Craftsman with Heart of a Teacher Gets Back His Drums

Pals put ‘heirloom’ drum kit back in maker’s hands
Sherry Lucas, The Clarion-Ledger 11:26 p.m. CST November 27, 2014
Beloved metro Jackson drummer Joe Partridge Jr. was gifted with a set he’d made nearly 18 years ago, as pals pulled together in a good deed, for a good-deed doer.

This was the drum set that got away.

Joe Partridge Jr. of Clinton, a custom drum maker and high-end furniture craftsman, had last seen it when he’d finished it, signing his name plus “1-97” to mark the date and watching it beat a path out of his life. For good, he thought.

Fast forward to a couple months ago. He got a call from a friend at Lakeland Music when it wound up there.

Week of [a “Ringo Starr”] drum clinic, [Bill] Richardson and Matt Brennan, a drummer and a long-time pal of Partridge’s.., were texting. The conversation turned to those drums….

[Richardson said], “…Matt was real quiet… Then…it was like an angel on my shoulder — said, ‘Do it. Give him the drums.'”

[Matt’s] been a co-worker of Partridge’s…. “We became friends because he has the heart of a teacher. … He’s just a kind soul,” sharing his knowledge about wood working and drum repair.

Richardson and Brennan kept the gift a secret till the final song of the drum clinic.

“A great moment for a great guy,” said Denny Burkes, who caught the emotional reaction — shock, tears, hugs — on video, ” ‘Top Secret’ Mojoe Kit for Joe Partridge’ on Youtube.

Days later, Partridge still was blown away by the generosity of Richardson, Brennan, his friends.

“There was never a set that I made that I really wanted as badly as this one,” [Partridge said.]

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Joe Morello on Buddy Rich Part 1

SKF NOTE: Revisiting the transcript of my 1979 interview with Joe Morello today. Five or six times Joe Morello said some things about Buddy Rich which were new to me. I also found Joe’s remarks instructive and/or funny. So, I will post the remarks separately, by subject, over the next couple of weeks.

Joe sat through our entire interview with a pair of drumsticks, sitting near a coffee table on which he had a practice pad. In upcoming posts, Morello demonstrates points he was making about Buddy Rich’s playing. Joe did so playing on his practice pad.

Joe Morello: …Buddy’s a good friend of mine. He’s always been nice. Buddy and I have always gotten along very well. And we used to fool around together with the sticks…. He’s got very good technique. It’s not as fast as you would think it is. He looks faster and he sounds faster than he is because he’s clean. Everything he does is very clean. There’s faster drummers, that’s for sure. If you want to just look at it from that. From strictly technically there are much faster drummers, so Jimmy’s faster, Louie Bellson‘s faster….

Scott K Fish: Jim Chapin is faster than Buddy?

JM: Oh yeah. Sure, but Buddy puts it together so beautifully. He builds this picture real nice, y’know.

[Buddy] just does his thing. That’s all. He’s got great ears. He listens. He hears real well.

I remember when we were in Vegas in 1967. He was still with Harry James then. See, for awhile, as you know, he was buried with Harry James’ band. He was with James for quite awhile. When I was winning all the polls and all that s**t, Buddy was coming in like, 12th, 15th. ‘Cause he wasn’t doing anything. He was just in Las Vegas playing Ciribiribin, and he’d do a little think on Caravan, y’know.

I used to meet him on the road once in awhile. I’d say, “Why don’t you start your own band?” He’d say, “I’ll never start another f*****g band as long as I live.” He said, “I’ll just play my three hours a night and go home.” He told me this in San Francisco. That’s when we drove home together and I told him that I knew the way back. Christ! And we got lost. He had a white Jaguar. Oh, Buddy’s nuts. He’s a nice cat though.

I guess Buddy’s still doing very well now, because he’s got a good manager.

Joe Morello on Buddy Rich Pt 2
Joe Morello on Buddy Rich Pt 3
Joe Morello on Buddy Rich Pt 4

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Elvin Jones’s Room

jones_elvinSKF NOTE: For a time in the late sixties, [Elvin Jones] lived in a first-floor room at the Chelsea Hotel. The room was long and narrow and dark, and it was clearly a bachelor’s nest. The bed hadn’t been made, and on a small dining room table were a box of cornflakes and a used cereal-bowl with a spoon in it. The bed was flanked by night tables, an overflowing ashtray and a copy of “The Voyage of the Space Beagle.” The bureau was littered with aspirin and Band Aids and a travelling clock, which had stopped. Wedged between a bass drum and a snare drum in a window alcove were a pair of shoes and a bow tie.

Jones rummaged around in a bureau drawer and pulled out what appeared to be a thick sheaf of hotel bills. “I’m the world’s worst bookkeeper,” he said…. “I’ve been living here for several months, and, man, the seventy-some dollars a week I pay is expensive for me. And Pookie’s Pub, where I’m at now, is not the highest paying club in town. I make about scale, or about a hundred and fifty a week. This morning I got a letter from my wife, who lives near the Haight-Ashbury district in San Francisco – she’s no hippie – and my kid is sick again, which means more doctor bills. Everybody wants that bread all at once.”

Source: A Walk to the Park, by Whitney Balliett, American Musicians II: Seventy-Two Portraits in Jazz, Oxford University Press 1996

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Brian Tichy: The Importance of Consistency

SKF NOTE: I don’t know Brian Tichy, neither am I familiar with his drumming. But his advice here is spot on for drumset players in all kinds of bands. I will have to give Mr. Tichy a listen.

GlideMagazine.com
DRUMMER BRIAN TICHY (INTERVIEW)
November 24, 2014 by Leslie Michele Derrough

 

Q. What do you think is the most important thing a drummer can do for a band?

There really is only one most important thing and it’s keeping good solid time, and solid doesn’t mean you have to hit everything and smash it as hard as you can and all that. It just means no matter what you’re doing up there, whatever it takes to make that band sound right and groove right and drive the band correctly, the way the band should be….

And I don’t want a drummer to change it up too much. But the main thing is the groove and the timing. And the first and foremost thing you can teach a drummer is the importance of consistency. Every time you hit that bass drum, every time you hit the snare, every time you hit a cymbal, it’s got to sound like one instrument. You can’t sound like a drum, a cymbal, a this, a that. It’s got to sound like a drum set and once you can keep that thing sounding powerful in the band with confidence in your capability, then they’re not worried, they’re not turning around looking at you, and that makes the band play better, makes the guitar player not worry about anything else. That’s the main job of the drummer. You hit the damn drums, you keep it in time and you make everybody feel good about it (laughs).

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Alison Geal Wins World Juvenile Solo Tenor Drum Championship

Coatbridge pupil is a world beater
Practice makes perfect for drummer Alison / November 24, 2014

A Coatbridge pupil with a passion for drumming has surpassed all her expectations after being crowned world champion.

Alison Geal (16) won the World Solo Tenor Drum Championship in the Juvenile MSR4 category at the World Solo Drumming Championships 2014 on Saturday 18 October at Glasgow Caledonian University.

The Coatbridge High School pupil said: “To be honest, it hasn’t really sunk in yet; I’m still a bit stunned! It’s been absolutely amazing – last year I was fourth, so I was hoping to do well but didn’t expect to win.”

There were 15 other competitors in her category from all around the world.

“I’ve had a huge amount of support from my school, my instructor David Henderson and of course from my mum and dad – I couldn’t have done it without them.”

Alison only began drumming three years ago, she plays in the North Lanarkshire Schools Pipe Band and also with the National Youth Pipe Band of Scotland….

Alison…plans to become a music teacher…. She is currently studying Higher Music and, as well as drumming, also sings and plays the keyboard.

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