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Steve Gadd Opens Up There's a whole lot
of drumming going on. Hundreds of thousands of people currently play
the drums.
Through the years, perhaps millions have played. But
in spite of all that drumming, just a couple of dozen
amazing
innovators have shown us the way. Of course, Steve Gadd is a member of
that group, but he's also a member
of an even more elite bunch; Steve
is one of the very few drummers whose innovations changed the way other
musicians
heard music.
Gadd first came to national attention in
the early 1970s through associations with such jazz luminaries as
Chuck
Mangione and Chick Corea. But he quickly established pop and funk
credentials as well with artists such as Paul
Simon (his innovative
drum part on Simon's "Fifty Ways To Leave Your Lover" became his
best-known showcase) and
the band Stuff. Gadd soon became one of the
busiest drummers in New York, and the hundreds of albums he appeared
on
inspired legions of young drummers to aspire to careers as studio
musicians.
Over the past decade, Gadd has
spent a lot of time on the road, doing
major tours with Paul Simon, James Taylor, and Eric Clapton. He
continues to appear
on notable albums, such as Simon's You're The One (2000), Clapton's One More Car, One More
Rider (2001), Taylor's October Road (2002), and David Sanborn's Time Again (2003). Due out soon
are DVD and CD versions of Corea's "Three Quartets" band recorded live.
Gadd was recently in the studio with
Clapton, and will be touring with
the guitar legend shortly. Also recently released are DVD versions of
Gadd's classic
instructional videos Up Close (1983) and In Session
(1985), and in September Gadd was honored by Zildjian with
an American
Drummer Achievement Award. (A Gadd tribute DVD that ties in with the
event will soon be released by Hudson
Music, who also included a recent
performance by Steve's band The Gadd Gang on the Drummers Collective 25th
Anniversary DVD.)
In the past, Steve has tended to let his playing do the talking.
Steve's openness, and
the insights he shares in the following
interview, may well change the way we play and hear music yet
again.
MD: I was a freshman at North Texas State in 1972, and my
teacher was John Gates, who had
been in the Army with you. He told me,
"There's this guy that nobody knows about named Steve Gadd, and
he's
something else." That began my search for your recordings. Chuck
Mangione's Alive was the first
record I heard you on, and the
groove was incredible. Your solos on "High Heal Sneakers" and "St.
Thomas" have the clarity
of Max Roach, and there is an incredible
fluidity and a contemporary slant. Do you recall what you were
listening to and
practicing at that time?
Steve: That was done right after I moved to New York. I had
just gotten out of the
Army, and before that I was in school. My main
background was listening to guys like Gene Krupa, Buddy Rich, Max
Roach,
Elvin Jones, Philly Joe Jones, Tony Williams, and Art Blakey.
Then I got to New York and started hearing some funk players, so
I
started to concentrate more on the groove than on the freedom of
straight-ahead stuff. One of the first guys I heard that had a
really
great groove was Rick Marotta.
MD: So he was established before you?
Steve: We both
got to New York around the same time. But he
grew up with a different background'more of a backbeat thing?and he
had
a hell of a pocket. Still does. So having come from the kind of
background I came from and then hearing that groove, I was
inspired to
technically emulate those jazz guys but to put some of that stuff in a
great pocket.
MD: I hear
that in your earliest recordings. How did you develop that deep, relaxed pocket?
Steve: I think it's a matter of
being aware of it and trying to
do it. No matter how "out" and over-the-bar whoever you're trying to
sound like did it, the
challenge is to try and do it in a way where
you're paying tribute to what they did but that is understandable in
terms of a
groove.
MD: Did you have a method for practicing that?
Steve: No, it was just a matter of
being in a situation where I
had the chance to record and hear it back. That's a tremendous
education right there,
because there are a lot of things you do in the
studio that get very creative and exciting, and you think they sound
great, but
on playback you can tell it's jumbled up and not easy for
the listener to understand. So you go back and simplify some
things and
you find out that it's a lot more understandable when you leave some
space. So being in the studio and
hearing things back was a good
education. And then years later, when they started using clicks, when
things got exciting you
could tell where you got away from the click.
So those were ways of testing yourself and trying to develop the
pocket.
MD: Your playing is highly supportive and highly interactive.
But there's also a transparency. Although the
playing may be busy, it
doesn't create interference.
Steve: When you're playing high-energy music
in the studio, a lot of times when the soloist gets busy, everyone gets busy. I've learned that that's the time to
not
get busy and just be supportive. When he takes a breath, that's a
better time to play something in terms
of being a support player. You
have to pick and choose your spots, sort of like filling in the blanks.
MD: I was
in the studio once in the early '80s watching you do a Dave Liebman record called What It Is.
I remember the
rhythm section putting down a track, and then Dave put a
saxophone solo on. The groove was kind of static, but he played on
top,
behind, and all around the time, and it was a really interesting
contrast. Mike Mainieri was producing, and after Dave put
his solo on,
I remember Mainieri saying that something was missing. You said, "I
have an idea." You went in and made a
pass that corresponded to the
saxophone solo. Do you remember that?
Steve: I remember working with Dave,
but I don't remember that particular session. What condition was I in?
MD: At that time you seemed to be
burning the candle at both
ends. You were playing sessions all day, and then I remember you
playing at Mikel's all
night. It seemed like an amazingly stimulating
but exhausting period.
Steve: Yeah, it was a great period, but
it was pretty exhausting. So I don't remember that particular session. How did it come out?
MD: It came out
incredible. You did exactly what you were just
describing: following the emotional path that he was on, but not
talking when he
was talking, so to speak.
Steve: I've found over the years that the feel overcomes
everything. If you get a
good groove happening, that carries it along.
If it feels good, there's not a lot you have to do. You can pick and
choose
your spots to dynamically respond to what's going on, but you
don't have to technically, constantly challenge yourself
to fill in
those spaces. When you play live, it's another ballgame. People
can see the excitement, and that helps
them put it together with the
audio. When you don't have that visual thing, it's better to keep it
simple. It's a
lot more understandable.
John Riley
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