John Judges's recent post about
irresistible grooves started me thinking about the importance of solid drumming and what it means to me as a bassist. Our drummer from church, Jason Thomas, is a good friend of Robert Searight and sat in for Sput for about a month's worth of Snarky Puppy dates this past summer. JT has also performed with
Marcus Miller at Montreux from time to time. He's also on
Mark Lettieri's release, Knows.
We often talk a lot about musical inspiration, but I've learned more about being a bassist and staying in the pocket and listening to the groove from JT than from listening to and emulating other bassists. He demands a healthy respect for tempo, time signatures and rhythm. Playing with JT is a treat - he's got the baddest back beat since Billy Cobham, can play any genre and enjoys it all.
I really enjoy players like Cobham, Bill Bruford, Phil Collins (his Brand X stuff with Percy Jones is sweet), Chad Wackerman, Steve Gadd, et al. Geez, go way back to Buddy Rich why don't you. Way out of my league, but they provide a tremendous foundation and a ton of rhythmic fun for me.
Count your blessings if your drummer can keep time, that's sometimes a rare gift in itself (come on, we all know a few like that like). Count your blessing AND say your thanks every day if you play with a drummer that can push and pull you out of your comfort zone and while making playing fun.
happy groovin',
Mike