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Jordan Burns Punk Attitude, Prog Chops 'You can put a Rush record on and steal a drum fill today,'
says Strung Out drummer Jordan Burns. 'It's endless just how many drum fills you can steal from Neil
Peart.'
Weaned on a strict diet of Peart ('my number-one influence, for sure'),
Burns has been
constantly working to blend his progressive nature with
the raw aggression of early SoCal punk drummers like Chuck
Biscuits,
Lucky Lehrer, and Derek O'Brien. He's been following this recipe in
Strung Out since he joined in 1993,
and it's paid off for the band,
which performs melodic hardcore punk with a definite metal edge. 'I
think my playing
style really helped make the whole package complete,'
the drummer says.
Growing up in Southern California,
Burns performed in a handful of
local acts before settling in with Strung Out. However, joining the act
meant immediately rising
to some rather tough challenges. That's
because after only six rehearsals, Burns found himself in a recording
studio,
cutting the band's debut full-length.
Fast-forward just over a decade, with countless tours and several
hundred
thousand albums sold, and you'll find Burns on Strung Out's
latest, Exile In Oblivion.
The album feature the
most double-kick action found in the Strung Out
catalog. 'I had to really work on my double-kick skills,' he
notes.
'the kicks are just flying on this record, and I had to brush up on my
skills for that. It's just something you
can't stop practicing.
'I can almost relate it to riding a dirt bike,' says the drummer, who's
an
avid motocross racer. Burns even owns his own team, MotoXXX. 'The
best way to train for riding is to ride. I feel the same
way about
drumming.'
For more information on all of Burns' activities, check out www.strungout.com and www.motoxxx.com.
Waleed Rashidi
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