I met Simon Phillips randomly at an event not related to music. There was a period of... damn, that dude doesn't half look like Simon Phillips! - he introduced himself as "Simon" and I went... "erm.. you're not a professional musician by any chance are you?"... people would come over and go "Uh, they're talking drums, forget it!" and walk away again! ... I got to see him live a couple of months later! Great bloke!
Never got the TH-cam rating system. I believe him to be suitably rated for his skill level, back catalogue and longevity and he makes no fuss about it.
Imagine how absolutely and completely musically ignorant you need to be to think that Simon Phillips is underrated. It almost beggars belief that such levels of ignorance could possibly even exist. Incredible…
My husband and I have been lucky enough to see Protocol several times in a small Northern California gold mine theater. Incredible to watch this master and the talented musicians he tours with. Quite a treat!
Years ago I used to be pretty much 100% a metal guy and mostly listened to and watched metal drummers. Simon along with Steve Smith really got me into the wider world of drumming. Huge respect. So musical.
When in high school I had gone-unknowing as to what I'd hear-to a Mahavishnu Orchestra concert. I'd never seen anything like it before and Billy Cobham instantly became a drum god to me. In 1980 I went to a Jeff Beck concert. Jeff had a young drummer named Simon Phillips on the kit. My jaw dropped. In every way I could think of, power, technique, musicality I felt he existed in the same rarified atmosphere of Billy Cobham. Mind-blowing, then and now. I think perhaps Simon has been great for such a long time that he is often taken for granted and passed over for the current flavor of the week. Simon Phillips is the definition of a professional and a legend. What a great video and such tremendously energetic playing.
What a band! Everyone is awesome!!!! @Simon: Thx so much for this genius drum solo! Thx the whole band!!!! Greetings from germany Christoph 👏 👏 👏 👏 👏 👏
Another of my fav drummers. He does that lick with doubles on the toms and his feet - awesome. I know it is Phillips' immediately with that one lick. He's played it on everything, even when he played with The Who in live show. He's played with everyone. Legend.
This was seriously mind blowing. What a pick! Simon Phillips is one of those drummers who, of course, deserves so much more recognition! Such control here...
I saw this band (with a different guitarist) in 2019. They are absolutely incredible and the keyboardist really stole the show. Also I agree that Simon, for whatever reason, doesn’t get the credit and praise I think he deserves. He is so versatile, musical, creative, and just has his own approach and voice on the kit.
That was incredible. The best one I've seen in a very long time. From the incredible playing, to the amazing tones. The whole band were aliens. I have to listen to that again
My fellow old farts from the 80s might not recognize the guitarist on sight, but you would probably remember his name - that's shred king and former Shrapnel Records recording artist Greg Howe. What a monster.
I just can't remember ever hearing a bad Patreon pick on this channel. Big shout out to the Andrew Rooney Patreons👏. This beggar appreciates it. What a song and craftmanship. Andrew you said you would play more songs yourself: this is the one. You deserve a big kit🥁.
Check out his playing with 801 (with Phil Manzanera of Roxy Music). He was only 19 at the time. His work on the Pete Townshend solo albums is also stunning. My favorite rock drummer of all time. Thanks for the video!
Hi Andrew , nice to see you back again . I know Simon Phillips because he was playing with Hiromi Uehara , but Hiromi Uehara had another drummer , Steve Smith , during trio project in Vienna , his drum solo is also amazing . Cheers .
@ Andrew Rooney, Simon is from the UK. I presume you are from the UK as well. The UK is known for great Drummers. Phil Collins is a great Drummer. And the list is Vast. Just came across your Channel for the first time. Enjoyed your critique. I am a Bass Player from Detroit Michigan USA. You drummers keep the pulse, us Bass players will guide the ship. Peace.
You had me at Simon Phillips but as soon as I saw Greg Howe on guitar, I knew it was going to be special. The audio quality is spectacular and yes, Phillips' drum tones are pretty much perfect. The cymbal on Phillips' left is a 22" or 24" China "Swish". It's quite a bit more mellow than a normal china.
EDIT : Again, Andy, you have the BEST Patreons !! This is SO amazing. I always love the fusion sound more than any genre. I remember Greg Howe from the Shrapnel Records days. I've never seen a drummer play open handed, as opposed to crossover.
So much great material from Simon! Two that have always stuck out to me are Let My Love Open the door by Townsend and Into the Arena by Michael Schenker Group. Both 1980 releases, so a great year for Simon!
holy frickin sht... i got today with this drunk dude, that gave me acoustic guitar to play him some stuff. last time i had guitar in my hands 3yrs ago. acoustic? like 15yrs... i was so ashamed that i can't play it anymore, cause ofc bass... now with this piece, same day? "i don't want to play on this planet anymore" :D
Hey!! I did request Simon Phillips in a comment, months ago. You just broke my heart, Andrew. hahaha I've suggested a video of him playing with the Hiromi Uehara Trio - Move, at Blue Note Tokyo. :)
I never forgot about Simps Philipps. He plays on so many great records for such an amazing long time already and always shines. The guitarist here sounds as little bit like Alan Holdsworth. And the keyboarder looks like Diego Maradona, but is thankfully very alive.
I love seeing how people have their kits set up. In addition to all of the things you pointed out, it’s interesting to me that his throne is so low and his cymbals are so high. Whatever works.
I don't know if his throne is necessarily that low - it's just that Simon Phillips is an elf. Seriously, he's a tiny guy. I have no idea how he can navigate those toms up so high over 24-inch bass drums. I'm 5'10", and I can barely get my kit comfortable with a 22-inch kick.
@@joeday4293 good point. Looking at his leg angle, his throne may not be that low but everything else is super high. Interesting to watch and clearly he has no trouble with it.
It is my understanding that swish knockers were used by jazz players as alternate ride cymbals from way back. Some jazz players would even put rivets in to create a really sizzling wash under the ride pattern. Swish knockers usually have a cup shaped bell unlike the squarish profile of true chinas, so their sound is a little less harsh sounding than regular chinas. They are still pretty loud, though, so in some situations one has to be a little gentle when crashing if one doesn't to overwhelm the music. I started playing open-handed because I wanted to "strengthen" my left hand. Unlike many open players like Simon Phillips, Carter Beauford and Billy Cobham, I chose to keep my ride on the right side. Mainly because I wanted to still play on other drummers' kits (such as in a open jam session) without having to move anything. I've heard that Carter Beauford and Billy Cobham are actually left handed, so it would make sense for them to have their rides on the left side close to their hi-hats. Simon Phillips has said he started playing open style to accommodate the multi-tom set-up while keeping his toms at the same level. I guess he felt it made sense to have the same hand doing all the ride patterns. There are some advantages to playing open handed. I found easier to breathe, especially when singing. In my case, anyway, playing with my right arm reaching across in front of my chest to reach the hi-hat seemed to restrict my rib cage a bit. And playing a pattern between the toms is so much easier when using the right on the toms and the left on the hi-hat. Another area where open style is particularly helpful is when the groove has an accented note on the hi-hat just before a snare back beat; such as accenting the up beats on the hats while playing 2 and 4 on the snare. I find that as one hand is coming down to play the accent on the hi-hat the other hand is coming up to prepare for the loud back beat on the snare, it can be pretty tricky with the hands crossed, at least for a klutz like me. But with open style, neither hand is impeded by the other. Each hand is free to prepare for the coming accent regardless of what the other hand is doing. Anyway, thanks for the video, Andrew. Simon Phillips is one of those drummers with awesome chops and a great pocket. Check out his playing on Pete Townshend's solo albums in the early eighties for some great pocket grooves.
Mr Phillips is also a kick ass producer, which helps explains his stellar drum sound. For something heavier check out Pesadelo from Derek Sherinian’s album The Phoenix. Kiko Loureiro plays guitar on it.
Andrew, if you haven't done so already, check out this video of Simon playing with Pete Townshend and David Gilmour in the 80s. The energy is unreal! th-cam.com/video/LeXf90OGTHE/w-d-xo.html
@@AndrewRooneyDrums absolutely! I used to be a little self concious of it when I was young but I'm proud of it. Especially with guys like this around lol
Probably not at the leading edge of drumming so much now, but I don’t care. He’s still my all time favourite drummer. I first heard him when he joined Toyah’s band and he bent my head! He sounded like no one else around at the time. In an age which saw liberal use of gaffa tape, he was one of the first to have his drums undamped in any way except for the bass drums. Sound engineers would struggle with that until they twigged the benefits. He’s actually right handed too, but just found that open handed playing gave him more facility round the kit.
Apologies in advance for a novel of a comment, but I've got a lot to unpack from this video (which I already loved) and your commentary: 1) Listen to those toms, kids - clear Ambassadors, wide open. You don't really need all that muffling, do you? What if your drums could sound like this instead? 2) Simon Phillips has been playing the same China cymbal since Jimmy Carter was President. What's your excuse for cracking yours? Or, seriously, any other cymbal? In nearly 30 years as a drummer, the only cymbals with cracks I have ever owned, I bought that way. Learn how to properly mount and play your cymbals, kids. It will save you a fortune. Your cymbals don't HAVE to break, unless you simply insist on breaking them. 3) Speaking of that china, riding on the china in heavy music was pretty much invented by Billy Cobham, a hero of Simon's, and a titan of our instrument who really deserves some shine on your channel. In fact, Simon's kit is quite obviously inspired by Billy's: double bass, open-handed setup, lots of China ride. Think Alex Van Halen invented the double bass shuffle with "Hot For Teacher"? Think Simon invented it on Jeff Beck's "Freeway Jam"? Think again - Billy Cobham, 1973, "Quadrant 4." Seriously, if you are reading these words, and you are not hip to Billy Cobham's watershed 1973 album "Spectrum," stop your everything and buy a copy immediately. Just for starters, it's where Phil Collins and Neil Peart got the idea for triplet rolls on high-pitched toms. 4) The debate about cross-handed vs. open-handed playing is very aptly described by a term my high school music theory teacher used to use all the time: "convention," meaning, the only real reason we do it this way is because we've always done it this way. If you want to do it the other way, nothing is stopping you. Just play whichever way helps you execute this art to your fullest potential. With regard to music theory and "convention," my teacher would say, "These practices evolved over centuries. It's not like a couple of Italian monks got drunk one night in 1532 and invented all the rules." The orientation of the drumset evolved organically over time, and I play cross-handed because I learned that way. I'm not about to sit here and get all holier-than-thou about open-handed playing when guys like Billy Cobham and Simon Phillips and Carter Beauford exist, who could all smoke me with one hand tied behind their backs. Great video, great review. How about some Billy Cobham next?
Not many drummers these days have more drums than cymbals on their kit. Then again, tuning your drums to a point where they are a melodic and not just rhythmical instrument is not every drummers priority sadly.
Hoping you get a chance to check out Tarn Softwhip, an incredible drummer who's done amazing covers of Avenged Sevenfold and just all around awesome in general.
In my uneducated opinion, I think the playing style (cross-over,open hand,etc) should be dictated by economy / efficiency for that players particular goal (genre,ideas) and their dominant hand. Eventually learning to be somewhat ambidextrous without sacrificing the musicality can be helpful. Btw, I think you'd dig Neural Code (I couldn't find any quality live videos): th-cam.com/video/J9D6J0v3NW4/w-d-xo.html
I started catching up on his older work with Hiromi Uehara. It’s a trio and they are just amazing together. Simon and Gavin are in my opinion the most melodically innovative. True Simon gets sadly overlooked.
I think the problem with getting subs is they won,t get a request played unless they become patreon or PayPal change your format have a couple of days or weeks just PayPal requests and patreon also include just subs request every one gets a shot it,s about music exploration not cash that's this Canadiens take should improve ratio but you might not see it I,m only a sub 🙄🦇😱
I hear you! But how? Couple of hundred comments per day requesting... so I do one of those requests? Still hundreds of requests I can't do. And btw. I've done a heap of requests from the comments section. ie 'Bleed' and 'Pneuma' to name a few
Individual musicianship is obviously outstanding but I find it all rather soulless. Seems more of an exercise in technique rather than producing a memorable musical experience. Diego Maradonna on keyboards though, was there no end to the man's talents!
I met Simon Phillips randomly at an event not related to music. There was a period of... damn, that dude doesn't half look like Simon Phillips! - he introduced himself as "Simon" and I went... "erm.. you're not a professional musician by any chance are you?"... people would come over and go "Uh, they're talking drums, forget it!" and walk away again! ... I got to see him live a couple of months later! Great bloke!
I went to school with Simon back in the early 70's. He was playing in his dad's Dixieland jazz band at the time (his dad was Sid Phillips)
Simon Phillips is one of the most underrated drummers of all time. Original style, lets his drums SING and a true scholar of the art.
Underrated? He is commonly held as one of the all time greatest so I'm not sure who you think is underrating him.
@@SockerConny80 zoomers on youtube of course
Never got the TH-cam rating system. I believe him to be suitably rated for his skill level, back catalogue and longevity and he makes no fuss about it.
Imagine how absolutely and completely musically ignorant you need to be to think that Simon Phillips is underrated. It almost beggars belief that such levels of ignorance could possibly even exist. Incredible…
@@oobenoob Not underrated, but I think when bringing up the greatest drummers of all time, he sometimes gets left out. He is in my top 3 list.
My husband and I have been lucky enough to see Protocol several times in a small Northern California gold mine theater. Incredible to watch this master and the talented musicians he tours with. Quite a treat!
Wow Robin. Sounds like an awesome venue!
Years ago I used to be pretty much 100% a metal guy and mostly listened to and watched metal drummers. Simon along with Steve Smith really got me into the wider world of drumming. Huge respect. So musical.
Great to hear Marko!
When in high school I had gone-unknowing as to what I'd hear-to a Mahavishnu Orchestra concert. I'd never seen anything like it before and Billy Cobham instantly became a drum god to me. In 1980 I went to a Jeff Beck concert. Jeff had a young drummer named Simon Phillips on the kit. My jaw dropped. In every way I could think of, power, technique, musicality I felt he existed in the same rarified atmosphere of Billy Cobham. Mind-blowing, then and now. I think perhaps Simon has been great for such a long time that he is often taken for granted and passed over for the current flavor of the week. Simon Phillips is the definition of a professional and a legend. What a great video and such tremendously energetic playing.
Yeah this video is quite the treat!
His kits are alway best sounding, period.
Yup. Sounds like a million bux
Simon's work with Hiromi Uehara's "Trio Project" is also PHENOMENAL.
I love Hiromi
I need to check it out!
@@AndrewRooneyDrums th-cam.com/video/1rxYw7Y45Eo/w-d-xo.html
One of the most incredibly trios to ever exist. Such insanely good music.
I LOVE everything about Simon and this band. I’ve watched it dozens of times and now I’m watching it w you👍🤟🏼
Sin After Sin was one of his earliest studio gigs and it remains the best percussion on a Judas Priest album ever.
Everything about this video was incredible...the playing by all the musicians, the song and an amazing recording job...loved every second of this.
When people ask “who’s my favourite drum video reactor?”, I’ll say Andrew Rooney!!!
HEY! Thank you :)
What a band! Everyone is awesome!!!! @Simon: Thx so much for this genius drum solo! Thx the whole band!!!! Greetings from germany Christoph 👏 👏 👏 👏 👏 👏
Glad you enjoyed it Christoph!
Another of my fav drummers. He does that lick with doubles on the toms and his feet - awesome. I know it is Phillips' immediately with that one lick. He's played it on everything, even when he played with The Who in live show. He's played with everyone. Legend.
Well spotted!
Wow those guys can play. Wish I could imagine how deeply satisfying that must be. Wow.
Thanks for a great pick
At least I can say that he was requested in the comments before. I did. Love Phillips. Some of the geratest drumsound ever.
Glad to get to him now!
This was seriously mind blowing. What a pick! Simon Phillips is one of those drummers who, of course, deserves so much more recognition! Such control here...
Yes Awesome!
I saw this band (with a different guitarist) in 2019. They are absolutely incredible and the keyboardist really stole the show.
Also I agree that Simon, for whatever reason, doesn’t get the credit and praise I think he deserves. He is so versatile, musical, creative, and just has his own approach and voice on the kit.
He's a legend Charlie!
These guys are so in sync with each other. Great sound from all of them.
Pure music Dale
Simon Phillips is an amazing totally ambidextrous drummer.
🙌🥁
That was incredible. The best one I've seen in a very long time. From the incredible playing, to the amazing tones. The whole band were aliens. I have to listen to that again
My fellow old farts from the 80s might not recognize the guitarist on sight, but you would probably remember his name - that's shred king and former Shrapnel Records recording artist Greg Howe. What a monster.
@@joeday4293 Greg Howe is criminally underrated. The dude was Michael Jackson's touring guitarist back in the day!
Yup whole band is outrageous
@@AndrewRooneyDrums I left it a few hours and rewatched it. Its even better
Simon is the epitome of finesse
Agree!
Such good timing, with great open handed and incredible finger technique.
Glad you liked it!
I just can't remember ever hearing a bad Patreon pick on this channel. Big shout out to the Andrew Rooney Patreons👏. This beggar appreciates it.
What a song and craftmanship. Andrew you said you would play more songs yourself: this is the one. You deserve a big kit🥁.
Check out his playing with 801 (with Phil Manzanera of Roxy Music). He was only 19 at the time.
His work on the Pete Townshend solo albums is also stunning. My favorite rock drummer of all time.
Thanks for the video!
You bet!
Hi Andrew , nice to see you back again . I know Simon Phillips because he was playing with Hiromi Uehara , but Hiromi Uehara had another drummer , Steve Smith , during trio project in Vienna , his drum solo is also amazing . Cheers .
Yes Steve Smith is also a legend
Ever thought of putting one of your super star students on the chanel so you can sit back like a proud dad.
Great idea!
Your reactions are the best for me to watch, it’s a very chill environment
Great!
And also kudos to Greg Howe, an incledible guitarist!
Smokin' performance! Love the end to the drum solo when they just nail that queue.
KILLER!
Simon Phillips ... one of my all-time favorite drummers. Criminally hardly mentioned when talking about the greats.
Simon influenced me so much, after i sore him first time the cymbal grew into the skys!
Great Andreas!
@ Andrew Rooney, Simon is from the UK. I presume you are from the UK as well. The UK is known for great Drummers. Phil Collins is a great Drummer. And the list is Vast. Just came across your Channel for the first time. Enjoyed your critique. I am a Bass Player from Detroit Michigan USA. You drummers keep the pulse, us Bass players will guide the ship. Peace.
You had me at Simon Phillips but as soon as I saw Greg Howe on guitar, I knew it was going to be special. The audio quality is spectacular and yes, Phillips' drum tones are pretty much perfect. The cymbal on Phillips' left is a 22" or 24" China "Swish". It's quite a bit more mellow than a normal china.
Simon could solo on the rims and hardware and we’d be in awe!!😂
Simon is just ridiculously good.
Absolute master of groove!!!
EDIT : Again, Andy, you have the BEST Patreons !! This is SO amazing. I always love the fusion sound more than any genre. I remember Greg Howe from the Shrapnel Records days. I've never seen a drummer play open handed, as opposed to crossover.
There are a few guys who play open handed. It's actually very logical. Especially if you are a lefty
Probably THE best drummer around now...
So much great material from Simon! Two that have always stuck out to me are Let My Love Open the door by Townsend and Into the Arena by Michael Schenker Group. Both 1980 releases, so a great year for Simon!
Flawless amazing timing 😎
🙌
Kudos to guitarist Greg Howe and the superb bassist Ernest Tibbs here too!
holy frickin sht... i got today with this drunk dude, that gave me acoustic guitar to play him some stuff. last time i had guitar in my hands 3yrs ago. acoustic? like 15yrs... i was so ashamed that i can't play it anymore, cause ofc bass... now with this piece, same day? "i don't want to play on this planet anymore" :D
HAHA!
Great Keyboard/Drum solo in 9 !!!!!!
Amazing, you gotta love those Tama Drums they sounded beautiful
I just saw Protocol play tonight at the Baked Potato in Los Angeles and Simon Phillips is God.
Great!!
Hey!! I did request Simon Phillips in a comment, months ago. You just broke my heart, Andrew. hahaha
I've suggested a video of him playing with the Hiromi Uehara Trio - Move, at Blue Note Tokyo. :)
I never forgot about Simps Philipps. He plays on so many great records for such an amazing long time already and always shines. The guitarist here sounds as little bit like Alan Holdsworth. And the keyboarder looks like Diego Maradona, but is thankfully very alive.
As another comment said, the stuff Simon has done with Hiromi is out of this world! When you have time you should check some out😊
Sin After Sin by Judas Priest. Excellent album made even better by Simon's drumming.
Oh nice! Thanks Dean!
I love seeing how people have their kits set up. In addition to all of the things you pointed out, it’s interesting to me that his throne is so low and his cymbals are so high. Whatever works.
I don't know if his throne is necessarily that low - it's just that Simon Phillips is an elf. Seriously, he's a tiny guy. I have no idea how he can navigate those toms up so high over 24-inch bass drums. I'm 5'10", and I can barely get my kit comfortable with a 22-inch kick.
@@joeday4293 good point. Looking at his leg angle, his throne may not be that low but everything else is super high. Interesting to watch and clearly he has no trouble with it.
Good to see you brother
Hey Don!
What a monster kit!
Maradona plays mean keyboards lol. What an awesome take.
WOW !!!!!
Bout time Andy... Simon sez meee
Hmhmhmhm !!! Damm that was good, and for myself in most of the record 2 or 3 record to get the perfect one is sufficient !!! Peace !!
Ladies and Gentleman.... Diego Maradonna on Keyboard! 🤣🤣🤣
It is my understanding that swish knockers were used by jazz players as alternate ride cymbals from way back. Some jazz players would even put rivets in to create a really sizzling wash under the ride pattern. Swish knockers usually have a cup shaped bell unlike the squarish profile of true chinas, so their sound is a little less harsh sounding than regular chinas. They are still pretty loud, though, so in some situations one has to be a little gentle when crashing if one doesn't to overwhelm the music.
I started playing open-handed because I wanted to "strengthen" my left hand. Unlike many open players like Simon Phillips, Carter Beauford and Billy Cobham, I chose to keep my ride on the right side. Mainly because I wanted to still play on other drummers' kits (such as in a open jam session) without having to move anything.
I've heard that Carter Beauford and Billy Cobham are actually left handed, so it would make sense for them to have their rides on the left side close to their hi-hats. Simon Phillips has said he started playing open style to accommodate the multi-tom set-up while keeping his toms at the same level. I guess he felt it made sense to have the same hand doing all the ride patterns.
There are some advantages to playing open handed. I found easier to breathe, especially when singing. In my case, anyway, playing with my right arm reaching across in front of my chest to reach the hi-hat seemed to restrict my rib cage a bit. And playing a pattern between the toms is so much easier when using the right on the toms and the left on the hi-hat. Another area where open style is particularly helpful is when the groove has an accented note on the hi-hat just before a snare back beat; such as accenting the up beats on the hats while playing 2 and 4 on the snare. I find that as one hand is coming down to play the accent on the hi-hat the other hand is coming up to prepare for the loud back beat on the snare, it can be pretty tricky with the hands crossed, at least for a klutz like me. But with open style, neither hand is impeded by the other. Each hand is free to prepare for the coming accent regardless of what the other hand is doing.
Anyway, thanks for the video, Andrew. Simon Phillips is one of those drummers with awesome chops and a great pocket. Check out his playing on Pete Townshend's solo albums in the early eighties for some great pocket grooves.
The big "china" he's riding on is a 1979 Zildjian 24" Swish Knocker. One of only two Simon claims.
Mr Phillips is also a kick ass producer, which helps explains his stellar drum sound. For something heavier check out Pesadelo from Derek Sherinian’s album The Phoenix. Kiko Loureiro plays guitar on it.
I saw Simon twice live with Hiromi Uehara Trio.He is a beast....
Legend
Andrew, if you haven't done so already, check out this video of Simon playing with Pete Townshend and David Gilmour in the 80s. The energy is unreal!
th-cam.com/video/LeXf90OGTHE/w-d-xo.html
Watch the guitar center Simon Phillips and Gavin Harrison Drum-off . There’s 4 rounds to the battle. 4vids.
I play open handed like him, not on purpose, it just happened that way. Allways thought this guy was incredible
He's a great role model for open handed players. Open handed makes total sense also!
@@AndrewRooneyDrums absolutely! I used to be a little self concious of it when I was young but I'm proud of it. Especially with guys like this around lol
Probably not at the leading edge of drumming so much now, but I don’t care. He’s still my all time favourite drummer. I first heard him when he joined Toyah’s band and he bent my head! He sounded like no one else around at the time. In an age which saw liberal use of gaffa tape, he was one of the first to have his drums undamped in any way except for the bass drums. Sound engineers would struggle with that until they twigged the benefits. He’s actually right handed too, but just found that open handed playing gave him more facility round the kit.
I didn't know he's right handed. That was a big surprise to me.
And that's a 24" Swish, by Zildjian.
Swish Knocker! The Swish is lighter than the very thick heavy Swish Knocker that has a pingy low pitched ride sound! Beautiful!!
The ghost notes he was playing were so tasty.
That was nice. As a rule I never delete the first take.
Blimey..that was good
Yes Ken!
I'm going to listen to this song as I play Mario Kart
Fn Bonkers. Reminds me a bit of Heavy Machinery (w/ Allan Holdsworth).
Seriously nutso Justin!
If I'm remembering correctly....Simon has a TH-cam video on why/how he plays open-handed.
I've seen him live at a clinic and he must have talked about it at that also. I can't remember to be honest
@@AndrewRooneyDrums and yes....very Weckl-like. Maybe even Mike Mangini. All three ambidextrous. Great to see and hear, for sure.
Apologies in advance for a novel of a comment, but I've got a lot to unpack from this video (which I already loved) and your commentary:
1) Listen to those toms, kids - clear Ambassadors, wide open. You don't really need all that muffling, do you? What if your drums could sound like this instead?
2) Simon Phillips has been playing the same China cymbal since Jimmy Carter was President. What's your excuse for cracking yours? Or, seriously, any other cymbal? In nearly 30 years as a drummer, the only cymbals with cracks I have ever owned, I bought that way. Learn how to properly mount and play your cymbals, kids. It will save you a fortune. Your cymbals don't HAVE to break, unless you simply insist on breaking them.
3) Speaking of that china, riding on the china in heavy music was pretty much invented by Billy Cobham, a hero of Simon's, and a titan of our instrument who really deserves some shine on your channel. In fact, Simon's kit is quite obviously inspired by Billy's: double bass, open-handed setup, lots of China ride. Think Alex Van Halen invented the double bass shuffle with "Hot For Teacher"? Think Simon invented it on Jeff Beck's "Freeway Jam"? Think again - Billy Cobham, 1973, "Quadrant 4." Seriously, if you are reading these words, and you are not hip to Billy Cobham's watershed 1973 album "Spectrum," stop your everything and buy a copy immediately. Just for starters, it's where Phil Collins and Neil Peart got the idea for triplet rolls on high-pitched toms.
4) The debate about cross-handed vs. open-handed playing is very aptly described by a term my high school music theory teacher used to use all the time: "convention," meaning, the only real reason we do it this way is because we've always done it this way. If you want to do it the other way, nothing is stopping you. Just play whichever way helps you execute this art to your fullest potential. With regard to music theory and "convention," my teacher would say, "These practices evolved over centuries. It's not like a couple of Italian monks got drunk one night in 1532 and invented all the rules." The orientation of the drumset evolved organically over time, and I play cross-handed because I learned that way. I'm not about to sit here and get all holier-than-thou about open-handed playing when guys like Billy Cobham and Simon Phillips and Carter Beauford exist, who could all smoke me with one hand tied behind their backs.
Great video, great review. How about some Billy Cobham next?
Fantastic comments there Joe.
And yup some Billy would be great!
Not many drummers these days have more drums than cymbals on their kit. Then again, tuning your drums to a point where they are a melodic and not just rhythmical instrument is not every drummers priority sadly.
Diego Maradonna at the keys. 😝
4:56 swish cymbal
Burners Purdie has a china he uses as a ride and crash.
Excellent Jeff!
Nice to see Diego Maradona in keyboards 😋
Longtime drummer of Toto.
Hoping you get a chance to check out Tarn Softwhip, an incredible drummer who's done amazing covers of Avenged Sevenfold and just all around awesome in general.
WHAT HAPPENED TO RUSH WEEK
We'll get there!
Analog 🤙🤙
Nice choice Andrew, Thank you. Can you react to Mike Portnoy studio vidoe's with Dream Theater Please?
I did recommend Simon. But Hey I am nobody lol ;)
Yes I'm sure people have recommended him in the past without me seeing the comment!
Check out Tommy Aldrich.
In my uneducated opinion, I think the playing style (cross-over,open hand,etc) should be dictated by economy / efficiency for that players particular goal (genre,ideas) and their dominant hand. Eventually learning to be somewhat ambidextrous without sacrificing the musicality can be helpful.
Btw, I think you'd dig Neural Code (I couldn't find any quality live videos): th-cam.com/video/J9D6J0v3NW4/w-d-xo.html
Didn't know Diego Maradona could play keyboards
Diego Maradona on keyboards with his last public appearance before his untimely death!
I started catching up on his older work with Hiromi Uehara. It’s a trio and they are just amazing together. Simon and Gavin are in my opinion the most melodically innovative. True Simon gets sadly overlooked.
I think a lot of viewers only know who's killing it on TH-cam sometimes. And don't realize there are super drummers out there!
First! Awesome!!!
Open handed is best.
I think the problem with getting subs is they won,t get a request played unless they become patreon or PayPal change your format have a couple of days or weeks just PayPal requests and patreon also include just subs request every one gets a shot it,s about music exploration not cash that's this Canadiens take should improve ratio but you might not see it I,m only a sub 🙄🦇😱
I hear you!
But how? Couple of hundred comments per day requesting... so I do one of those requests? Still hundreds of requests I can't do.
And btw. I've done a heap of requests from the comments section. ie 'Bleed' and 'Pneuma' to name a few
Meean
Individual musicianship is obviously outstanding but I find it all rather soulless. Seems more of an exercise in technique rather than producing a memorable musical experience. Diego Maradonna on keyboards though, was there no end to the man's talents!