Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Drumming Greats: Mick Fleetwood


As I weaved through traffic on Orange Blossom Trail with my windows down and music cranked up the other day I couldn't help but notice that I was getting some awkward looks from other motorists.

Now let me explain for a second. OBT, as we affectionately call it, is propagated by people who enjoy hip hop and Latin music, so when I pull up at a red light and Fleetwood Mac's Dreams is blaring from my VW sound system I guess I can understand the funny looks from other motorists sitting on their 22" rims. What these motorists don't realize is that I am a drummer, and Fleetwood Mac is backed by one of the greats in the drumming community – Mick Fleetwood.


OK, so I will admit that Mick wouldn't be a drummers first choice when it comes to inspiration. He isn't  a blazing jazz pioneer like Billy Cobham or Max Roach, he isn't a progressive superstar such as Neil Peart, or a modern day rock star such as Rich Redmond, but we should all give Mick Fleetwood his due and here's why:

1. You know a rhythm section is great when the band is named after the bassist and drummer.
Sure many fans associate Fleetwood's fame with the vocals of Stevie Nicks, but many do not know that the band started out as a blues group and was named after bassist John McVie and Mick Fleetwood. Hence the name Fleetwood Mac.

2. To be a drummer you have to have brass balls.
Part of being a great drummer is having confidence. Nothing says confidence like wearing a wedding dress for a Rolling Stone article, and Mick did just that.


3. Mick kept the band alive.
We all know of the chaos that is Fleetwood Mac. The marriages, the divorces, and all the drugs, but through it all Mick is responsible for keeping the group going. After a long hiatus Mick urged the group to get back together for a new album in 1997 called Dreams, which brought them back to the mainstream and put the original line-up back on stage thus reinventing the Fleetwood brand.

4. Showmanship.
Watch any Fleetwood video and you will see Mick making faces, dancing on the kit, and feeling the music. To be a great drummer you have to be "in the music", and for his entire career Mick has been inside the music.

5. The tick-tock.
This is what keeps Fleetwood Mac on my playlist. Sure some drummers can burn the double bass, others can swing like mad, and newbies can play at 200 plus beats per minute, but to get the audience to dance and your records to sell your music has to have a groove. When it comes to groove Mick and John created a tick-tock that is always in the pocket, on time, and infectious.

I urge all the young drummers out there to give Fleetwood Mac a listen. See what these musical pioneers do that has pushed them up the charts and put them on stages across the world. In this day of speed drumming competitions and programmed beats we often forget that when you put great musicians together you get a great product. When that band has a drummer who can keep solid time, create an infectious groove with the bassist, and perform with confidence and musicality you can survive the test of time.

Finally watch this video from their successful Dance video, even with the University of Southern California Marching band Mick keeps the groove alive.


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