G
Greg_L
Banned
Being an actual live and recording drummer that regularly uses click tracks and finds it very easy to do so, I'm always a little suspicious and leery of any musician that shuns tempo guides. Any competent musician can play along to a click or without. A click track doesn't befuddle and/or infuriate a competent musician. It's not a big deal, for any style of music. Rock bands to classical, use a "click" WTF do you think a conductor is doing when he waves his little stick around? He's mixing the orchestra live as it happens....and providing the tempo. Any competent engineer or home recordist using a decent DAW or modern digital metronome can program a click track to do whatever you want it to do. Only hacks let a click track hurt the "feel" of their music. And that's because they probably suck. It's just a guide, and it's immeasurably useful for multitrack recording when you're laying down tracks piece by piece. Even live, playing as a band, you can wander around the click track. You don't have to let it lock you in like a robot. Speed up, slow down, charge through a chorus, and fall back in line for a verse or whatever. And furthermore, understanding the click makes you a better player when you're not using one. I'm not a great flashy drummer, but one thing I can do like a fucking king is hold my meter and drive the ship. I can only assume I picked up that trait by doing a lot of playing with metronomes/click tracks.