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John Otto The Limp Bizkit Otto Hour "Developing things like
soloing and independence
is an ongoing battle. Working on that stuff
will never stop until you leave this Earth."
Four years ago, when John
Otto was first featured in Modern Drummer,
the then twenty-three-year-old spoke with a wisdom and knowledge
that
belied his age. "When I started listening to jazz, I didn't understand
the music," Otto said. "But I thought,
'These guys wouldn't have any
problems playing any kind of music.' I wanted to be able to do
that."
Through hard work and practice, Otto has exceeded his wildest musical
dreams, turning himself into a
monster drummer. He's incorporated jazz
fluency and groove efficiency into a drumming style that is his and his
alone.
And as a member of Limp Bizkit, a band that creates their
chart-topping songs through collective improvisation, Otto has had
the
chance to stretch his chops and test his metal. With singer Fred Durst,
bassist Sam Rivers, DJ Lethal, and new guitarist
Mike Smith, Otto has
achieved something rare in these days of soulless pop stars, motorized
hip-hop, and Pro Tools
machinery.
Typically recorded without a click track, Limp Bizkit's mammoth grooves
are as natural as the
jungle and often just as ferocious, all thanks to
Otto's slippery and smoking 2-and-4 alignment. The band has also
been
quite resourceful, evolving in ways that pretenders to their throne
could never imagine. At the center of their growth is an
outlook that
admits everything and denies nothing. Rap? Jazz? Metal? Hip-hop? It's
all there in the Bizkit brand, and it
starts from the ground up with
John Otto's inclusive worldview of drumming styles past and present.
Grounded in metal, jazz, and hip-hop, Otto's fireball rhythms are the
grease that makes the Bizkit cook. A
native of Jacksonville, Florida,
Otto grew up listening to everyone from John Bonham and Lars Ulrich to
Elvin Jones and Bill
Stewart. Beyond simple lip service to the greats
of jazz, Otto has put in serious woodshed time and academic study,
starting
back at his days at the Anderson School Of The Performing Arts
and moving forward to high school drum corps and individual
instruction
with noted teacher Rick Kirkland. Otto spent time deconstructing
Elvin's solos as well as Bonham's
sound. And he's studied the mad
genius of Vinnie Colaiuta, but also the academic texts of Ted Reed and
Kim Plainfield.
More recently, Otto has recorded his own loops CD and mastered the art
of playing two bass drums. (Besides
the usual way of playing double
bass, he's developed a technique of playing two pedals simultaneously
with one foot.)
Otto has also started his own media company. And he has
somehow found the time to record Limp Bizkit's latest release,
Results May Vary.
On the band's previous hit album, Chocolate Starfish And The Hot Dog
Flavored Water,
Otto put his years of experience and expertise to the test, merging
feline hip-hop grooves and furious
sticking with the band's
freewheeling jams. The drummer popped it low and mean on "Hot Dog," got
loose and lumbering
on "My Generation," wailed like Bonham on steroids
in "Full Nelson," and laid down cannonball grooves on "Livin' It
Up,"
"Take A Look Around," and the caterwauling "Boiler."
Results May Vary
reveals an Otto of a
different stripe. The band has changed gears,
replacing a guitarist and adding a harder, more menacing approach.
Results
is a dropkick to the groin with hardly a moment to catch your breath.
Otto is merciless throughout. From "Eat
You Alive" and "Gimme The Mic"
to "Creamer," he shows why he's one of the most versatile, creative,
fluid, and fiery
drummers working today.
MD: Most people don't think of drummers playing metal or
hip-hop as
being particularly expressive, but you're extremely open,
flexible, and fluid. Is that all because of your extensive training?
John: I think it is. It's all those hours in the practice room
and a lot of playing experience. After all that
time spent on the
instrument, you get to a point where you don't have to think about
things. Your playing becomes like a
language, where you're simply
speaking your mind, getting your thoughts out without having to think
of the words.
MD: A lot of jazz drummers are into certain rock drummers, but
it's not usually the other way around.
Most metal guys wouldn't know
Elvin Jones from The Muppets' Animal.
John: I listened to Elvin
Jones a lot. Years ago I
studied with this dude named Rick Kirkland. When I went to him for
lessons, I told him I
wanted to be able to play jazz. At that point I
couldn't play it and I didn't understand it, but the music amazed
me. It sounded cool. I eventually got into albums like Miles Davis's Bitches Brew. I was into Dave Weckl for a minute.
To this day, I always listen to Vinnie Colaiuta, and, of course, Steve Gadd.
MD: Why did you ultimately pursue
rock over jazz?
John: That's what I grew up with. I listened to Metallica, but
also Big Daddy Kane. For me,
it was always metal and rap. I'm a product
of that generation. I make beats. That said, I was influenced by
a lot of
different music coming up. When I got into studying drums, I
decided to study it all. I don't claim to be a super-jazzer, but I
can
read charts, and I love to play samba.
MD: You have that fluidity, which makes everything feel good.
John: That's what it's all about.
Ken Micallef
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