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Mike Fasano Finding His Own Niche When Warrant drummer
Mike Fasano graduated from high school, he skipped college and signed
to a
cruise-ship gig. "I was playing in an all-purpose lounge
band - cha-chas, rumbas, waltzes, and "I Just Called To Say I Love
You,?"
he says. "I could play drums, but I didn't know how to play any of
that." Luckily, the ship's big-band
drummer took Mike under his wing
and showed him the ropes. "That turned out to be the best thing I ever
did," he admits. "I
learned how to play, traveled the world, and made
money." Now when asked where he went to school, Mike replies,
"Princess
Cruises University."
After four years at sea, Mike's close friend Matt Sorum convinced
the
drummer to stay land-locked. "Matt was playing with Guns N' Roses at
the time and said, "You're a good
drummer; you need to stay in town. If
you're out on those ships for four months at a time, you can't audition
for
Madonna or whoever." Mike took Matt's advice and started climbing
the ladder of LA's closely knit music scene,
recording and touring with
former GN'R guitarist Gilby Clarke and playing in his own band, Dad's
Porno Mag. In
January 2000, he got the offer to join the resurging
heavy metal outfit Warrant.
When Mike isn't on the road with
Warrant, he stays busy as one of LA's
premier drum techs, a job he literally fell into after working as
Sorum's tech
on sessions for GN'R's Spaghetti Incident.
"From that," Mike says, "I became a different option to the other
drum
tech/rental guys in town. Maybe all of the time I spent fooling around
with heads and drums over the years is
what's helped me. I can go into
sessions and understand what's going on with the music and what the
bands
need."
Mike's teching r'sum' includes artists such as Blink-182, Green Day,
Goo Goo Dolls, and
Mick Fleetwood. In addition to his technical
expertise, he also owns an extensive collection of drums, including
classic
Ludwigs and Gretsches, DWs, and his favorites, Pork Pies, which
he rents out for use on sessions.
"This is the
greatest job I could do," Mike says. "But I wouldn't be a good drum tech if I wasn't a drummer
first."
Gail Worley
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