I was listening to some classic rock this weekend and noticed that Steve Miller's drummer was pretty damn good. He was laying down funky grooves and innovative patterns in main stream radio way before I can recall anyone else.
Depends on the song - when it all began, in 1966, Tim Davis was his drummer, then Jack King. then John King played for the Joker album, Gary Mallaber for Fly like an Eagle, then Gordy Knudtson came on board with Born 2B Blue and (I believe) is still playing with him today.
I believe Henry Ford following some insult when he did not know a specific fact made a statment to the effect "I don't clutter my mind with facts when I know I can look the facts up"
Do you have a specific resource data base regarding who played on what song - or do you simply look at CD's in your collection?
I always read credits to see who is on a recording - but I rarely remember more than a day or two.
When I look for answers I generally check multiple sources to be certain of my answers.
When I was young I had almost a perfect photographic memory....... I could generally quote building and mechanical codes (among other things) verbatim - and tell you the page and paragraph they were on.
Now (oh so many years later) it's more of a sense and I have to check to verify my facts.
So today - in my profession - just as with my music - although I might not be as quick as when i was young - there is a strong maturity that exists and makes up for the small losses.
AMAZING!
I laughed when I realized that I said Dance Dance Dance
was a good song to play to.(My grampa...)
I meant, Come on and Dance.
Why is AJA a very fullfilled song both Musically and Production wise? What did they do to make that recording
so loud and full?