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Josh Freese In Demand Looking at Josh
Freese across a Starbucks table, it's hard to believe I've known him
since he was
eleven years old. Suddenly it struck me that he was then
the same age that my son is now, and the comparison was
mind-blowing.
At eleven years old, Josh was already fiercely into his instrument. He
had a career focus and a true
commitment. When I met this kid, I
wondered to myself if his ambition would last.
Well, Josh's
passion
hasn't wavered for a moment. Having just turned thirty, he has produced
a body of work that most musicians
wouldn't have the opportunity to
complete by age fifty. And although the eyes looking back at me today
have an obvious
maturity (he and significant other Nicole Amdurer are
parents of an almost two-year-old, Hunter Cole), Josh's enthusiasm
for
the work is still wonderfully childlike.
Freese took the instrument seriously from the get-go. His first
drum
teacher was Ron Romano, who he started with when he was eight.
Unfortunately that relationship ended when
Josh's dad, the director for
the band at Disneyland in California, got Ron a job playing down at
Disney World in Florida. "I
cried when Ron left," Josh admits. But
watching his dad direct the Disneyland band, combined with playing to
Devo records in
his bedroom, seemed to be a productive next step for
Freese, whose other significant teacher was Roy Burns. "He was a
great
teacher," Josh says. "I've tried to teach, and I suck at it. People ask
me all the time to give them lessons,
and I tell them not to waste
their time. Some guys are great teachers and some guys aren't." Josh
has also taken
lessons with drum giants like Terry Bozzio and Gregg
Bissonette.
Another "tutor" for young Josh was Vinnie
Colaiuta. The
two met at a NAMM show when Josh was eleven, and it turned out to be an
invaluable experience for the
youngster, as Vinnie began regularly
inviting him and his father down to LA club the Baked Potato to see the
master play.
"I'd sit behind Vinnie," Josh says, "and I'd leave being
half-inspired and half-discouraged. He was phenomenal, and
then he'd be
cool enough the next day when I'd call him at 9 A.M. to answer my
stupid questions, like, "What kind
of bass drum beater were you using
last night?" He had probably gotten to bed two hours before, but he was
always cool to
me."
At that same NAMM show, Josh's life took a major turn, when, while
banging away on some Simmons
electronic kits, the company took notice
of his impressive playing and asked him to represent their company to
the youth
market. Simmons sent Freese to various NAMM shows to
demonstrate the product, and even put him in a commercial. The
only
drawback for Josh was that he became tagged as "an electronic drummer,"
and he spent the next three years as the
electronic drummer beside the
set drummer in a Disneyland band called Polo.
By age fifteen, Freese was itching to have
some different experiences.
"I grew up a huge Devo fan," he admits, "but by the time I was eleven
or twelve, I had read many
articles in Modern Drummer
with Terry Bozzio, Vinnie Colaiuta, and Chad Wackerman, where they were
saying,
"Playing with Frank Zappa was so challenging - playing with Frank
was so this - playing with Frank was so that"." So I started
going out
and buying Zappa records, and I became infatuated with that music at a
pretty young and impressionable
age."
A chance meeting with Frank
Zappa's son Ahmet brought Freese to Ahmet's brother
Dweezil's
attention. Although he never played with Frank, Josh did have the
thrill of watching him in the studio, and he
did get to play with
Dweezil. It was in Dweezil's trio that Josh came in contact with one of
his greatest mentors, Frank
Zappa bassist Scott Tunis, who turned the
youngster on to punk rock. Aside from opening musical doors, Tunis, who
was
already an adult, taught Freese an even greater lesson about
maintaining an open mind.
When Dweezil took a
break, Freese landed his first major tour with
Michael Damian, and eventually came in contact with the bands
Infectious
Grooves and Suicidal Tendencies. Before he knew it, Josh was
getting an abundance of session calls for his ability in the studio
to
play spot-on but a little left of center. In the early '90s, he hooked
up with the punk band The Vandals and recorded
and gigged with Paul
Westerberg. Albums by Juliana Hatfield, Meredith Brooks, Chris Cornell,
Tracy Bonham, Indigo Girls,
and A Puddle Of Mudd followed. Before he
knew it, Josh was surprised to find himself voted number-2 studio
drummer in the
Modern Drummer Readers Poll.
Freese has never stopped long enough to realize that he is, in fact, a
top
studio musician, or fully acknowledge the recognition his position
has brought him. Heck, Josh wasn't even aware that he
had recorded half
of the recent multi-million selling album by Avril Lavigne until way
after its release. At that time, it had been
just another session with
a producer he knows. Listeners can be forgiven for not knowing all of
Josh's big credits, too, for
instance, his uncredited appearance on
Puddle Of Mudd's huge Come Clean
album. Sometimes the project
name changes by the time the music is on
the radio, so Freese is always amused when he finds out that he's
the
drummer on the song he's hearing on the radio.
According to Freese,
many times the scenario goes like
this: "I'll get a call from a
producer who says, "Josh, I need you in the studio next week. The band
is back wherever they
live. We have all the Pro Tools files open - it
will be you, me, the computer, and an engineer. You have to redo three
or four
songs. So I'll go in, knock out the tunes, and a lot of times
I don't even hear the finished record. Sometimes it ends
up being a hit
without my even realizing it."
After being a member of Guns N' Roses between 1998 and
2000, Josh left
in favor of the varied menu of music to which he had become accustomed.
He continues to play on and off with
The Vandals and Paul Westerberg,
while consistently getting involved with new projects that turn him on,
such as A Perfect
Circle, whose debut album, Mer De Noms, garnered critical acclaim right out the gate, and an offshoot called
Tapeworm.
"Almost every one of my heroes I've tracked down, become friends with,
and gotten to work alongside
of," Josh says. "A lot of those people
don't make a ton of money, but as a fan, a kid who was always more into
the
underdog, that's the music I fell in love with. Before there was
alternative music, I was into it. I've gotten to work with
people who I
consider to be true artists, and to me that's way more rewarding than
the big money. I've played with
some big-money people, too, but that's
never the motivation."
MD: How do you explain the
seriousness you had about your
instrument and career at such an early age? You were considered a bit
of a child
prodigy.
Josh: I was infatuated with music and drums at an early age. I
come from a pretty musical
family. My grandparents on my dad's side
both taught music in school, my mom is a classical pianist, and my dad,
who
is mainly a tuba player, was conducting the band down at Disney
World in Florida when I was born. Thank God he was
transferred to the
California Disneyland when I was six months old.
There was so much
music in my house. My
earliest memories are watching my dad conduct the
big band and jazz band at Disneyland. I remember getting a trumpet
for
Christmas when I was six, and I played that for about four months. But
my dad had an endorsement with the brass
department at Yamaha, and
somehow he also had a drumset from them, which was up in our attic. It
was a Yamaha
Recording series kit, which is a pretty extravagant first
kit.
The earliest pictures of me playing were when I was
seven or eight,
standing, with huge '70s headphones on, with a snare drum and a cymbal,
Stray Cats' Slim Jim
Phantom style. That might have lasted about a
month before I got the nerve to ask my parents if we could bring the
whole
drumset down from the attic.
I remember my dad sat down behind the drumset and played the simplest
4/4 beat,
and it sounded like a record to me. He told me to try it, and
I was able to do it right away. I started playing to Van Halen,
Queen,
and Devo records. It's ironic that I've gotten to play with Devo; It's
such a dream come true to play
with people I've admired since I was in
first grade.
I never really noticed that music and drumming was this
big serious
thing for me. But my mom remembers how I'd get up at 7:00 A.M. to call
Zildjian on the East Coast before I
went to school. I'd be talking shop
with [veteran cymbal expert and artist relations manager] Lenny DiMuzio
when I was
in the fifth grade. I just think I had a lot of
determination then and, really, I still feel that same drive now. I'm
still trying to
improve, and I never take anything for granted. It
comes down to my feeling so fortunate that I can do what I love for a
living.
You don't have to be rich and famous to feel successful or feel
good about your work.
I'm really
happy about where I'm at and where I've been. Working with
people like Devo and Paul Westerberg from The
Replacements, people I've
been a fan of, is much more important than working with whatever big
names in music you
can mention. I just recently got to play with a band
I'm a huge fan of, Ween. I made less money on that record than I
have
on any other record I've done this year. But artistically and
creatively it meant more to me than anything
else.
MD: To what do you attribute your success as a studio player?
Josh: I think
it's a combination of being into a lot of
different kinds of music and understanding a lot of different kinds of
music, and
being open to things. I still feel that I have a hunger and
a fire inside of me. I'm not jaded. I mean, I've been touring
since I
was fifteen, so sometimes I roll my eyes about something. But I always
catch myself. If I'm complaining about
something, I'll laugh and go,
"Why am I complaining about the food backstage? Who cares? I'm in New
York City
tonight, playing music for a living."
I think the fact
that I still love playing music makes a difference. A lot of it,
I
think, has to do with the fact that I got less into the circus tricks
and more into people like Keltner, Jordan, and Porcaro. I
think what
also was important for me was playing other instruments and
songwriting. I'm just as inspired by songwriters
as I am by drummers,
which can't help but come out in my drumming.
It's important to draw
inspiration from whatever you're inspired by.
And it's important to understand what's going on around you, as far
as
what the bass player is doing, what the lyrics are saying, and what the
guitarist is playing. Listening is all-important -
listening to music in
the car, going out and hearing people play, and then when you're in the
studio, listening to
what's going on around you and being supportive of
that, being a team player rather than a hot dog. Get into
country
music, punk rock music, everything - Willie Nelson, The Ramones, Elvis
Costello, Tom Petty. It's so important
to be open.
Robyn Flans
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