Went to a concert with Dennis Chambers (Dean Brown, Victor Wooten and Bob Franceschini) last weekend in Oslo. All true legends! Fantastic gig! Great stories you bring here Rick Beato!
Dennis Chambers is one of my favorite drummers to listen to. If you see his name on a project you know the music will be amazing. Thank you for this interview. Not only is he a professional drummer but he has some fascinating stories to go along with his experiences in the music industry
Dennis is best in the world for me. Got to hang with him via a mutual friend at the RTF reunion in Maryland....it was so cool the 3 of us backstage with Lenny, Stanley, Al Di, Chick, and Larry Coryell (opened up for em)....for sure folks in the music world know how bad ass Dennis is
Rick, I'm so happy you're bringing Dennis Chambers to the masses. I'll never forget seeing him with John Scofield at the Greeley Jazz Festival in Greeley, Colorado. Our university Jazz ensemble competed and on one evening John Scofield played. I was the percussionist and a dear friend was the drummer. I was an eager understudy to my friend and even our professor looked up to his ability. So during the Scofield set, my friend was breaking down to me everything Dennis was doing. He was in awe and would call out the different techniques. It's kind of like what you do on your channel. You bring music appreciation alive. The funny thing was I had a bad ear infection at the time and could barely hear, but it made me forever love Dennis' work and those John Scofield albums are canonical to me. Thank you.
Rick bringing Dennis to the masses…? Lol. This man has 4 decades of recording and touring credits in jazz fusion and pop. We’re here because we celebrate this legend just like you my friend… 🙏🏽
What a great interview with the awesome Dennis Chambers!!! I got to see him play with John McLaughlin's Free Spirits in the mid 1990s. It was incredible! I learned some stuff from Dennis in this interview that I had never known before. It just blew my mind that Jimmy Page was taught by John McLaughlin and that he played a double neck guitar because of him as well. Thanks for posting this excellent interview with one of my favorite drummers of all time!!!
Dennis Chambers has some amazing musical history, playing with McLaughlin and meeting Jimmy page and Steve Howe unbelievable story his amazing journey should definitely be documented in video or book or something thank you Rick he's such nice person. Thank you for introducing him to the younger generation hopefully they will listen to some of his wonderful drumming with such amazing bands.
I saw Dennis at two clinics back in the nineties in Atlanta........just absolutely breathtaking!! Super nice guy, full of information, one of the best drummers ever! Great interview here!
At this point, I just wish there were more hours in the day to watch your videos, Rick! Each one has something great to walk away with and I'm frankly addicted at this point...
These interviews are so great. Thanks Rick! Keeping it candid and loose like you are is the ticket. Sounding Off is going to be huge! P.S. Thanks for including such an iconic drummer so soon. And thank you Dennis!
Great interview, Rick. I've seen Dennis play with John McLaughlin several times. He's amazing. The last time I saw him was when he played with Mike Stern at the Regattabar in Cambridge, MA less than a year after his health scare. After the show my buddy and I went to sit at the bar downstairs, Noir. Right before we were about to leave, Dennis walked in and sat right next to me at the bar. He wound up talking with us for about an hour. It was one great story after another. He even told us the Jimmy Page story. The guy was so cool, so friendly, and so interesting. It made for a very memorable night.
Fantastic Sounding Off Rick, the stories he told were awesome, the technical questions too, the chat between you two were so warm, a real and great pleasure to me to Thank you for doing all these videos!!
What a super interesting interview, I have no need to know any of this stuff but the history, the legacy, the knowledge, the insight, the love of their art a joy to hear. The James Brown story is brilliant, and then the Miles Davis one, too much just incredible. What a biography there should be. I was totally captivated listening to this stuff...
Love you Rick, and you know exactly who to get on these chats.. Dennis Chambers is truly one of the all-time greats. He really is. 18 yrs old and playing with P Funk?? It's like a 19 yr old Jeff Porcaro playing on tour with Steely Dan. These guys got hired as mere kids for a reason..
This channel is the best.. Dennis chambers???? Whoa... I remember him and tony rooster jr doing a DVD I watched that thing everyday when I was in high school
Saw Moshulu(Jeff Berlin Bass, Oz Noy, guitar, David Sanchez, Keys, Chambers, Drums) in a small Jazz club in Schdy, NY. Most amazing show I've seen in my 40 years of going to concerts. I've never seen a drummer change tempos within a song the way Chambers did. Amazing! He more than held his own between the monster tandem of Berlin & Noy.
What a great interview. The best parts besides the records he played on, are when he mentions Chuck Levin’s, Vennemans and Ted’s music stores near D.C. and Baltimore. My house has gear from all these places even today.
What a spectacular interview, Rick! Dennis is so good! Make sure sure you get your ears around the album with Scott Henderson and Jeff Berlin. All extremely tasty covers. That version of Footprints is killer! Also, the one with Tony Macalpine or CAB is a real treat. Bunney Brunel rules! Tony is awesome. Three cheers for Nili Brosh!!!! I have all of her stuff. Currently spinning her second release, "Matter of Perception," Marco Minnemann is a man among men. Saw him with the Aristocrats several times. On his birthday, no less, when his mother and sister were in the audience. Highly recommend Nili Brosh, Matter of Perception!!!!!
or maybe he called it the "philly sweep," don't recall exactly - heard him tell about it in one of his instructional videos - sweeping back and forth between snare and floor tom!
Best Dennis interview ever! Never heard the James Brown story. Never heard the Miles story from Dennis, either. But Rick dragged it out of him somehow. Glad he did. Not surprised they both wanted to hire Dennis. Of course they wanted to 😆.
Dennis is such an amazing musician and a very chilledout dude! He first came across my mind on John McLaughlin's 'The heart of things - live in paris'-record. I am a guitarist. And back then when I heard that record Dennis' drumming was the forst time ehare i went 'wtf...this drumming is just amazing...'
I really didn't expect this at all and was stoked from beginning to the end Dennis is one of my fav drummers and i really appreciated this whole interview, the casual familiar vibe, Dennis' humble character and the way you steered the whole video You'll probably won't read this but Rick, thank you alot, these kind of interviews are jewels compared to the conventional ones
tennis shoes in a dryer, what a great analogy to how poly rhythms may sound to someone. Made me recall there was always something cool sounding about that.
this is by far the most hillarious episode .unbelievable! you really enjoy this ,watching rick having so much fun with one of the most briliant drummers firstheard him on wakaria from the brecke r brother.
Rick Beato Hey can I get some clarification on something please. I watch a ton of your theory videos and right now Im hung up on a small detail, and that is: when you say the minor scale is constructed by 1 2 (3b) 4 5 (6b) (7b) what are the flats relative too? or in any other case with chords for example that may be 1 3 (5b) 7 for example. Are the flats relative to the major scale or the neutral notes? are you saying the notes are flat, or they are "flatted" relative to something. I saw in one video there is a chord with a double flat 7 which leads me to believe you are just flatting a note twice but relative to what? please respond
Marco Andreoni Awesome thanks for the clarification. Its so simple and I should have pinpointed it, but I kept deriving clues and at times the seemed to contradict so I wasn't sure
I just watched this again. @35:44 Dennis talks about a song called "Foolish Fool" with Bernard Purdie on drums. Holy crap he's right - John Bonham's sound is right there in Purdie's kit. Also I had to dig around to find it was Dionne Warwicks little sister "Dee Dee" who sang the song. Give a listen, it's powerful! And if that doesn't move you, listen to Chaka Khan's version - it's killer!
OMG! Every-time I watch one of these it gets better, Dennis Chambers/! The guy's a monster drummer. I began to dig his thing with John McLaughlin but mostly with Carlos Santana ( my pal has one of those sciroco ? kits, they look like horns) - great story about Jimmy Page. He was one of the people i listened to a lot learning drums, - my most up there drummers were, Bonzo, Moon the loon, Papa Jo Jones, Joe Morello - oh wow! Jimmy Cobb, Bernard Perdy - hot work.
Fantastic interview!! Huge fan of Dennis! Cool story of James Brown, have one similar :) I met JB on a plane a month before he passed away, from London to Atlanta. It was a very cool moment! WOW what an amazing story of Miles Davies :0 Thanks for posting! Keep groovin', DC
I listened to this back to back with the Steve Vai episode on a road trip, and I've got to say this is an amazing series! Having listened to Steve first, I was amazed by the clarity of his perspective on so many things, how he seems to have this great ability to meet the world with acceptance and also a positive outlook - one of the only things we can actually control! By contrast, I did find Dennis to have a bit of an old man's take on the world - negative slant about technology and the internet, negative about the way kids come up learning to play now, saying the music of today being so inferior, etc. etc. It's all where you look and how you look at it. His command of history is also super subjective - i.e. the idea that back in the 60s it was frowned on to sound like anyone else when you were coming up and that everyone back then was so original. That's bull. Tony Williams for one clearly learned and applied a million Max, Philly Joe, Roy Haynes, and Alan Dawson licks (to name a few) in his quest for his own voice. That is the way of the world - nothing happens in a vacuum. Wonderful interview but I found it to confirm what I've always felt about Dennis - exceptionally talented, super proficient and technically gifted, but a little stiff and closed-minded in some ways. Probably why he's not one of my faves. Also, WTF with him not mentioning Bonham in that litany of influences he rattled off?? I know for a fact he's a fan, have heard him say it before. Thanks Rick, great interview.
Dennis Chambers is absolutely right about older drums. For me the very best combinations is older drums and cymbals and new hardware. The Slingerland 60, -70's and Rogers Fullerton shells are beautiful.
Thank you for this great interview. DC is one of my biggest influences. Seen him many times with Scofield and Stern from '86-the mid 2000's.. BTW-Wanted to see if DEE DEE WARWICK- "Foolish Fool" w/ Bernard Purdie, is the artist DC is referring to about being an influence on Zeppelin's sound. Not Diane Washington. THANK YOU GUYS SO MUCH...please keep up the great work.
"There was nothing special about that kit, nothing custom" - yeah, but there was Dennis Chambers playing on it !!
Went through my mind too..:-))
Rick, this is so great. You never hear such extensive interviews with people like Dennis or Steve Vai. I'm so glad you're doing this.
Rick; seeing the joy on your face as you listen to your guests is wonderful to watch in itself :)
This "sounding off" series is Absolutely Brilliant - It's so nice to hear two knowledgeable Musicians talking about Music.
Örn Leifsson absolutely! One of the best music education series ever. I wish I had something like this 30 years ago!
Another video in the bag interviewing the great Dennis Chambers for posterity. He is awesome. This is a gift to all drummers.
Went to a concert with Dennis Chambers (Dean Brown, Victor Wooten and Bob Franceschini) last weekend in Oslo. All true legends! Fantastic gig! Great stories you bring here Rick Beato!
Finally someone asking the right questions and letting the guest speak without interruptions or interpositions: Rick, your interviews rock!
wow.. saw Dennis play with John McLaughlin and Joey DeFrancesco in the 90s, the most incredible cymbal work I've ever seen or heard. what a player!
Dennis Chambers is one of my favorite drummers to listen to. If you see his name on a project you know the music will be amazing. Thank you for this interview. Not only is he a professional drummer but he has some fascinating stories to go along with his experiences in the music industry
Dennis is best in the world for me. Got to hang with him via a mutual friend at the RTF reunion in Maryland....it was so cool the 3 of us backstage with Lenny, Stanley, Al Di, Chick, and Larry Coryell (opened up for em)....for sure folks in the music world know how bad ass Dennis is
This is so enjoyable and I'm not even a drummer, but a passion for rhythm and groove is a must for all musicians.
That Miles story is the absolute BEST!!!! Great stuff.
one of my favorite drummers. his recorded output is legendary
Awesome interview!!
I worship Dennis Chambers, thank you so much Rick! More power to you.
Awesome interview. Dennis Chambers...'nuff said.
Rick, I'm so happy you're bringing Dennis Chambers to the masses. I'll never forget seeing him with John Scofield at the Greeley Jazz Festival in Greeley, Colorado. Our university Jazz ensemble competed and on one evening John Scofield played. I was the percussionist and a dear friend was the drummer. I was an eager understudy to my friend and even our professor looked up to his ability. So during the Scofield set, my friend was breaking down to me everything Dennis was doing. He was in awe and would call out the different techniques. It's kind of like what you do on your channel. You bring music appreciation alive. The funny thing was I had a bad ear infection at the time and could barely hear, but it made me forever love Dennis' work and those John Scofield albums are canonical to me. Thank you.
Rick bringing Dennis to the masses…? Lol.
This man has 4 decades of recording and touring credits in jazz fusion and pop. We’re here because we celebrate this legend just like you my friend… 🙏🏽
Hats off to
Dennis Chambers...WOW!!!
Unbelievable guest. So cool. One of the all time greats. Thanks for doing this.
This is an awesome interview!!!! One of the nicest people on the planet!!!!! D.C. = Legend
One of the greatest, and a huge inspiration...love ya Dennis
I freakin' loved this 'cast'. Dennis is so humble✌
Rick this was a real great show today. It's fascinating to hear stories about musicians you have admired all your life.
What a great interview with the awesome Dennis Chambers!!! I got to see him play with John McLaughlin's Free Spirits in the mid 1990s. It was incredible! I learned some stuff from Dennis in this interview that I had never known before. It just blew my mind that Jimmy Page was taught by John McLaughlin and that he played a double neck guitar because of him as well. Thanks for posting this excellent interview with one of my favorite drummers of all time!!!
One of the best interviews I have ever seen.
Got to see Dennis Chambers on the Blue Matter tour, INTENSELY MEMORABLE!!!
Dennis Chambers has some amazing musical history, playing with McLaughlin and meeting Jimmy page and Steve Howe unbelievable story his amazing journey should definitely be documented in video or book or something thank you Rick he's such nice person. Thank you for introducing him to the younger generation hopefully they will listen to some of his wonderful drumming with such amazing bands.
Great interview! Thank you! Dennis is a force of nature. I saw him on the 90s with Stern... all attentions were on him.
I saw Dennis in the 80s with Scofield in London...jawdroppingly good.. been a favourite ever since....awesome player
I saw Dennis at two clinics back in the nineties in Atlanta........just absolutely breathtaking!! Super nice guy, full of information, one of the best drummers ever! Great interview here!
What a phenomenal drummer and great human. Dennis Chambers is an icon.
At this point, I just wish there were more hours in the day to watch your videos, Rick! Each one has something great to walk away with and I'm frankly addicted at this point...
what a joy to find this incredible discussion, love dennis chambers playing and really appreciate rick devoting the time to these legendary players.
Absolutely love seeing you nerd out on stuff like this, Rick! When you are playing him that clip of his solo, your face is priceless.
Thanks for the in-depth interview. DC is my favourite drummer
Absolutely fascinating,Rick.This man certainly has some incredible stories, could listen to Dennis for hours.
This episode and the whole series is fantastic. Thoughtful, insightful, and laugh out loud at times. So good.Thanks Rick!
These interviews are so great. Thanks Rick! Keeping it candid and loose like you are is the ticket. Sounding Off is going to be huge! P.S. Thanks for including such an iconic drummer so soon. And thank you Dennis!
amazing interview THANKS Dennis and Rick
Great interview, I've always loved Dennis chambers style and approach, it's inimitable really. Great video thank you.
Great interview, Rick. I've seen Dennis play with John McLaughlin several times. He's amazing. The last time I saw him was when he played with Mike Stern at the Regattabar in Cambridge, MA less than a year after his health scare. After the show my buddy and I went to sit at the bar downstairs, Noir. Right before we were about to leave, Dennis walked in and sat right next to me at the bar. He wound up talking with us for about an hour. It was one great story after another. He even told us the Jimmy Page story. The guy was so cool, so friendly, and so interesting. It made for a very memorable night.
This is the best music channel on the internet. Your contracts are top line musicians. I'm impressed.
Fantastic Sounding Off Rick, the stories he told were awesome, the technical questions too, the chat between you two were so warm, a real and great pleasure to me to
Thank you for doing all these videos!!
Wow, Another great interview
What a super interesting interview, I have no need to know any of this stuff but the history, the legacy, the knowledge, the insight, the love of their art a joy to hear. The James Brown story is brilliant, and then the Miles Davis one, too much just incredible. What a biography there should be. I was totally captivated listening to this stuff...
Nice interview. Great anecdotes. Well done Rick
Thanks again another wonderful interview.
Please don't ever stop doing these interviews. Incredible content. And I am not even a musician.
This is so awesome! Thank you 🙌🏽 🙏🏽
I never heard that John McLaughlin story before. Fantastic.
woah.This is the best episode. Miles story is awesome.
Amazed to hear that Dennis gets star-struck too... with all my English guitar heroes: Page, McLaughlin & Howe.
Insanely great Jimmy Page story.. enjoyed every second of this interview.
Another drumming legend, thank you.
Gr8 interview what a career this Bro has had awesome.
Really enjoyed this interview with Dennis! Some great and funny stories!! Thanks!!
Love you Rick, and you know exactly who to get on these chats.. Dennis Chambers is truly one of the all-time greats. He really is. 18 yrs old and playing with P Funk?? It's like a 19 yr old Jeff Porcaro playing on tour with Steely Dan. These guys got hired as mere kids for a reason..
Still air drumming to that Loud Jazz solo, after all these years.
Best funk drummer ever! Drum solo on "Pass the Peas" on Maceo Parker's Roots& Grooves is one of the best solos I have ever heard.
This channel is the best.. Dennis chambers???? Whoa... I remember him and tony rooster jr doing a DVD I watched that thing everyday when I was in high school
This series is amazing, Rick! Thank you, forever!!!
Another great video !!! Thanks Rick
Great freaking interview, thanks to you both .
Saw Moshulu(Jeff Berlin Bass, Oz Noy, guitar, David Sanchez, Keys, Chambers, Drums) in a small Jazz club in Schdy, NY. Most amazing show I've seen in my 40 years of going to concerts. I've never seen a drummer change tempos within a song the way Chambers did. Amazing! He more than held his own between the monster tandem of Berlin & Noy.
What a great interview. The best parts besides the records he played on, are when he mentions Chuck Levin’s, Vennemans and Ted’s music stores near D.C. and Baltimore. My house has gear from all these places even today.
Best, most interesting interview yet...
Mister Chambers is always fantastic musician in this fragile world!!!!
What a spectacular interview, Rick! Dennis is so good! Make sure sure you get your ears around the album with Scott Henderson and Jeff Berlin. All extremely tasty covers. That version of Footprints is killer! Also, the one with Tony Macalpine or CAB is a real treat. Bunney Brunel rules! Tony is awesome. Three cheers for Nili Brosh!!!! I have all of her stuff. Currently spinning her second release, "Matter of Perception," Marco Minnemann is a man among men. Saw him with the Aristocrats several times. On his birthday, no less, when his mother and sister were in the audience. Highly recommend Nili Brosh, Matter of Perception!!!!!
Wow! How'd I miss this? Mr. Philly shuffle himself. Incomparable!
or maybe he called it the "philly sweep," don't recall exactly - heard him tell about it in one of his instructional videos - sweeping back and forth between snare and floor tom!
Dennis is never giddy. But His face lighting up about Jimmy, John and Steve is priceless!
My fav drummer full stop.
Best Dennis interview ever! Never heard the James Brown story. Never heard the Miles story from Dennis, either. But Rick dragged it out of him somehow. Glad he did. Not surprised they both wanted to hire Dennis. Of course they wanted to 😆.
Dennis is such an amazing musician and a very chilledout dude!
He first came across my mind on John McLaughlin's 'The heart of things - live in paris'-record.
I am a guitarist. And back then when I heard that record Dennis' drumming was the forst time ehare i went 'wtf...this drumming is just amazing...'
I really didn't expect this at all and was stoked from beginning to the end
Dennis is one of my fav drummers and i really appreciated this whole interview, the casual familiar vibe, Dennis' humble character and the way you steered the whole video
You'll probably won't read this but Rick, thank you alot, these kind of interviews are jewels compared to the conventional ones
+Chris Pouliot I did read it and thanks Chris! Dennis is amazing and such a great guy.
tennis shoes in a dryer, what a great analogy to how poly rhythms may sound to someone. Made me recall there was always something cool sounding about that.
Fantastic!!!
well done Rick! I felt like I was part of the conversation, laughing along with you guys.
Thanks for this Rick. Great stories.
the fact that he mentioned RTF's "Romantic Warrior"(MY personal favorite fusion record) made my entire week!
love the series!
Great interview, Dennis mentioned John Scofield, I LOVE Idris Mohammed's drumming on Groove Elation, best tone and feel.
I'm down, great interview, it's a shame there's only 55,000 views, it's a testament to what and who was actually getting recognized by, fake news
Rick should get Dennis on again for a chat and sharing some drum licks :)
Thanks for this Rick... Awesome interview! Dennis has some great stories!! ;-)
I'm sure you'll hear even more when he's eventually in the studio for you! :)
Hopefully... ;-)
Fucking brilliant! That solo! I was grinning as much as you.
this is by far the most hillarious episode .unbelievable! you really enjoy this ,watching rick having so much fun with one of the most briliant drummers firstheard him on wakaria from the brecke r brother.
I've been waiting for this!!!!!!
Instant like!
Pedro Gonzalez waitWait until of the Victor Wooten one next week :)
Rick Beato
Hey can I get some clarification on something please. I watch a ton of your theory videos and right now Im hung up on a small detail, and that is: when you say the minor scale
is constructed by
1 2 (3b) 4 5 (6b) (7b)
what are the flats relative too? or in any other case with chords for example that may be 1 3 (5b) 7 for example. Are the flats relative to the major scale or the neutral notes? are you saying the notes are flat, or they are "flatted" relative to something. I saw in one video there is a chord with a double flat 7 which leads me to believe you are just flatting a note twice but relative to what? please respond
Pedro Gonzalez it takes the major scale as a reference.
Marco Andreoni
Awesome thanks for the clarification. Its so simple and I should have pinpointed it, but I kept deriving clues and at times the seemed to contradict so I wasn't sure
that was awesome ...great stories 😃
I just watched this again. @35:44 Dennis talks about a song called "Foolish Fool" with Bernard Purdie on drums. Holy crap he's right - John Bonham's sound is right there in Purdie's kit. Also I had to dig around to find it was Dionne Warwicks little sister "Dee Dee" who sang the song. Give a listen, it's powerful! And if that doesn't move you, listen to Chaka Khan's version - it's killer!
OMG! Every-time I watch one of these it gets better, Dennis Chambers/! The guy's a monster drummer. I began to dig his thing with John McLaughlin but mostly with Carlos Santana ( my pal has one of those sciroco ? kits, they look like horns) - great story about Jimmy Page. He was one of the people i listened to a lot learning drums, - my most up there drummers were, Bonzo, Moon the loon, Papa Jo Jones, Joe Morello - oh wow! Jimmy Cobb, Bernard Perdy - hot work.
Fantastic interview!! Huge fan of Dennis! Cool story of James Brown, have one similar :) I met JB on a plane a month before he passed away, from London to Atlanta. It was a very cool moment!
WOW what an amazing story of Miles Davies :0 Thanks for posting! Keep groovin', DC
Great interview!
Love it!
I listened to this back to back with the Steve Vai episode on a road trip, and I've got to say this is an amazing series! Having listened to Steve first, I was amazed by the clarity of his perspective on so many things, how he seems to have this great ability to meet the world with acceptance and also a positive outlook - one of the only things we can actually control! By contrast, I did find Dennis to have a bit of an old man's take on the world - negative slant about technology and the internet, negative about the way kids come up learning to play now, saying the music of today being so inferior, etc. etc. It's all where you look and how you look at it. His command of history is also super subjective - i.e. the idea that back in the 60s it was frowned on to sound like anyone else when you were coming up and that everyone back then was so original. That's bull. Tony Williams for one clearly learned and applied a million Max, Philly Joe, Roy Haynes, and Alan Dawson licks (to name a few) in his quest for his own voice. That is the way of the world - nothing happens in a vacuum. Wonderful interview but I found it to confirm what I've always felt about Dennis - exceptionally talented, super proficient and technically gifted, but a little stiff and closed-minded in some ways. Probably why he's not one of my faves. Also, WTF with him not mentioning Bonham in that litany of influences he rattled off?? I know for a fact he's a fan, have heard him say it before. Thanks Rick, great interview.
Fantastic! Thank you.
Seriously the drum sounds on Blue Matter are incredible. That album turned me on to DC
Thank you for this video!
I loved the stories. Especially the Miles Davis one. LOL
Dennis Chambers is absolutely right about older drums. For me the very best combinations is older drums and cymbals and new hardware. The Slingerland 60, -70's and Rogers Fullerton shells are beautiful.
Wonderful!
Thank you for this great interview. DC is one of my biggest influences. Seen him many times with Scofield and Stern from '86-the mid 2000's..
BTW-Wanted to see if DEE DEE WARWICK- "Foolish Fool" w/ Bernard Purdie, is the artist DC is referring to about being an influence on Zeppelin's sound. Not Diane Washington. THANK YOU GUYS SO MUCH...please keep up the great work.
27:20 Rick's face listening to the epic drum solo! Yes!