Gary Chester: Studio Recording with Ashtrays and Thimbles

SKF NOTE: I found the full transcript from my 1983 interview with Gary Chester, published that year in the April Modern Drummer. The transcript is about twice as long as a typical MD feature interview at that time, suggesting Gary shared words of wisdom beyond those in his interview.

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Gary Chester: …I played ashtray on a lot of tunes. A lot of Garry Sherman‘s things. You couldn’t really tell it was an ashtray. It was one of those ashtray’s with the sand on the bottom of it. I found mine in a doctors’s office.

I have a feeling about music, Scott, about being feminine and masculine. Powerful and light.

If I wanted a light sound, and the lows were rolled off it — like Phil Ramone use to do — the ashtray would sound like a very controlled maraca. It wouldn’t sound like an ashtray. I wouldn’t use it if it sounded like an ashtray.

The beads always roll in a maraca. But, in an ashtray, you have complete control in it. The beads only move when you hit it.

So, I said, “Alright, I’ve got the feminine part of it. Now where’s the masculine?” I went out and bought thimbles. And I used this on a lot of country dates. I would put my metal thimbles on – I did this on a couple of John Denver‘s albums – and I’d play in the center of the ashtray, which is where all the pebbles were. Rather than let the pebbles roll I made a direct contact between the little metal piece and the pebbles.

I’d sit the ashtray on either a timpani or a snare drum and I’d get down into the sound chambers.

Don’t ask me how I know these things. Don’t ask me how I found them. It just came out of me.

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John Densmore: Drummers Trump Guitarists

LIFESTYLE 1/21/2015 @ 9:52PM 731 views
The Doors Drummer John Densmore On Late Greats Jim Morrison, Ray Manzarek
by Jim Clash

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John Densmore: [I]f you have a great drummer and lousy guitar player, you’re fine. A great guitarist and a lousy drummer? The band’s not going to make it. It’s the feel of that whole thing that’s important.

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Christmas Card from Charles “Keep A Knockin'” Connor

SKF NOTE: The great drummer Earl Palmer told me he was the drummer on Little Richards’ records, and Charles Connor was Little Richard‘s touring drummer. Mr. Palmer, if memory serves, said there may have been some exceptions to that. But not many.

I had a phone conversation once or twice at Modern Drummer with someone representing Charles Connor about an interview. If that interview happened, it happened after I left MD.

I just found this Christmas card from Mr. Connor. Interesting it’s postmarked December 1985. I left Modern Drummer in October 1983. I can’t explain the dates. The card was sent to me at MD. MD forwarded the card to my home address.

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Drumming: An Alternative to Jail and Death

Drum instructor honored at annual event
Posted: Jan 18, 2015 10:02 PM EST
By Natalia Martinez

LOUISVILLE, KY (WAVE) – With each stroke of a drum, young musicians are beating the odds thanks to their instructor, Ed White.

Some of the musicians where once considered troubled youth, but the credit White for helping them find their rhythm.

“He’s taught me how to read, rudiments, everything that you can, anything,” Allen explained.

“We’ve got our young boys who are so angry that they’re sending each other to the grave and the jail,” White told the crowd.

White founded RCDC 22 years ago, witnessing hundreds of children succeed.

“So we can say for that, free at last, free at last, thank God Almighty, we are free at last,” White said.

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Movies: Drummers as Obsessives, Non-Conformists, Psychos

Drumatic: a history of drummers in film
As Whiplash picks up five Oscar nominations, Anne Billson marvels at the range of drummers on-screen over the years
By Anne Billson 8:00AM GMT 17 Jan 2015

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Whiplash is about a jazz drummer who drums till his fingers bleed. His connection to the kit he pounds so obsessively is echoed by his abusive relationship with the conservatory conductor, who yells obscenities in his face like the drill sergeant from Full Metal Jacket.

You could substitute another instrument, but it wouldn’t be the same, because drums are primal, physical, brutal in a way that other instruments are not. They signal war, sex and violence, life and death – sometimes all at once. Drummers are a fundamental part of the team, yet detached, with their own special rules; the musician equivalent of goalkeepers.

In films, drummers are often depicted as obsessives, non-conformists, or psychos.

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