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

Jimmy DeGrasso 
(March 2009 Issue)

Laying Down His Signature Stroke With A New Project

When F5 bassist and founder David Ellefson needed a drummer for the group’s sophomore CD, it was a no-brainer to enlist his former Megadeth rhythm section partner Jimmy DeGrasso. Though Ellefson hadn’t done any preliminary drum programming, DeGrasso nailed his parts for the eleven songs on The Reckoning in less than five days. He was able to incorporate a variety of feels from standard hard rock to thrash metal, a blues shuffle, and plenty of syncopated double bass drum patterns.

    “With a lot of the syncopated double bass parts that drummers are required to play today,” DeGrasso says, “it’s very important to remain relaxed. Every note has got to be dead on, because if one of your feet starts dragging just a hair, suddenly the whole thing falls apart. You have to be really precise and play through those sections with a certain amount of flow.”

    Working without Pro Tools, triggering, or what DeGrasso refers to as “anything tricky,” the drummer captured what have been referred to as perfect drum sounds on The Reckoning. “A lot of metal records today are very digital and so Pro Tooled that you can’t hear any articulation in the drums,” he says. “Everything is too clean, to the point where there’s no variation in volume and tone for certain things on the bass or snare. You can pick it out a mile away. The drums on The Reckoning are clean and very analog, and that’s what I like about them.”

Gail Worley

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