Artist Index
Most Viewed Articles
Photo Gallery
Blogs
News
Clinics and Events
The Showroom
Hear the Gear
Hear the Music
MD Videos
Accessories
Apparel
Back Issues (New Window)
Books
CDs
MD Digital Archive
Snare Drum Selects
Videos/DVDs
Print Subscription
(includes Digital Free)
Digital only Subscription
New Subscription
Gift Subscription
Renew Subscription
Digital Activation
Change Address / Email
Subscription Status
Cancel Subscription
Missing / Damaged Issue
Customer Service
Refer A Friend
New Subscription
Gift Subscription
Renew Subscription
Change Address / Email
Subscription Status
Cancel Subscription
Missing / Damaged Issue
Customer Service
Refer A Friend
Modern Drummer Magazine Current Issue

April 2010 
on NEWSSTANDS
03/05/10

  • The Flaming Lips'
  • Kliph Scurlock &
  • Steven Drozd
  • Alex Lopez
  • Deantoni Parks
  • and much more!

Subscribe
And Save !

RSS Feed on Modern Drummer Magazine Go to Home Page of Modern Drummer Magazine
Cart Empty
No Books
Drummers News and Events Contests Multimedia Shop Education Contact Subscriber Services
Go to Artist IndexTo Artist Index

Steve Reid 
(February 2009 Issue)

Flow Master

Steve Reid has performed and recorded with more artists than most drummers have shed sticks. From James Brown and Miles Davis to Jackie McLean, Four Tet, Fela Ransome Kuti, Chaka Khan, and the Barnam & Bailey Circus, Reid is a hypno-groove master. He does it again on Daxaar, the new album by his Steve Reid Ensemble. Recorded in Senegal with African musicians, Daxaar finds Reid laying down intense voodoo drumming based in Yoruban religious music. A former Black Panther, Reid’s music–and his commentary–speaks for itself.

    “A lot of drummers use drums that don’t sound like drums,” Reid believes. “For thirty years drums have been manufactured more for recording than for drum sound. They put mufflers in the heads, which cut down on the actual drum sound. Guys never hear an open drum with a ring, or learn how to control that ring to their advantage.”

    Playing a hybrid set of 1950s-era drums and cymbals, Reid often holds the groove for an entire song’s length without drum fills, crashes, or even a simple roll. “I got that from playing behind James Brown,” Reid explains. “There it was imperative that you hold the groove. I set up a trance, like hypnosis. So even when I’m not doing it, you think I’m doing it.”

Ken Micallef

 

Go to Artist IndexGo to Artist Index

Free MD WIRE E-NEWSLETTER Sign-up
Visit Modern Drummer on myspace, facebook, and twitter.


Modern Drummer Magazine © 2010
Privacy Policy

myspace facebook twitter