Check out the Christmas CD, "It's For You He Came", featuring Bart Elliott on drums and percussion, available in the Drummer Cafe Store.

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Frank Briggs has provided yet another play-along for our Premium Resource subscribers. "Potato" is an intermediate level play-along track from Mike Keneally's CD, Sluggo!

Subscribers can download audio tracks (with and without drums as well as solo drums) plus a PDF drum transcription and recording session notes.



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December 02, 2008, 07:43 AM *
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Author Topic: David Logeman  (Read 581 times)
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vexen
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« on: October 16, 2005, 11:12 AM »

Well i just met this guy this past friday. I actually was just bored with some friends so went to a bar to listen to some live music. The drummer absolutely amazed me, so of course i'm giong to talk to him between sets. In our talk i found out this guy has played with Frank Zappa, Jan & Dean, The Beach Boys, and now is with The Surf City Allstars, which is a combination of some of those. I must say he's an amazing drummer. He was playing with 2 of his friends for fun, they called themselves Tres Hombres (don't get it confused with the ZZ Top album as i did ;p), and they are just a cover band enjoying themselves. Even just covering though, he throws his own little style in, which to me seemed to be a lot of triplets rather than just straight 8th notes and such. I recommend you listen to some of his stuff, especially Tinsel Town Rebellion (Frank Zappa). He drives that album, and definently serves to have taken Bozzio's place. On top of it all, hes a really great guy. Just thought i'd open some eyes to what i have just recently seen.
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equipmentdork
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« Reply #1 on: October 16, 2005, 12:02 PM »

David plays on one of my fave FZ albums, You Are What You Is.  Always enjoyed his playing on that one!  Playing with FZ is like a knighthood!  It's so cool that lots of name drummers play in many smaller projects.



Dan
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« Reply #2 on: June 26, 2008, 12:19 PM »

David Logeman played with Frank after Vinnie Colaiuta left. He played with FZ for about 6 months. In a lot of Zappa books he's not even mentioned. After he left Zappa VC returned for a couple of months. Than Wackerman got the job.

There are some very nice clips on Youtube with Logeman on drums. One really nice example is Keep it greasy. The way he plays it is absolutely fantastic. Because this video was recently posted on Youtube, I thought it was worth mentioning it.

Rene
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Dave Heim
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« Reply #3 on: June 26, 2008, 02:43 PM »

David Logeman played with Frank after Vinnie Colaiuta left. He played with FZ for about 6 months. In a lot of Zappa books he's not even mentioned. After he left Zappa VC returned for a couple of months. Than Wackerman got the job.

One of the past issues of "Traps" magazine (I think it was the Fall 2007 issue) featured a timeline of the Frank Zappa drummers.  Who they were, when they started, when they left, when they came back, which albums they were on.  Interesting stuff.
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James Curley http://www.myspace.com/jamesfcurley
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« Reply #4 on: June 27, 2008, 12:26 PM »

On this website David Logeman gives some reactions on question about his FZ gig. We could persuede him to become a Drummercafe member ... Smiley


 http://www.united-mutations.com/l/david_logeman.htm

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One of the past issues of "Traps" magazine (I think it was the Fall 2007 issue) featured a timeline of the Frank Zappa drummers.  Who they were, when they started, when they left, when they came back, which albums they were on.  Interesting stuff.

And here is a list of FZ touring bands:
http://members.shaw.ca/fz-pomd/lineups/index.html


René / NLD
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Walt62040
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« Reply #5 on: July 15, 2008, 04:22 PM »

Thanks for the info.  I checked out two Utubes, Paris 1980 and I have to say that I did not think they got any kind of a groove going at all on Keep It Greasy or You Are What You Is.  As I am not a drummer, maybe I am just not getting it, but it seemed like the drums and the bass never linked up at all.  Maybe it was the bass player that was pulling things off kilter. 

In You Are, they got it together a little bit around 0:54 and again @ 1:21 but by 1:34 it had all fallen apart.  To much leading the beat, or bad drum micing, or more is less.  Feel free to flame.

Walt
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David Crigger
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« Reply #6 on: July 17, 2008, 01:29 AM »

Thanks for the info.  I checked out two Utubes, Paris 1980 and I have to say that I did not think they got any kind of a groove going at all on Keep It Greasy or You Are What You Is.  As I am not a drummer, maybe I am just not getting it, but it seemed like the drums and the bass never linked up at all.  Maybe it was the bass player that was pulling things off kilter. 

In You Are, they got it together a little bit around 0:54 and again @ 1:21 but by 1:34 it had all fallen apart.  To much leading the beat, or bad drum micing, or more is less.  Feel free to flame.

Walt

Actually Walt, they are getting quite a groove going on both.

You Are What Is - this IS a ska tune, which may be a groove you're not that familiar with. BD - four on the floor. Gtr - on all the "and's" and the chords, the bass and the vocals almost always syncopating the "1" by an 1/8th note - in other words lots of "& of 4" pushes. With the exception of a couple of slightly rushed fills (and that's being darn picky), that was pretty darn on the money.

Keep It Greasy - This was WAY beyond "pretty darn on the money". The groove here is basically syncopated 16th note funk but played "real fast" as us fusion guys so much like to do.  And keep in mind, this version of Frank's band actually plays this stuff pretty "straight ahead" - the same charts during the Coliauta period would be far more challenging to listen to.

So no, they're playing it - you're just not hearing it.... and that's cool.  This is complex stuff in a live setting - which always tends to be harder to sort out. Compared to the studio records always a much more compromised mix and often less clean performance. But even with that, it's there being played...

So if I would make some suggestions - back up the truck a bit listening-wise and build up to stuff like this. Like for You Are What You Is - check out some reggae, some ska, and be sure to digest all of the Police. I mean even just some Bob Marley and some Police will get you way into that kind of groove and those kind's of syncopations.

For Keep It Greasy - dig into Tower of Power, and then Herbie Hancock's Headhunters, assuming you've already digested the music of James Brown and pretty much everything on the Motown label.

Lots of listening, for sure - but that's how you put it together, just like everyone else. One album/CD at a time - devouring the ones you "really get" and build your hearing chops up to the ones you don't "get" yet.

Have fun,

dc


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