblock — which was common then for Dixieland. But all those types or styles of rhythm. First, they were distinct and separate from another style. Secondly, they were always written.

And so, I was playing in this hotel band and Bob Wills approached me. Somewhere along the road I had gathered the reputation of being the best dance drummer in town. And Bob came to me in late ’34 and he wanted me to come play drums with him.

Well, at that time, his type of music had two names. It was either a fiddle band or a string band. That’s the only way you referred to them. And they did not use drums! They had no use for a drummer because their rhythm was a bass fiddle and a banjo — which was the basic rhythm.

Now, you add a guitar to that, well, he kind of helped it a little. And the piano player, if he wasn’t taking a chorus, well, then the piano player played rhythm. Just chords. So the rhythm section at its high point included the bass fiddle, the banjo, the guitar, and the guy chording the piano.

Well, also at that time, the way you played a bass fiddle in a string band or a fiddle band was you pulled or you noted the bass fiddle on the first and third beat in a bar. Then [the bass player] slapped [the bass fiddle] on the two and four beat: mmm-slap, mmm-slap, mmm-slap. They didn’t play 4/4 on a bass fiddle because, in the first place, it was too hard on their fingers. And in the second place, they couldn’t do anything with it.

Well, when they slapped it was that bass string slapping against the neck of the bass fiddle — which made a click. And that was the rhythm.

So, [Bob Wills] came to me and I said, “What in the hell do you want with a drummer in a fiddle band?” I thought he’d lost his mind! And he said, “I want to take your kind of music and my kind of music and put them together and make it swing.”

SKF: You and Bob Wills were playing two different styles of music then. Were there bands or musicians you and your band were trying to emulate?

Sonny Greer
Sonny Greer

SD: Sonny Greer! Sonny Greer was the drummer with Duke Ellington at that time. Sonny, hell, he didn’t weigh 130 pounds soaking wet! He was one of my favorite drummers. But, my bands were Duke, [Count] Basie, McKinney’s Cotton Pickers. I don’t know whether you remember them or not.

SKF: Sure.

SD: Those were my people. Those were the people I looked at.

SKF: Had you ever met Sonny Greer?

SD: Oh yeah. You know, you just do when you hero worship somebody.

And I was in Oklahoma City at one of the high points of my life. [It] was out at Crystal Lake. McKinney’s Cotton Pickers were playing out there. You know, then we had huge ballrooms. And they were there.

Well, that was my first chance to see and hear McKinney’s Cotton Pickers in person. So you know where I wound up! On the back of the stage. And here’s this 28-piece band. Now you talk about swing and get it! I mean, they went!!

And the drummer — I can’t recall his name now — he had a bass [drum], and a snare, and a sock [hi-hat], and one cymbal. That was it. [I] set back there behind that whole band and that’s all the equipment he had. And there was where I developed the statement I use all the time now, Scott, when I walk in…. ‘Cause I don’t own a set of drums now.

McKinney's Cotton Pickers. Drummer Cuba Austin standing near drum
McKinney’s Cotton Pickers. Drummer Cuba Austin standing near drum

[SKF NOTE: The drummer was probably Cuba Austin. Also, as of this writing I am unable to find any verification of McKinney’s Cotton Pickers having 28 musicians. The largest number I’ve found on record is 21.]

SKF: You don’t?

SD: No. I haven’t owned a set of drums since 1941. There’s no point in it. I don’t travel on the bus. I fly everywhere I go. And we go to Nashville, or Los Angeles, or wherever the hell we go — you just call ahead and tell that you want a set of drums. The guy in the van brings tom-toms, floor toms, every damn thing. Five times as much as anybody can play! And he’ll set them up.

I go in with my sticks and my brushes and I sit down and I play for two hours. I get up, put my sticks and brushes back in my pocket. He tears [the drums] down, puts them back in the cases, back in the van — all for $25 dollars. So what’s the point of owning anything?

I come to the conclusion years ago that the more drums a guy has got, the less he’s apt to play.

Sonny Greer had a pretty decent set of drums, but really not what kids have today. But [Sonny] played everything he had. And the little fellow was so short and so little. Sonny damn near had to stand up to play!

[Crystal Lake] was where I learned you didn’t have to have a whole lot of drums around you to play a damn good rhythm. Because that McKinney’s Cotton Pickers, I mean, they would just get and go.

Along with Earl Hines, those were the people I listened to and copied and enjoyed.

Continued on Part 2

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Smokey Dacus: Pioneer of Western Swing Drumming: Pt. 3

Smokey Dacus: Pioneer of Western Swing Drumming: Pt. 3
by Scott K Fish

[SKF NOTE: The back story to this interview is in Part 1. Part 2 is here.]

SKF: When you say you are the first drummer in country music — that’s literally true? There were no country bands per se….

SD: No! There was nobody using the drums. They didn’t need it.

Well, see, in those days, Scott, there was no such thing as a drummer’s throne. You had a hell of a time.  You had these folding cane chairs that you had to get, an empty Coca-Cola crate, or something to sit on. Well, I always sit on my trap case.

As Bob’s band enlarged it got a little harder to really do all that needed to be done with a sock cymbal and a brush in my left hand. Whether my right hand was playing on the sock or not — it still wasn’t there. I had to step up a notch. Well, in my system I was playing I couldn’t quite step up. So I would take my right hand, turn my stick around, hold it by the little end, and with the butt end of that stick I would slap [my] trap case right down to the right of me where I sit. Well, that made the same racket that the bass fiddle made when he slapped it, except mine was a damn sight more potent than his.

SKF: You were hitting on 2 and 4?

SD: Yeah.

SKF: Instead of using your snare drum?

SD: I hit the snare too.

SKF: Snare and trap case together?

SD: Yeah. But I had to augment it a little bit. So I turned that stick over, hit my snare with the brush on 2 and 4, and hit that trap case [with my stick] on 2 and 4. I looked like I was riding a galloping horse going ninety miles an hour! But I guarantee you could feel it, you could hear it, for a half-a-mile.

One emcee at a Nashville event introduced me by saying, “Here’s the guy that invented suitcase rhythm.”

wills_bob_bus

SKF: What kind of drumset did you record with in the studio?

SD: I’ll give you this example: When we did the album in 1973 — which was for the last time. That was when Bob had his last stroke, Scott. I didn’t have any drums. This kid from out of Big Springs, Texas brought his drums over there for me to play.

I was sitting there in Sumet-Burnet Recording Studio in Dallas. I set up his bass [drum] and one cymbal. I said, “Look, son, it don’t take much drums to play rhythm.” He said, “You mean you’re not going to use anything but the bass and the sock?” I said, “Hell, that’s all you need.”

And I played with both brushes on the sock. With both brushes. Then I would change and pick up a stick on the closed sock. That’s all I was playing on! Just sitting there playing real easy. This kids said, “Well, ain’t nobody going to hear you.” I said, “That’s what he’s [recording engineer] got knobs for in yonder.”

I recorded everything Bob ever made from 1935 to 1941.  Every one of them. Fiddle tunes and all. You don’t have to beat your brains out in a recording studio.

SKF: How was it different in the studio in 1935-41 compared with today? For awhile you couldn’t record with a bass drum in the studio, right?

SD: Well, yeah, you could if they had a crapper [?] about 40 feet from the microphone. Because we had one microphone out in front for the whole band. The only way you balanced it was the proximity to that microphone.

If you had to sing — you got up to it. Leon played his Dobro guitar about belt level. When it come time for Leon to take a chorus he moved out front to this one microphone. Bob let it down for him, put the microphone right over top his steel guitar. [Leon] played his chorus, then he moved back. Bob would raise the microphone and Tommy Duncan [would] sing. If fiddles played, they went to the microphone. Everybody went to the microphone because you couldn’t bring the microphone to them.

In a recording studio then, the bass fiddle had to get back about 20-feet in whatever corner they could get him. And I got just [as] far as I could. Then I would put a quilt or something over the bass [drum]. Of course, I learned from the first recording session like that. Immediately afterwards I took the front head off of my bass drum. Because all bass drums had two head then.

wills_bob_sepia

SKF: Just to clarify, what year was this, Smokey?

SD: ’35. When I got back home I took the front head off of my bass drum. I went down to S.H. Kress & Co. and bought me a 36 square yard of this heavy muslin. Then I put it over [the front of my bass drum], put the head back on, put the rim back on, and tightened it down. Took a pair of scissors and trimmed it off. Okay. All you got then was thup. You didn’t get any ring. That worked pretty good. So I took the back head off and put [muslin] on it.

SKF: Did you play your bass drum wide open in concerts?

SD: Oh yeah. Sure. But you had to stop the ring in a recording session.

SKF: How about tuning with calf drumheads?

SD: [SKF NOTE: Smokey tells me he also played tympani with the TU Symphony.] You buy tympani in sets: an E and F. Okay, so now I was involved with tones and tuning and frequencies. I wasn’t that technical about it. There’s just some things I do, basically.

I always kept my bass drum tune to G. Basic reason for that is, that’s the one string on the bull fiddle [the bass player] will hit more times than he’ll hit anything else. I wold tune my snare, as close as you could tune a snare, to F. And tune it from a frequency rather than a tonal standpoint. So I tuned them like that and played them that way all the time.

SKF: [SKF NOTE: I asked Smokey if he ever had to contend with drums that had non-tunable calfskin heads on the bottom. He misunderstood my question. I think he thought I was asking about snare drums. Smokey’s answer about gut snares vs wire snares is interesting, so I didn’t interrupt him.]

SD: You take them damn [gut snares] off , you go to Jenkins Music Store and you buy a set of these little round wire snares, see? Then it didn’t make a damn what you did to the bottom head. You’re still going to get the same sound. You take the gut snares off, throw them away, put a set of wire ones on.

SKF: You didn’t like gut snares?

SD: No. Because we played in an armory — which is not what you’d call acoustically efficient — and [there was] a hell of downpour of rain outside. When I patted my foot on the [calfskin] bass drum [head] it would go anywhere from four- to six-inches and come back. But if you hit a snare it was kind of like hitting a wet blanket. If you kept tightening it during the night, then you damn sure better undo it before you put it in the trap case.  If you don’t, you get back home and the next day it would be busted.

SKF: Right. The heads stretch.

SD: You’d better believe. So, you could allow that looseness with the little twisted coiled wire snares underneath it and still get away with it.

SKF: How did you become familiar with symphony music? Did you have a teacher when you were a kid?

SD: No. The only lesson I ever had in my life I gave myself.

When I was in junior high school, they had a high school band. They got to go with the football team. They’d go 20 miles over to Poplar City [???] —which was a hell of a trip. On a couple of occasions they went about 80 miles down to Oklahoma City. That was something else!

I figured there was some way I could learn to play in the band I could go on trips with the football team. I mentioned when I was 11-years old I learned to play on a 5-string banjo. But I was playing by ear. I knew when it was right and when it was wrong, but I didn’t know what the notes were. So I sent off to Sears & Roebuck and bought a $12.50 banjo.

I made a remark or two earlier that I wasn’t too crazy about banjos. But the reason why I ordered the damn thing is I got a $2.50 instruction book — free! It was the instruction book I wanted.

So, I took that thing and learned the notes, what I was playing, and the hardest thing for a percussionist — drummer — to play: the rest. The rest is what’s hard. I taught myself to read. I didn’t like that banjo, so I discovered I could take a [four string] tenor guitar, tune it like a banjo, and play just like I was playing the banjo. Only the sound was a hell of a lot better to me.

When I was in junior high school there was a boy that played an E-flat Bass Horn — about 8,000 yards of gas pipe that you blow through. His sister played piano. We got us a little band together. Then I got a job playing snare drum in the high school band. The bandleader wanted to have a high school orchestra. To do that you had to have what they called a trap set. Somebody’s got to play the bass and a set of traps, and I could play them. So I played snare drum in the high school band I traps in the high school orchestra.

Well, the first dang thing I know I got an offer to come up to Eagles Hall and play a dance. One night I was up there playing. I think I was about a junior in high school. My dad wasn’t too fond about that. I was playing with this old man, his wife, and somebody else. We’d play one square dance, one round dance, one Rye waltz, and one Schottish. We’d play a round like that all night long. Never played two round dances together or nothing.

So I got a job and I got paid for it. But my dad found out that I was playing up at Eagles Hall. Well, about 10:30 my dad come a walking in, got me by the damned ear, off the bandstand and led me right out that front door, downstairs, and home! That was the most embarrassing moment in my life. I was playing, I was professional, I was getting paid — and my dad got me by the ear and took me home. But I had been playing in high school quite a bit.

SKF: When did you start noticing more drummers being used in country music?

SD: Well, I don’t know how to say this because everything I’m telling you is exactly the way it was! I thought Bob had lost his mind and so did everybody else. But what Bob knew that none of the rest of us really paid any attention to — the people didn’t really dance to the piano, or the fiddle. They danced to the rhythm!

As Leon MacAuliffe tells it, Bob said he had a good band playing good together, but he needed a little more oomph for the people to dance to. So he hired me!

Well, in spite of what everybody thought, including me, it was the right way to go if you’re going to play dances. And, of course, with Bob Wills I played more Dixieland rhythm. I played on the beat and with the bass fiddle with my right foot. And with my sock, my snare, and my hand I played on the 2 and 4. When you had a hell of a strong first and third beat going out there, and you had a hell of a strong second and fourth beat…. Sometimes we played to as many as 5,000 people. And the halls were a block long. You couldn’t really hear the music, but you could feel the beat. And that’s what they danced to: the beat. So it turned out that, hell, Bob was right.

SKF: The Bob Wills band varied between 13 and 20 musicians right?

SD: Well, we started with eight. Then you kept adding. [Bob would] add one because he knew what he wanted to sound like. So he kept adding. But two or three years later, a few — I can only think of two or three fiddle bands that dared try to use a drummer. But by then I had established some kind of a pattern of what a drummer was supposed to do in a fiddle band. But until that was established, nobody would ever bother using [a drummer.]

The first time we ever went to The Grand Ole Opry they wouldn’t let the drums sit out on the stage.

SKF: You mean the Grand Ole Opry would let the band play, but you had to set up off the stage?

SD: Back behind the curtain.

SKF: How did that make you feel?

SD: And all I could use was a snare drum. Couldn’t use a bass [drum] or none of that stuff because they just would not tolerate it.

SKF: What would they say to you? What was their reasoning?

SD: They would tell Bob, “You can’t do that.” And Bob would say, “Well, okay. Let’s pack them up and go home.” Then they’d try to compromise, but not for a long time. I think Bob was the first one that ever took a horn on the stage at the Grand Ole Opry.

Original Grand Ole Opry stage
Original Grand Ole Opry stage

SKF: What do you think made Bob such a successful bandleader?

SD: Well, there’s a whole bunch of things you could talk about for an hour-and-a-half. But the basics were real simple. He knew people. He could communicate with the people on the dance floor. He could feel, he could sense, whether they wanted a fast tune, a slow tune or whatever. He was in communication with the people all night long.

And when you finished a dance, you don’t pack up your instruments and go out and sit in the bus. You visit with the people who are here. And we did! Thats’w why we could get down and dance with anybody that was there. We went to people’s houses and ate. We even played funerals for people. We played at a good many funerals.

So we visited with people. We weren’t in any hurry. And we knew the people we were playing to because they were faithful people to us. They were making us a pretty good living.

[For example,] we were playing in Holdenville, Oklahoma one night. And we about 2,700 or 2,800 people there that night. There were babies sleeping on pallets on the bandstand. [People] brought their babies, put them on the bandstand, and let them go to sleep. They’d come in their overalls and whatnot, but we knew 95-percent to 98-percent of the people there either by first name, last name, or both!

SKF: Obviously you’ve influenced country drummers who came after you. Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys are often credited as having an influence on the early rock musicians or rockabilly music. Do you feel you had an influence on what the early rock drummers were playing?

anthology_bob_wills

SD: Well, yes, I do to an extent, although it’s not anything that I talk about. Have you ever seen this double album Columbia released, the Bob Wills Anthology? [SKF NOTE: Smokey reads from the album liner notes.] “Smokey Dacus is the archetypal country drummer. His influence stretches to the present. For the special approach to drums in country material which he pioneered has become standard fare in modern road and studio bands.”

Well, I had to get my dictionary and look up that word archetypal to see what the hell I was. I didn’t know if it was good or bad. The definition of that word is: “The original from which all things thereafter are copied.”

I don’t know if that’s true or false, but it is true to some extent. That’s one I don’t generally talk about much.

I played with a stick in one hand and a brush in the other, which is out of balance. Up ’til then there was only one way to play. You played with two sticks. Or if you was a hotel drummer, like I had been, you played with a pair of brushes, one in each hand. Lawrence Welk’s drummer uses them a lot today, but only on certain tunes.

But to take one in one hand and one in the other — that presents a problem. Because you get the body as well as the beat. That’s the only way I know…. I was hard-pressed to find a body and a beat back in 1935.

SKF: So what’s ahead for you, Smokey? What are you up to now?

SD: Oh Lord! A bunch of senile teenagers. Al Stricklin, the piano player, is 74-years old today. He’s older than I am. Hell, I ain’t 74. I’m in the 70’s, but I ain’t 74. What is today?

SKF: Today is the 29th.

SD: February 26th we go to Fort Smith. We play a political rally, a fundraising thing or whatever it is. From there we’ll go to Mustang, Oklahoma on the 27th. The following Saturday, March 6th, we’re in Witchita. There are a couple of other dates there in March and April. June the 26th we go to Houston, Texas. We go to Austin, Texas on June 30th for the Texas Bar Association. We play Larry Gatlin’s Celebrity Golf Tournament on June the 28th. We’ll play the Royal Oaks Country Club Pro Am in July. I go to Del Royal’s Celebrity Tournament June 3rd, 4th, and 5th. Charlie Pride’s Tournament on the 11th-13th.

We’re all retired!

SKF: Yeah, your schedule sounds retired. What do you call your band?

san_antonio_rose_story

SD: The Original Texas Playboys. We’ve got five of the original eight, Scott.

SKF: Are you still recording?

SD: Oh, hell yes. Maybe three months ago we went into Tyler, Texas. We record for Delta Records out in Nagodoches, Texas. My Lord, the first royalty check from Delta was more than I ever got from Capitol in all the years I recorded for them.

SKF: How many albums have you done for Delta?

SD: Of course they’re afraid we’re going to kick the bucket — which is a mighty possibility — so they’re trying to get everything in the can that they can get. In 33 hours we recorded 45 tunes. Because it don’t take us too damn long. If we can’t play it now, we never could play it. And the only rehearsing we do is oral. You know, “What are we going to record? Okay. How are we going to start it? Okay. How’re we going to end it? Okay.” And that’s it.

faded_love

[Delta] released Faded Love and they released The San Antonio Rose Story, which we did in that session two-and-a-half months ago. And that was probably the hardest thing we’ve done since we quit back in ’41.

When we first recorded San Antonio Rose it was just a fiddle tune, Scott. There wasn’t any words and there wasn’t any music. It wasn’t written down anywhere. Irving Berlin wanted to buy it. He sent this guy to Tulsa and he wanted to buy San Antonio Rose. There only thing was, there wasn’t any words to it, no sheet music, no nothing.

Well, [at the time] sheet music was a big deal. So [Bob Wills] said, “Okay. Berlin said he’d buy it if we had some words to it.” Bob told Everett Stoller, the trumpet player, “Write some words to that and send it to him!” Everett wrote some words that night and we played them the next day.

And we had played it all this time but it was just all in our heads. Then we had words so we had to call it The New San Antonio Rose. By the time this happened we had two trumpets, trombone, and three saxes. Man, which was to us, a full brass and a full reed section.

So [David] Stallings of Delta Records wanted to release an album of the San Antonio Rose Story. We got two old 78’s. One of the first time we ever recorded it, when it was just a fiddle tune. When Bob played it himself.

So we sat in the [Delta] studio and listened to that dang thing for 15- or 20-minutes and said, “Okay. Let’s wax it.” We set up and recorded it just exactly, note for note, the way we recorded it the first time.

Then we got the [horn version], listened to it, and said, “Okay.” We set up and recorded the bed for the trumpets and saxes. Then Leon sung it. We did everything except the horns. [David Stallings] got these two professors [to record the original horn parts.]

It’s note for note the way we recorded it. And that’s the hardest damn thing, really, to try to play. Forty-seven years later to play something note for note the way you played it before. That gets a little touchy.

Of course, the ghosts get to walking around in the studio. You know, ‘cause we could see Bob walking all around among us while we were doing it. It was kind of ghosty and kind of scary.

And they’re getting read now to release our third album, Texas Fiddle. We’ll go back sometime this summer, sit down and play 35 or 40 more. When we were recording from 1935-1941 there wasn’t such a thing as an album. There was a 78 rpm record. It had two sides and that’s all. So when we’d go to a recording session we’d record 20, 25, 30 [songs], because there was only going to be two tunes on each one.

So we’ve got about five albums. We’ve got at least two more that we’ve cut. And then we’ll go back and do it again some this summer before something happens to us.

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Anton Fig Releasing Solo Album

Lettermen Drummer Anton Fig To Release All-Star Solo Album
by VVN MUSIC on AUGUST 8, 2015
in NEW MUSIC,NEWS

antonfig_figments800_webHe spent the last 29 years as the drummer for Paul Shaffer’s World’s Most Dangerous Band/CBS Orchestra on the David Letterman Show but now Anton Fig is ready to break out with his first ever solo album.

Over those years, Fig had the opportunity to work with a huge list of artists and some of those musicians are returning the favor guesting on Figments which will be out on August 14.

Figments’ stellar cast includes Beach Boys mastermind Brian Wilson, Richie Havens, Ace Frehley, Al Kooper, Donald “Duck” Dunn, Chris Botti, Randy Brecker, Ronnie Cuber and Lew Soloff, Fig’s longstanding Letterman bandmates Paul Shaffer, Felicia Collins, Will Lee.

[D]rawn from…songs…Fig had written/co-written…. “I…realized I had accumulated all these songs,” he explains. “[I]t was time to realize them by matching each song with the right musicians and singers, with my drumming and production as the through-line.”

Originally issued in a limited-edition pressing in 2002….

“About 80 per cent of the record,” he says, “was done in my apartment in Manhattan. People just came over and sang and played. It was beautiful to have Richie Havens singing in the bedroom.”

In 1986, Anton accepted an offer to join Late Night With David Letterman’s house band, a gig that would last for nearly three decades….

“It’s gonna be different going out there again,” Anton says of his return to the road, adding, “David Garibaldi, the drummer from Tower of Power, recently told me, ‘Everything you’ve done in your life is just to prepare you for what you’re about to do next.’ So that’s how I’m approaching it.”

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Ian Thomas: Be a Successful Session Drummer

Be a successful session drummer
By Geoff Nicholls (Rhythm)
Ian Thomas tells us how he got to be one of the UK’s most in-demand sessioneers

Ian Thomas

Ian Thomas

Arriving in London from his native Cardiff in 1984, Ian was known as a superb jazz and big band player. But he could also rock and his big breakthrough was on George Michael’s 25-million selling Faith (1987).

1. Take a bad kit to the studio and it will sound bad whatever anyone does to it. So make sure your instrument is up to scratch.

2. Be on time and find out what you need. What is the music? Find out what instruments you need.

3. Be versatile, and learn together. Why cut off a whole load of work because you can’t be bothered to learn to read?

4. Play for the music.

5. Approaching the live gig. What I’m into now is trying to remember songs and sets. I used to write everything down and it would take ages to get rid of the cheat sheets.

6. Learn to read, but have patience. Everyone says to me your reading is amazing and actually it has taken a long time to get it together.

7. On film work. I did a session for the Twilight series of films. There were five of us in the percussion section and it was the hardest thing I have ever seen written in my life! Improvising to actual picture is really rare.

8. Breaking through. Coming to London from Cardiff was a big step, I didn’t know anybody. I signed on the dole and said I would give it five years or do something else.

9. Bringing It Home. I’ve been working on [my home studio] for the last four years. I was doing quite a few sessions where [clients] had only booked the studio for the live drums. Nowadays many want live drums again, and they can’t get it from a machine. So they hire a studio and a bunch of mics, but they have no idea how to mic a drum kit! I can do a better job, why not come to my place?

10. It’s okay to be nervous. “The first time I worked with BB King was on his 80th birthday album in 2005. He gathered us all around and said, ‘I have played on thousands of albums in my lifetime and I have never played perfectly on any of them. I doubt if I will play perfectly on this one either. I am gonna play from here [the heart] and that is all I want you to do. Forget any fears, I just want to hear what you have to say.’

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Stand By: I Found My Lost Smokey Dacus Interview Transcript

SKF NOTE: Last week, after years and years of searching, I found the full transcript of my interview with drummer Smokey Dacus. I wrote here about Smokey and the lost transcript in April 2014. I said in part:

Smokey Dacus, original drummer with Bob Wills & the Texas Playboys, is credited as the first to play drumset in a country band. Modern Drummer founder/publisher Ron Spagnardi chose to not publish my interview with Smokey Dacus as a feature. Ron’s decision remains one of very few regrets from my MD days. If memory serves, only key points from the Dacus interview were included in the Country Drummers segment of my feature MD series, A History of Rock n Roll Drumming. The remainder of that interview is one of many manuscripts in a box in my closet.

bobwillsattheranchhouse

I am preparing the interview for publication on Life Beyond the Cymbals. It is 41 typewritten pages of insight into one of the world’s great drum innovators and one of America’s – especially country music’s – innovative bands.

This segment from the transcript is a brief look at how Bob Wills and Smokey Dacus first met. I will post the full interview – which has never been published – very soon.

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Smokey Dacus: So I was playing in this hotel band in tuxedos. But the common thread I mentioned was: everything I played — luncheons, dinners, or dances — was written. That was when you used to go to Jenkins Music Store [and] pay 75-cents for an orchestration. The cotton pickin’ thing was at least a half-inch thick. There was a piano score, scores for at least four violins, a full reed section, three trumpets, the trombone — the whole bit!

Well, we didn’t have all those [instruments]. So we would just take out the pieces we needed for our group. But everything we played was read. Okay.

And so, I was playing in this hotel band and Bob Wills approached me. Somewhere along the road I had gathered the reputation of being the best dance drummer in town. And Bob came to me in late ’34 and he wanted me to come play drums with him.

Well, at that time, his type of music had two names. It was either a fiddle band or a string band. That’s the only way you referred to them. And they did not use drums! They had no use for a drummer because their rhythm was a bass fiddle and a banjo — which was the basic rhythm.

Now, you add a guitar to that, well, he kind of helped it a little. And the piano player, if he wasn’t taking a chorus, well, then the piano player played rhythm. Just chords. So the rhythm section at its high point included the bass fiddle, the banjo, the guitar, and the guy chording the piano.

So, [Bob Wills] came to me and I said, “What in the hell do you want with a drummer in a fiddle band?” I thought he’d lost his mind! And he said, “I want to take your kind of music and my kind of music and put them together and make it swing.”

end

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