Whats on your turntable tonight?


For me its the first or very early LP's of:
Allman Brothers - "Allman Joys" "Idyllwild South"
Santana - "Santana" 200 g reissue
Emerson Lake and Palmer - "Emerson Lake and Palmer"
and,
Beethoven - "Piano Concerto No. 4 in G Major" Rudolph Serkin/Ozawa/BSO
slipknot1
@bdp24

Well he is a pro. Attended the Conservatoire in Nice, France. So like Berkeley trained musicians he brings a rigorous approach rather then self taught Stan Lynch. Steve can write and read music which I am not sure if any of the heartbreakers can do except Benmount.

I think Steve grooves better than most drummers and can handle more styles. He brings a great groove to everything the HB’s do but his personality doesn’t come out as strongly as Stan Lynch. So Stan did a lot more to shape the sound of the HB’s, as an original member. Stan also sings great harmony like Roger Taylor or Don Henley - so he probably was a better fit.

Steve is a good friend of Mike Campbell. Stan was a buddy of  Benmount. Keeping a band together is as complex as a marriage. Success often leads to a breakdown.
Jefferson Airplane - "Surrealistic Pillow" 2013 re-issue on pink swirl vinyl. Good stuff......

shadorne---I read Tom say that Steve came up with ideas that never occurred to him, ideas resulting from his technical training and experience, which Tom and The Heartbreakers don’t share with him . There’s an old saw amongst musicians, that one’s limitations determine one’s style. There’s some truth to that. There’s another, particularly amongst drummers, that drummers with advanced technique tend to sound alike, with no identifiable style of their own, only their technique. That I’m not so sure about, though Steve and Kenny Aronoff (University of Illinois training and degrees, Mellencamp’s original drummer) do sound alike. One guy with somewhat less technique but absolutely no style is Max Weinberg, Springsteen’s drummer. Boring.

There are drummers with technique who have/had a lot of style, starting with the incomparable Earl Palmer (New Orleans drummer credited with creating, single-handedly, Rock ’n’ Roll drumming---Little Richard, etc.), as well as Levon Helm (The Band), Roger Hawkins (Muscle Shoals studios---all those great Jerry Wexler-produced Atlantic recordings of Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett, etc., Traffic), Hal Blaine (L.A. studios---a LOT of 1960’s hit singles, including those of The Beach Boys, Phil Spector, Simon & Garfunkel, even Sinatra), Jim Gordon (Joe Cocker, Derek & The Dominoes, L.A. studios), and Jim Keltner (Ry Cooder, George Harrison, Traveling Wilburys, studios), and Steve Gadd (Eric Clapton, Paul Simon---including his great part in "50 Ways To leave Your lover").

Then there is Ringo Starr, a drummer with very limited technical ability, but a LOT of style. Charlie Watts too.

reubent, 

JA / SP is one of my all-time favorites. Recommend MFSL 45rpm mono. 
+1 on the MFSL/JA mono!!

The Notting Hillbillies  "Missing..Presumed Having a Good Time"!!!!