Whoever thought to do a compilation….GOD BLESS YOU. Been a fan since the early 2000 when I first heard Dilla, from there you are exposed to so much and eventually I discovered Robert Glasper which lead me to Derrick Hodge and Casey Benjamin and of course Chris Dave it’s all just a step above music it’s therapy and healing one note at a time
He is not my personal favorite drummer (but he might be if he played more jazz as at 10:24 and 18:30!), because but his talents are supernatural. Seemingly infinite speed with zero effort. So fast and lubricated he must drink WD-40. Total command of time. Total independence. Total groove. Not human. Rolls like Buddy Rich. Like Nate Smith+JoJo Mayer+Steve Smith+Brian Blade+Dave King together. Amazing compilation. Thank you.
I'd recommend the Robert Hurst album "Unrehurst, pt. 2" from 2013. It's him, Bob, and Robert Glasper, and you get to hear him play with more jazz sensibilities. The tune "Truth Revealed" is like my benchmark for waltz feel in a trio setting thanks to that album.
Amazing drummer, one of my faves.. But u have checked out justin tyson and marcus gilmore? Although if u just talkin of this style, dilla-loaded style then yeh Chris probably the best
Ive Just heard him. Im a drummer. He is Supernatural. Not since Buddy Rich have I heard a drummer this good! Everything he does just flows. Seemingly effortless perfection. Buddy looked like he came out of a boxing ring or gym. But Chris Dave flows so naturally, like a riverstream! It is otherworldly?
From an O.G. just getting into Chris Dave and his crew,I hear a lot going bbn on.Elements and Influences of Hip Hop,Neo Soul,Free Jazz,and all of the Old School African American music genres.Chris Dave's cymbal selection and cymbal work is cutting edge,as well as his particular choice to collaborate with djembe artists.
ah man, i was at lafayette in london (vid 2 until about 6 mins in) it was the last gig i've been too ( it was a week or two before lockdown) best gig i've been to by far! I've never been to a gig with barely any phones, people with their eyes shut; straight vibing. loved every second.
Was there too, and i could not believe what i was hearing. Chris dave and derrick hodge killing that part. Robert holding down those ephemeral chords. Was awesome
1:51 I don’t think I’ve heard Kendrick Lamar’s “How Much a Dollar Cost” live before that was ridiculous. Chris Dave’s grooves make me shake my head every time.🤦🏾♂️
Any footage of him doing the vocal parts to a Michael Jackson song (Billie Jean I think)? He did it at the London Lafayette (UK) show with Robert Glasper that there's a few clips of here. It was absolutely unreal.
The original line is from an old song by Bobby Caldwell called What You Won’t Do For Love and sampled plenty of times probably most noted when Tupac sampled it but for this I believe he was just free-styling by saying “ you tried everything” which is a part of the original song.
Too many doo dads. Too much twitchy chattering on various surfaces. A truly great drummer who these days seems to want to avoid anything as obvious as playing the drums.
@@jesseshepard2324 The drum set is an instrument in itself. Victor Lewis shows how to make music without all that clanging and buzzing and twitching, which is not musical at all but just noise: th-cam.com/video/Lw2o0tAxrZ4/w-d-xo.html. In my view, Dave needs to rediscover the music in the drums, which he had in abundance when he was playing with Kenny Garrett.
caferrara It’s alright, i also understand your opinion. Dave is just going in the direction of replecating electronic sounds. I know tons of drummer that don’t like this. Their aesthetic is a natural drum sound, often just ambassadors without muffling. But drummers that had their time with 808 drums, boombap and so on feel more at home with Dave’s developed style. I respect him for going this path so far. Touring with 5 snares to have kinda different snare samples. Having 5 different hihat-kinda stacks to replicate different filters etc. Thats just some pioneering stuff he did, seeing how far you can go with modifying drum sound in an electronic direction. And while doing this, his touch still feels natural and like a human. You can check out Kendrick Scott if you want a master of standard Bebop drum set. Or Ari Hoenig. But Dave just left that path of sound design and and found his own drum set sound somewhere else. I think you should give him that credit. Because doing something own in times like today and still perfect it is really hard. AND he mobilized tons of people that normally don’t here acoustic music - coming from rap - and opened their minds to jazz.
@@Spezifestos Fair enough. Kendrick Scott, Nate Smith, Eric Harland, Ari Hoenig, et als. are holding down the traditional drum chairs. I met him once at the Village Vanguard and asked him how one holds the sticks to get such rapid articulations: "Any way you can" was his answer.
The original line is from an old song by Bobby Caldwell called What You Won’t Do For Love and sampled plenty of times probably most noted when Tupac sampled it but for this I believe he was just free-styling by saying “ you tried everything” which is a part of the original song
hope to see a documentary on him soon
By far my favorite drummer
Same
THE LEGEND
Whoever thought to do a compilation….GOD BLESS YOU. Been a fan since the early 2000 when I first heard Dilla, from there you are exposed to so much and eventually I discovered Robert Glasper which lead me to Derrick Hodge and Casey Benjamin and of course Chris Dave it’s all just a step above music it’s therapy and healing one note at a time
3:11 he never stops feathering!! iykyk
He is not my personal favorite drummer (but he might be if he played more jazz as at 10:24 and 18:30!), because but his talents are supernatural. Seemingly infinite speed with zero effort. So fast and lubricated he must drink WD-40. Total command of time. Total independence. Total groove. Not human. Rolls like Buddy Rich. Like Nate Smith+JoJo Mayer+Steve Smith+Brian Blade+Dave King together. Amazing compilation. Thank you.
You should look up jd beck he's a 16 year old drummer and his playing reminds me of chris dave
@@Kaonashimusic No need to look him up. I've seen him with DOMi (warming up for CHON)! :) :)
Listen to his stuff with Kenny Garrett
I'd recommend the Robert Hurst album "Unrehurst, pt. 2" from 2013. It's him, Bob, and Robert Glasper, and you get to hear him play with more jazz sensibilities. The tune "Truth Revealed" is like my benchmark for waltz feel in a trio setting thanks to that album.
He played a lot more jazz in the early 2000s
I believe he is the best right now and that is for real!
Amazing drummer, one of my faves.. But u have checked out justin tyson and marcus gilmore? Although if u just talkin of this style, dilla-loaded style then yeh Chris probably the best
Ive Just heard him. Im a drummer. He is Supernatural. Not since Buddy Rich have I heard a drummer this good! Everything he does just flows. Seemingly effortless perfection. Buddy looked like he came out of a boxing ring or gym. But Chris Dave flows so naturally, like a riverstream! It is otherworldly?
Omfg!! Chris dave compilation. Thanks so much for compilate and share.
From the younger generation of drummers in the states I my two favourite drummers are Ronald Bruner Jr and Chris dave
They are such polarising opposites but are more alike than one assumes haha
What's crazy is Chris is 49!
We want Aphex Twin`s 'Come to Daddy Dave' cover!
From an O.G. just getting into Chris Dave and his crew,I hear a lot going bbn on.Elements and Influences of Hip Hop,Neo Soul,Free Jazz,and all of the Old School African American music genres.Chris Dave's cymbal selection and cymbal work is cutting edge,as well as his particular choice to collaborate with djembe artists.
Is this Chris’s video or derricks?! Gaaaaaaa they be VIBIN!!!!!!!!!!!!! best. trio. EvEr!
Pure Flavor !!!
ah man, i was at lafayette in london (vid 2 until about 6 mins in) it was the last gig i've been too ( it was a week or two before lockdown) best gig i've been to by far!
I've never been to a gig with barely any phones, people with their eyes shut; straight vibing. loved every second.
Was there too, and i could not believe what i was hearing. Chris dave and derrick hodge killing that part. Robert holding down those ephemeral chords. Was awesome
Groove master indeed 👌👌
The master.
Hey look at that, Chris Dave and tomtoms don't hate each other anymore. Pretty sure that means world peace is just around the corner.
chrimate change
6:56 "ohh shit"
It was about time haha
that flat ride at 6:09
bro i need to be quiet its 1:20am and those choices of sounds just HIT in the First Clip
自分用
1:50
4:57
9:00
16:05
21:14
21:53
24:23
28:51
most of them are J Dilla beats
1:51 I don’t think I’ve heard Kendrick Lamar’s “How Much a Dollar Cost” live before that was ridiculous. Chris Dave’s grooves make me shake my head every time.🤦🏾♂️
If you dig that try the R+R=NOW version. Features Glasper and Hodge but Chris Dave isn't in that group
Ok i was waiting on this one
_E X C E L E N T E_ 🥁🥁👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿💪🏿💪🏿
Any footage of him doing the vocal parts to a Michael Jackson song (Billie Jean I think)? He did it at the London Lafayette (UK) show with Robert Glasper that there's a few clips of here. It was absolutely unreal.
4.40 amaaaazing
I first heard Daru Jones do the offbeat J Dilla beat like 10 years ago.. so goddamn dank
He is an extra terrestrial
WOW. great
His stack sounds like God himself is clapping
Coordinated
5:29 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
wild!!
At 25:52 peep Travis Sayles scream.
I felt the same way.
21:54 sick
anyone know if the first clip is in full version anywhere?
🔥🔥🔥
Minute 6:13 what song is it? Totally forgot
25:35 OOOOOOOOOOOHWEEEEE
Claiiiiiiiiiiiireeeeeeeeeeee
what was the thing that Herbie, RG and YBN cordae were all in the same room for. I forgot about that and never saw anything come of it.
th-cam.com/video/F2UBjozJS6w/w-d-xo.html
Is it still possible to add timestamps for the clips?
yea, if you post them in the comment I'll had it in the description :)
hi, what is the song, on 1:30?
Does anyone know if 4:18 is a reference to a song? It sounds so distinct
🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿
what's the track on the first clip? gahh it's driving me insane cause I know I've heard it before, just can't remember it.
One month late, but it's Come Down by Anderson paak :)
Song name at 25:23?
Anybody know the song at 11:15 I’ve been trying to find it for years
yessir, thats The Sting by Kevin Eubanks
Song at 3:23?
th-cam.com/video/z0yKuHIutLQ/w-d-xo.html
Sometimes I see people say his clap stack is sabian made. Can someone tell me a web page or something that proves it?
Cap the clap stack is made by istanbul however the hi hats are made by sabian
What song is that at 10:00
Turn me up prod. By J dilla
@@emmytheunderrated2724 10:04 ?
@@1.Ventura same song :D
The original line is from an old song by Bobby Caldwell called What You Won’t Do For Love and sampled plenty of times probably most noted when Tupac sampled it but for this I believe he was just free-styling by saying “ you tried everything” which is a part of the original song.
Too many doo dads. Too much twitchy chattering on various surfaces. A truly great drummer who these days seems to want to avoid anything as obvious as playing the drums.
That's because being a percussionist goes beyond only playing kick, snare, toms, and cymbals.
@@jesseshepard2324 The drum set is an instrument in itself. Victor Lewis shows how to make music without all that clanging and buzzing and twitching, which is not musical at all but just noise: th-cam.com/video/Lw2o0tAxrZ4/w-d-xo.html. In my view, Dave needs to rediscover the music in the drums, which he had in abundance when he was playing with Kenny Garrett.
I hear you, but thats kind of what makes him so great
caferrara It’s alright, i also understand your opinion. Dave is just going in the direction of replecating electronic sounds. I know tons of drummer that don’t like this. Their aesthetic is a natural drum sound, often just ambassadors without muffling. But drummers that had their time with 808 drums, boombap and so on feel more at home with Dave’s developed style. I respect him for going this path so far. Touring with 5 snares to have kinda different snare samples. Having 5 different hihat-kinda stacks to replicate different filters etc. Thats just some pioneering stuff he did, seeing how far you can go with modifying drum sound in an electronic direction. And while doing this, his touch still feels natural and like a human. You can check out Kendrick Scott if you want a master of standard Bebop drum set. Or Ari Hoenig. But Dave just left that path of sound design and and found his own drum set sound somewhere else. I think you should give him that credit. Because doing something own in times like today and still perfect it is really hard. AND he mobilized tons of people that normally don’t here acoustic music - coming from rap - and opened their minds to jazz.
@@Spezifestos Fair enough. Kendrick Scott, Nate Smith, Eric Harland, Ari Hoenig, et als. are holding down the traditional drum chairs. I met him once at the Village Vanguard and asked him how one holds the sticks to get such rapid articulations: "Any way you can" was his answer.
Song at 10:10 ??
The original line is from an old song by Bobby Caldwell called What You Won’t Do For Love and sampled plenty of times probably most noted when Tupac sampled it but for this I believe he was just free-styling by saying “ you tried everything” which is a part of the original song