Check out Bart Elliott's review of the new Aquarian Hi-Velocity Snare Drumhead on Drummer Cafe TV this week.


Drummer Cafe Community Forum
November 21, 2008, 01:56 PM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
News: Zildjian Honors Ginger Baker at the Drummers Achievement Awards
 
   Home   Login Register  
Pages: 1 2 [3]  All   Go Down
  Print  
Author Topic: Jeff Berlin waxes poetic on the metronome  (Read 1454 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
New York Frank
supporter
Platinum Member

Online Online

Posts: 1697



« Reply #40 on: April 25, 2008, 10:04 AM »

If I ever encounter a tempo Nazi blaming Me, I'm going to insist on the band working with a click at rehearsals to get the real story.
Logged
Jim R.
Bronze Member

Online Online

Posts: 163



« Reply #41 on: April 25, 2008, 01:55 PM »

Then the pendulum swings to the other side and everytime you try to correct them with the tempo you have on the click they say, stop being such a stickler...or, yes, but I would really like to do it at this new tempo. Which just shows them that they were the original ones were off in the tempo feel.

You use the new tempo and the next time it feels too fast for them and your back at the first tempo. It drives ya nuts.
Singers think they know because they can feel the phrasing as the sing and they can tell when its too fast. I believe them to a point, because I believe this can be true, that some things just seem right at just the right tempo. But mostly you discover later that they are very subjective and the next person.
Logged

Music can put a baby to sleep or inspire a soldier in war.
kohei
Silver Member

Online Online

Posts: 256



WWW
« Reply #42 on: April 25, 2008, 02:57 PM »

Singers think they know because they can feel the phrasing as the sing and they can tell when its too fast.

You heard about the singer that came up to sit in? She asked to do LUSH LIFE and , when the piano player asked her what key she did it in, she said "F#." Piano player looks shocked and says "F#!?!" Singer replies "Why? Is that too slow?"
Logged

If thine enemy offend thee, give his child a drum.

"It takes pretty great drummer to be better than no drummer at all." - Chet Baker
smoggrocks
supporter
Platinum Member

Offline Offline

Posts: 2457


Is there another word for synonym?


WWW
« Reply #43 on: April 25, 2008, 03:51 PM »

...regarding his contributions to slap bass playing back in '79-ish...to [even] call them pioneering (to modern bassists) is pretty reasonable. He didn't (and I don't think is claiming to have invented the concept of the slap bass) but during that period of time he did raise the slap playing bar to a height that hasn't really inched up much since (again impressive after almost 30 years)...

Monster player...

edits mine.

david, thank you for setting the record straight on mr. b's achievements and stature. even in non-bass circles, the dude's been considered something of a demi-god for quite some time. i first heard him playing with bruford back in like '78, and remember the advanced musicians around me praising his style and sound.

he has done plenty o' "mainstream" gigs as well [norah jones, santana, george benson and i think even sheryl crow], and i don't think anyone's complained about his competency in keeping solid time.

also, he definitely never said he has not used a metronome--at least not in this bulletin. i suspect he's used them plenty, and arrived at his insights and conclusions after a lot of use with them.

but whatever. my main area of agreement w/him concerning the metronome lies in his notion of being conscious about playing music, not just pulse.

i like what david said about beginning students not knowing how to use the tool to benefit them. i think a lot of that is because the metronome can be intimidating. it sucks when you don't or can't lock in with it, and like anything else you can't do well, it's easy to blow it off. when you have someone who can focus your consciousness, it's much more effective. i remember playing for a teacher of mine, and i was rushing without realizing it [to the click]. she put her finger on my back to get me to pause and really listen, and it opened a new window for me. so i agree that it's best utilized with the aid of a knowledgable teacher.

going back to jb's personality a bit... i know he's got a reputation for being a bit of a shmuck, but he supports a neat organization--the dr. t. atlas foundation--so he can't be all that bad. also, he's always willing to answer questions. a lot of big names don't want to be bothered with that.


http://www.dratlasfoundation.com/doctoratlasbio.htm
Logged

The most wasted day of all is that on which you have not laughed.
Chris Whitten
Honorary Cafe VIP
Platinum Member

Online Online

Posts: 5861


« Reply #44 on: April 25, 2008, 04:34 PM »


david, thank you for setting the record straight on mr. b's achievements and stature. even in non-bass circles, the dude's been considered something of a demi-god for quite some time.


For the record, I'm still mystified by the slap bass claim. I disagree with David's take on this style of bass playing and who innovated it, but stated I wouldn't continue the debate as it had little to do with the topic.
Perhaps it's an American vs European perspective issue.
I'm 99% sure every bass player I've ever played with would know little of Berlin's work.
Logged

David Crigger
Honorary Cafe VIP
Silver Member

Online Online

Posts: 361



WWW
« Reply #45 on: April 25, 2008, 08:16 PM »


For the record, I'm still mystified by the slap bass claim. I disagree with David's take on this style of bass playing and who innovated it, but stated I wouldn't continue the debate as it had little to do with the topic.
Perhaps it's an American vs European perspective issue.
I'm 99% sure every bass player I've ever played with would know little of Berlin's work.


For ones that have fusion backgrounds at all, that would surprise me. But maybe so...

But a lot of the detail of what inspired what and when can get lost over the years.

Heck, I'm of the school, that belief that a good chunk of the accolades 99% of drummers give John Bonham should be laid at Carmine's feet instead.  And if it wasn't for how unusual and weird Vanilla Fudge, and how accessible and great the work of Jimmy Page was, more drummers would agree with me. But, it's right there in the recordings and the dates don't lie - add in the contact the two had, and it ain't hard to go from A to B.

And don't get me started with the whole Miles begetting the whole Mahavishnu odd meter fusion era - really not the rock-edge part, and certainly not the odd meter thing - 'cause Miles never even dabbled in that.

And none of this is at all to belittle the great playing and accomplishments of Bonham or Miles - it's just pointing out that history sometimes gets a little too condensed, a little too quickly is all.

So anyway, at the time, again '79 and early 80's - when Berlin topped the Guitar Player's readers poll for a couple of years, Jeff dropped a bunch of jaws - probably most dramatically with the intro to 5G on the Bruford band "One of a Kind" album.

I think he kind of retired a bit for a few years (his son had cancer - which I guess is going better) and currently teaches, releases solo albums and tours with BX3 - that mega-bass band with Billy Sheenan and Stu Hamm.

dc
Logged
boomka
supporter
Gold Member

Online Online

Posts: 755


« Reply #46 on: April 26, 2008, 01:55 AM »

Quote
Because as far as I'm concerned without the appropriate skill-set - basic internal rhythm skills of playing, hearing and counting; and the ability to self-correct - and hopefully at least some supervision - the metronome can do as much harm as it can do good.

I know I'm going way up thread here, but can I just add "singing" to this list?

One of the strongest tools I was taught to use was to sing parts to internalise what's being played. Giving notes their full value (as opposed the single staccato sound usually produced by a drum) can really develop the sense of space and time between the notes.

That's all, great thread, and just about everything else I would say has been covered by someone else.

As you were... Wink
Logged

In lumine lucem
felix
Cafe VIP
Platinum Member

Online Online

Posts: 8733


Y no keno!


« Reply #47 on: April 26, 2008, 06:05 AM »

You heard about the singer that came up to sit in? She asked to do LUSH LIFE and , when the piano player asked her what key she did it in, she said "F#." Piano player looks shocked and says "F#!?!" Singer replies "Why? Is that too slow?"

"What I really meant to say was E#."
Logged

Yaay!
Pages: 1 2 [3]  All   Go Up
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.7 | SMF © 2006-2008, Simple Machines LLC | Sitemap Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!
Page created in 0.097 seconds with 21 queries.

You support this site when you purchase from Musician's Friend through the Drummer Cafe!
Copyright ©2001 - 2008 Drummer Cafe. All rights reserved.
developed by Bart Elliott | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Site Map