Best Rock Drummers


I've seen most of them and by far the two that stand out are Neil Peart of Rush and Ceasar Z. of Golden Earring. For non-rock I would say it's a no brainer with Buddy Rich.
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@mbennes: Oh man, you are too hip for the room ;-) , Buddy Harman is FANTASTIC, in my all-time Top 10. I’ll bet you and I are the only ones here who know his name. Buddy was the "first call" drummer in Nashville for decades, in effect that city’s Hal Blaine (another great) He can be heard on the recordings of hundreds of singers, including Tammy Wynette and George Jones. His playing on "Stand By Your Man" is SO cool. He invented playing the hi-hat part on the snare drum with a brush, with the 2/4 backbeat played "cross-stick".

Of course, it can be argued that Buddy was not a Rock drummer. Rock ’n’ Roll, yes. What’s the difference? Rock ’n’ Roll swings, Rock doesn’t. As an illustration, listen to Ringo’s playing when he joins The Band onstage for the last song in The Last Waltz concert segment, Dylan’s "I Shall Be Released". See how slow, plodding, and ponderous is his playing? Now listen to Levon Helm; nimble, light on his feet, like Fred Astaire dancing. Listen to Levon’s drumming on Clapton’s cover of Bobby Blue Bland’s "Further On Up The Road"; he swings SO hard! Like a Jazz drummer, but with a 2/4 backbeat. Rock ’n’ Roll, baby!

When I saw Keith Moon live in ’68 and ’69, he was incredibly exciting: explosive, dynamic, maniacal. By the end he was so sluggish, so tired, so boring. "Who Are You"? Terrible! Was it the booze and pills? Or age?

John Bonham played his kick drum in the "bury the beater in the head" style. In other words, not letting the bass drum beater rebound off the batter head. The effect that creates is to make each bar in the music feel separate---the music seems to come to a halt at the end of each bar, starting up again for the next. The music has no natural flow, no movement and momentum. Robert Plant would definitely not have Bonham playing on his records with Alison Krauss, nor would she let him ;-) .

"When I saw Keith Moon live in ’68 and ’69, he was incredibly exciting: explosive, dynamic, maniacal. By the end he was so sluggish, so tired, so boring. "Who Are You"? Terrible! Was it the booze and pills? Or age?"

So true bdp24. Someone here attached a studio video the other day of Who are You and thought that his playing on that song was brilliant. I thought that it was terrible and boring. He was great in the beginning, or maybe I should say different and very good, but drumming is very physical as well as mental, and he was depleted in both of those arenas, and it really showed as time went on. Live at Leeds was really good, but by the time Who’s Next was recorded, he was already a shadow of his former self. Same thing happened to Phil Collins long before he reached the sorry state he’s in now. Listen to how predictable he is on the Invisible Touch disc.

Dallas Taylor is underrated. I saw him with CSN and he was very impressive. That being said, the best depends on what you're trying to achieve. If you need a studio drummer and want a platinum or gold record, Gary Chester is a very good choice. Hal Blaine is of course another. For a very musical drummer with great chops, Jim Gordon though it pains me to mention him. For a live show, I would say Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann. Also, I saw the Buddy Rich Big Band and as fun as Buddy Rich is to watch, an evening of drum solos can be a bit tiresome.

There probably should of been another category for jazz/rock & roll.  IMO the Grammys are long overdue for change.  They actually need a separate category just for Rock.  I hated the Pop/Rock category because you'd get an artist like Whitney Houston (nothing against her) beating out every Rock band.  Country has their own category.