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Dave Grohl Returning To His Roots
With Probot Many drummers have
hit it big since the post-metal resurgence of the early '90s. But no
one has had the
impact and influence of Dave Grohl. With the full-body
flam and bass drum contortions of Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen
Spirit,"
Grohl forever changed drumming, turning Muppet-like heavy metal
caricatures into what Grohl himself calls "a
drummer's sport." There
had been pummeling protagonists of the drums before, but none exacted
his level of pop
craftsmanship, instinctive technique, and innovative
song interpretation.
Today, with the all-Grohl supergroup
Probot,
Dave returns to the drums with a vengeance. The molar-flashing
Virginia native has once again confirmed his status as one of the
most
intuitive, musical, and creative drummers of this generation. He's also
proving to be a quick-witted musician
unafraid to follow his heart's
ambition.
Popularizing the now ubiquitous quiet/loud formula with Nirvana,
Grohl
supported the moody and often manic songs of Kurt Cobain with a style
that crossed the classicism of a Ringo Starr
with the head-goring
aggression of Grohl's hardcore heroes, Kent Stax, Bill Stevenson, Dave
Lombardo, and Earl
Hudson. Add a love of Tony Thompson, D.C.'s go-go
funk scene, and one of the goofiest grins in rock, and you have
Dave
Grohl's recipe for success.
But drumming was never enough for Grohl. With Nirvana's premature
end,
he founded pop-rockers Foo Fighters, eventually handing drum duties
over to the very capable Taylor Hawkins. The band
has sold millions of
records and even grabbed a Grammy.
Foo Fighters' third album, There Is Nothing
Left To Lose,
left Grohl searching for meaning beyond pop hooks and ear-shredding
volume with sweet songs like "Learn
To Fly." With a new lease on his
rock 'n' roll soul, Grohl and The Foos recorded One By One, but
he
yearned for a return to his hardcore drumming roots. Searching for
sustenance, Grohl did sessions with Reeves Gabrels, Killing
Joke, Tony
Iommi, and Tenacious D. With hardcore roots still calling, Grohl put
all his energy and considerable drumming
muscle into Probot.
Grohl's two-fisted tribute to the '80s hardcore canon, Probot was
conceived,
performed, and produced entirely in his Virginia basement
studio. What began as casual tracks laid down to Pro Tools over
a
couple of beers soon became a full-blown metal mission. Recruiting his
vocal heroes from such currently
lost-in-the-wilderness bands as
Motorhead, Mercyful Fate, Venom, Sepultura, and Voivod, Grohl created a
skull-crushing
blowout that is irony free and seriously
song-structured. As always, his unerring musicality turned what could
have been a
collection of novelty one-offs into a gripping gala of
pounding stoner rock.
At a recent Headbanger's
Ball
performance, Grohl and the assembled Probot "band" stomped through "My
Tortured Soul," one of a handful of tracks
where the drummer's implied
double bass drum trickery and all-or-nothing energy electrified the SRO
audience. Probot
reveals Dave Grohl in all his drumming glory, from the
introductory double bass stampede of "Red War" to the closing
Gothic
fog and ice bell ambience of "Sweet Dreams."
Other hardcore
highlights include the toxic tom executions
heard in "Shake Your
Blood," the speedball rhythms of "Access Babylon," the flying dinosaur
dynamics of "The Emerald
Law," and the agitated, neck-snapping suspense
of "Dictatosaurus." Throughout the album, Grohl lays down the kind
of
signature parts that will make air drummers the world over shout, "Beat
it with your fist, Dave!"
Similar, but
more metal-pop funky, Grohl also drummed on Queens Of The Stone Age's breakout 2002 album, Songs For The
Deaf.
Using unorthodox recording techniques and his full arsenal of
tom-truncheoned grooves, full-set triplet rollovers,
and roaring flam
punctuations, Grohl again created a template for rock drumming that
will be scoured, studied, and followed for
years to come. Obviously,
Dave Grohl is back at the drums in a big way.
MD: When you returned to
the drums for Probot, was there a moment when you realized your dream was becoming a reality?
Dave: The
whole thing started in January of 2000, after The Foo Fighters made There Is Nothing Left To Lose.
That was our first
record where we really started focusing on low-level
dynamics, acoustic sounds, and songs that moved from verse to
chorus
without surrendering to that quiet-loud dynamic. In '99, rock music was
becoming a victim of dynamics. I had a
lot of ideas and I wanted to see
where the melody took the songs rather than where the distortion pedal
could take them.
We started writing as a group in my studio
in Virginia, and the songs stemmed from jams. But it was petty
mellow.
Then on tour I would pop in a Sepultura record or Slayer's Reign In Blood
before hitting the stage. I
would listen to that music to get pumped up
to play "Learn To Fly." So I started questioning the direction I was
taking with my
music. I love that era of Foo Fighters music, but having
grown up listening to hardcore punk rock, underground metal, and
really
fast, sinister music, it seemed strange that it was absent from
anything else I was doing.
MD: Had you
lived out your singer/songwriter role?
Dave: It was all about challenging myself. I hated the sound of
my voice
and I questioned everything: my guitar playing, my
songwriting, and especially my drumming. To strip it all bare was a
real
test.
MD: So what does Probot represent?
Dave: Probot is just me going back to my roots
because I needed to prove to myself that I still had that music in me.
MD: When did you first start listening to
hardcore and metal?
Dave: I started listening to underground American hardcore in
1982. I had a relative that
turned me on to punk rock, and by '84 I was
completely immersed in it. That scene was totally independent
and
underground. I had my own fanzine, and I started a band. It really
instilled that "DIY" [do it yourself] ethic. I started
discovering
bands like Venom, Motorhead, Slayer, and Mercyful Fate, bands that were
similar to hardcore in that the
aggression, rebellion, and energy of
the music was still there, but they were even nastier.
MD: Did you study
the drummers in those bands?
Dave: Oh yeah. That's how I learned to play drums. I learned from listening to
my favorite albums. I would put on Rush's 2112
and try to play with Neil Peart. But then, as I listened to
hardcore
and metal, I realized it was a drummer's sport. I was really into Earl
Hudson [Bad Brains], John Wright [No
Means No], Jeff Nelson [Minor
Threat], and Dave Lombardo [Slayer]. I would learn all of their licks
verbatim. And I didn't
even have a drumset! This may sound dumb,
but I had a chair that was next to my bed, and I would kneel down on
the
floor and put a pillow between my legs to use as my snare. I would
use the chair to my left as the hi-hat and use the bed as
toms and
cymbals. And I would play to these records until there was condensation
dripping from the windows.
MD: Do you practice the drums now?
Dave: Sometimes, and there's so much
more I would love to
learn. I'm not even halfway there. I feel like I could be such a better
drummer, but I'm not a
drummer in a band at the moment. [laughs]
MD: But you always return to the drums.
Dave: Always.
Ken Micallef
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