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Web Exclusive Interview
Chad Cromwell
We first featured Chad
Cromwell in the March '04 issue of Modern Drummer.
There wasn't quite enough room for all the great stuff
Chad had to say,
though, so we decided to share the rest of it with you here.
by Billy Amendola
Chad has been a member of Peter Frampton's
band for the past six years, and is on Frampton's latest CD, Now. Peter tells MD,
"For me the drummer in
any band is the engine that drives and steers
the rest of the players. Chad is one of a handful of players in the
world who has
the sensitivity and overall feel to take the music to
another level. After playing live and recording with Chad, I am
totally
spoiled. Chad's a very special player."
Now, most drummers would be content and comfortable with a gig
the caliber of Peter Frampton. But Chad, who's such
a versatile working drummer, likes to switch gears, whether
it's
rockin' out live or on record with Frampton, Neil Young, or Joe Walsh.
You can also find him laying down a
country groove with Vince Gill, Amy
Grant, LeAnn Rimes, or Mark Selby, or on a pop record with Jessica
Simpson. He's
also toured and recorded all of Dire Straits front man
Mark Knopfler's solo records for the past eight years - in fact,
he's
currently recording Knopfler's new one as we speak. The guitar great
had this to say about Cromwell: "I
clicked with Chad right off. He's
very musical, positive, and easy to hang out with. Also, Chad has the
absolute
confidence that what he's doing feels good, which is essential
for a drummer. Chad's always into the song more than
into himself, and
he'll do whatever it takes to get the song to work. I'll always be
having a good time from
Chad's first downbeat."
Since his move
to Nashville in 1990, Chad has gone on to become one of the
most
in-demand session players on the scene, while still maintaining a busy
touring schedule. Not many get the opportunity
to have success at both.
We start our conversation about what it was like in the early days of
his career, and his first taste of
success.
Chad: Right
before I graduated high school, there was a guitar player in Memphis
named Robert
Johnson [not the blues legend], who was a little older
than I was. He moved to London and somehow got involved with
John
Entwistle's band Ox. At the same time Chris Spedding had a thing going
on for a while, and he had a bass player
who was also from Memphis,
David Cochran, who ended up in his band. Well, those two guys from
Memphis met and
decided they wanted to start their own band. They lived
in London, but they weren't meeting any drummers who they felt
had
"soul" - being so accustomed to Memphis guys. So they set out to find a
young guy to help complete this trio, and then
they were going to
pursue getting a record deal over in London. A band of three guys from
Memphis, that was sort of a cross
between punk and soul music. [laughs]
So,
David came back for Christmas holiday to see his family. While he
was
back in Memphis, Robert said, "Look around and see if you can find
somebody that works for this." So I meet this guy
through a mutual
friend. It wasn't the band that I would have normally been in at the
time, but I was over there jamming
with these guys - we were playing Led
Zeppelin's "The Immigrant Song," and we just hit it off. So he gets on
the phone
and calls Robert and says, "Hey, I've found the guy." So I
took this gig. I graduated from high school that year, and a week
later
I was on a plane to live in London.
While I was there, we did a
showcase for Chrysalis. The head of A&R at
the time came down to
the rehearsal studio, listened to us play, and wanted to sign us. Well,
then this bidding war started.
And who ended up signing the band but
Elton John's new label, Rocket Records. Elton had just started it. His
first
signing was Grace Jones, and we were second. This was all kind of
mid-'70s London, which were big years for rock
'n' roll. So we went in
and made a record in three days.
MD: What was the name of the
band?
Chad: It was called Lash LaRoo. Unfortunately, it just kind of came unglued. Without getting too specific, it
basically fell apart.
MD: But it was your introduction to "the big time."
Chad:
[laughs] Oh
yeah. I went from riding around in limousines and living in
a beautiful four-story town house in London, to the last two or
three
weeks with no money. We were going down the street buying pork &
beans and toast to survive. It was a bizarre
experience. But that was
my introduction to the music business and how quickly it can change.
And when I came home, you
know, I was kind of destroyed. I had high
hopes for all that. Anyway, I finally got my legs back under me and
started looking
around, playing in the clubs again.
MD: Let's jump ahead. You recorded LeAnn Rimes' debut record,
Blue.
Chad: Yes. She blew up, didn't she? She's great.
MD: I remember Pat
Brown from Pro-Mark telling me at that time, "Wait till you hear this girl sing."
Chad: It's funny you mention
Pat. He's my guy. I love Pat. I go back with Pro-Mark and Pat a long time. Class-A individual.
MD:
Let's talk equipment while we're on the topic.
Chad:
I use DW drums, and I have to say, John Good
and Scott Garrison from
Drum Workshop are amazing guys. They've made a world of difference in
my career.
They've helped me get the sound I need, and they've spared
no expense getting me there. And it's greatly
appreciated. I use
Zildjian cymbals, and John DeChristopher, John King, and Jim
McGaffee - all three of those guys have been
wonderful. I have a full bag
of their new Constantinople line to check out. They've gone to
different gauges in some of the
cymbal depths, and the tones that are
coming out of these cymbals are scary. You've got to check them
out.
MD: When you're called for a session, will you take a variety of cymbals and different types of snare
drums?
Chad:
Oh yeah. Generally I have my studio rig set up into three different
categories. If I'm going
to do a demo date, then I've got a demo rig,
which will be my DW kit. And then the bag of cymbals will have just
my
basic setup. And then if I'm doing masters, where I'm going to be at a
place for a day or two, I'll send one
of my Timeless Timbre kits. And
I'll send in a couple of bags of cymbals so that I'll have two to three
options for
hi-hats, rides, and crashes. Then all of my snare boxes
will roll to any master I'm on. So if I've got to move from one
studio
one day to the next studio the next day, then come back to the other
kit the following day, my guys will just come in
and pull all my snares
out. The snares follow me wherever record dates go. And then if I'm
going to be camped out for a
while, like a week or something, I'll send
over my vintage Zildjian cymbals and my other bag. I'll just
have
everything, basically, but the kitchen sink. And on some those dates
I'll send my round-badge moon-glow satin
Gretsch kit, or my pink marine
'59 Ludwig kit.
As far as percussion, it's all Meinl. And my
tech, Harry
McCarthy, takes care of everything I do here in Nashville.
He owns Drum Paradise here with his partner Mark Arnold. I was
Harry's
first client here when he came from LA. He has not made one mistake in
almost ten years now. I don't
know what I'd do without him. I don't
have to worry about anything. All I have to do is show up. I didn't
know
guys like that existed.
MD: Let's talk a little bit
about recording and Pro Tools. Are you ever called upon
to go in and
play a couple of bars for a producer, and then have him say, "Alright,
thanks, we'll use whatever we'll
need"
Chad: I generally
don't get asked to just come and play a few measures. I mean,
it's
happened, but very rarely. What mostly happens with me is after we
finish a rhythm date, the engineer and the
producer might ask me to
stay and give them samples of the kit.
MD: Sometimes here
in New York you
walk in, you'll hear the song, and the producer might
say, "What do you hear for this?" You'll play something and
they'll go,
"Oh that's good. What else do you hear?" and you'll play something
else. Meanwhile they're
recording everything. And before you know it they have your whole drum track cut up and put back together, and they have
a whole track done.
Chad:
And you know what? That's a big part of why there's very little
live
rhythm-track recording going on in New York City. I hate to be that
honest, but that's the truth. That's been the
curse of Pro Tools: Now
everyone is a recording engineer and a producer with their own studio.
But people have forgotten that
ensemble recording is and always will be
the best way to record. But that requires more than one human being in
the room at
a time. Thank God Nashville is still a rhythm section
oriented town. So far that's holding true, and I hope that it will
for
many years. You can never discount the fact that human beings want to
hear humans making
music.
MD: What was it like playing with bassist Willie Weeks again on the new Vince Gill record, Next Big
Thing?
Chad: Oh man, Willie's great. He did the Donny Hathaway Live
record, which is
probably the definitive R&B record. There's some
bass playing on there that's Hall Of Fame. I've known
Willie a long
time. We don't get to work together as much as I'd like to, but when we
do, we have a great time. We
actually recorded together on Keb Mo's new
record.
MD: You also toured with Bonnie
Raitt?
Chad: Yes, I did some work with Bonnie, subbing for Ricky Fataar. I did the US leg of her tour in '94,
for the record Longing In Their Hearts.
We also did Oprah Winfrey's TV show last year. Bonnie's one of
my
favorite people in the world, a great lady. I definitely want to sing
her praises. We call Bonnie an unofficial member of
Knopfler's band.
She can sit in with us any time.
MD: When you play, I can hear you incorporate
that R&B feel into country - that very soulful, funky type of groove.
Chad:
Thank you. You know what?
That feel is on a Motown record somewhere,
and it's on a Stax record. I'm not doing anything new. And that's
the
thing that most young drummers don't want to know about. They don't
want to be told to go into a room, turn
on a drum machine or create
some sort of click track, and play along without doing one fill for
five minutes. That's
tougher than nails, because there's an incredible
discipline to that. Say you're asked to play a half-time ballad at
67
bpm - a really slow tempo. If you are recording a ballad for an artist at
that tempo, that means you are subdividing to the
minimum number of
actual notes played from the kit, which ultimately means you are a time
manager. There's a
lot of time between snare backbeats. If that
next one doesn't lay in there exactly the same as the one that
preceded
it, then you've got to stop the tape. And that's what you have to know how to
do.
MD: So what's coming up for you?
Chad:
Besides Knopfler's new one, I just
finished up recordings with Trisha
Yearwood, Leann Womack, Mary Chapin Carpenter, Livingston Taylor,
Amanda Wilkinson,
CC Winan, and a new country artist named Trent
Willman. I also recorded for a new country band called Sugarland, as
well
as a solo record that Peter Asher is producing for Raul Malo,
who's the lead singer of The Mavericks.
[Editors
note: As
Chad and I were finishing up our interview, word came that long-time
Peter Frampton keyboardist Bobby Mayo had
passed away. I was fortunate
to have a chance to spend some time with Bobby, in fact it was Bobby
who was responsible for
Chad andMD hooking up. Thank you Bobby, God bless.]
MD: Sorry to hear about
Bobby.
Chad:
Bob was truly one of the most talented guys I've ever met. He burned so
hard at both
ends of the candle - in a positive way. That light burned so
bright, when it was time to go out, it went out so quickly. He was
a
great friend and a great partner to Peter and the band. I loved him,
and I'm going to miss him.
For more
with Chad, check out his feature in the March '03 issue of MD.
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