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Live drumming or a drummachine? Always when i see prince and the revolution live there is a drummer. But to me it usually sounds like a drummachine. Does anybody know if the drummer is really playing or just pretending? In later shows like lovesexy, there was no drummer when the drumcomputer is obvious. | |
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he's playing, the drums were set to trigger the linn sounds that prince had on record. bobby z wasn't a great drummer though if what we hear about him is true. a couple guys, chazz, p's cousin and Morris have both said that they were better. Sounds to me, from what i read that Bobby was more eager though, hung around, took odd jobs, errands and just waited until Prince saw that he had a committed professional. People dog Prince but we don't know what some of those guys from the old neighborhood were like, they can be a pain in the ass and very small minded. I'm sure that factored into Prince's decision. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Even Prince himself has said in the Rolling Stone interview in 1985 that Bobby Z was't the greatest drummer, "but he watches me like no other drummer." [Edited 2/20/17 10:00am] | |
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Bobby Z is a cool guy and the right guy for Revolution sound, but, technically, not a very skilled drummer It´s interesting to notice that, in some phases of his career, Prince didnt seem to really want a proeminent drummer [Edited 2/20/17 16:51pm] | |
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I wouldn't know about technical skill and all that, but to my ears the "sound" of bobbys drumming was the funkiest Bitch this ain't the movies | |
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not trying to be rude, most of the people around say that Bobby was limited on drums. Pop music doesn't have to be technically hard and Prince never really pushed his musicians in those days to really show their stuff. The revolution had an excellent chemistry but as musicians, they had their limits, i think wendy said recently that some of his later guitarists could play circles around her and it's true. The thing about rock music is that sometimes it's not about how well you can play, it's about the energy that a collective has. Elvis' early musicians weren't nearly the best but they had a chemistry between them that impacted music history, lots of examples of this. | |
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Bobby Z was competent for the sophistication of the material at the time, 'Holiday Inn' gibes aside. . He is a better live drummer than popularly regarded; he was present to bear direct witness to P's 'signature' integration of the computerized programming and live drumming, and replicated that better than many of the latter drummers, under the technologically crude limitations of the early/early-mid 1980s. . It was quite some time after his dismissal, including wallowing through late 80s and early 90s diversions into non-Linn drum machine (or sampler) programming, before the better players' distinction brought something important to the live performance. . The more technically accomplished and aggressive playing styles changed the modalities of the back catalogue material significantly, for better or for worse. .
[Edited 2/20/17 20:04pm] | |
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^^^ I agree with much of imprimis's summation. Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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I'll take bobby z over hannah every single time ... in fact as drummers go, based on feel and not technical nerd shit ...
Bobby Sheila Prince Bland Blackwell Kirky Hannah In that order Ps bobby played all live acoustic drums on parade tour ... which is only second to pr tour ... bobby is all class and no flash .. just the way music should be [Edited 2/20/17 19:51pm] | |
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. [Edited 2/21/17 20:41pm] | |
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Michael B.'s definitely the best drummer Prince had.
But Bobby Z is very solid, no doubt about that. | |
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TrivialPursuit said:
Thank you for the insight. Pretty amazing lets go crazy and delerious are live drums. I guess the linn patern sound makes me believe it is a drumcomputer. | |
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Would you say the drums on the grammy performance 1985 (baby im a star) are live? Dont know if its allowed to post yt so didnt insert it. | |
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I believe TrivialPursuit is saying, regarding LGC and 'Delirious', that they are largely (although not entirely) a programmed electronic drum line, and not all live playing. However, I believe he does play most of 'Baby, I'm A Star' live. There is a certain aspect of subjectivity here, as some of the pre-programmed patterns might also be triggered (some by Bobby, some by the engineers), and other parts played live and/or live with Simmons pads controlling one of the [proprietary/modded] Linndrum units, in the course of the same song. I believe he played 'Delirious' live on the 1999 Tour, but it was more heavily pre-programmed as part of the LGC 'suite' on the PR Tour. . (Sheila's situation was not at all unlike this, for instance, 'sitting pretty' with limited input for FIML, 'Hot Thing', IIWYGF, etc. on the SOTT Tour, most of which were stock sound Fairlight sequenced and/or MIDIfied Linndrum sequenced on the Fairlight) . To be fair, though, they were very heavily invested in recreating the sound of the album (which was less a concern for arrangements in subsequent tours, and the complexity or nature of this early-/mid-1980s electronic sound is not always amenable to pad-triggered playing, no matter how adroit the chops), the equipment was technologically limited by the standards of only a few years later, and the entire band were elevated to the most prominent level of stardom virtually overnight, necessitating assurance that the performances would be consistent and mostly error-free for a tour of PR's commercial scale. .
[Edited 2/21/17 8:20am] | |
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he said was 'spectacular'
Bobby Z was the first one to join. He's my best friend. Though he's not such a spectacular drummer, he watches me like no other drummer would. Sometimes, a real great drummer, like Morris, will be more concerned with the lick he is doing as opposed to how I am going to break it down. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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TrivialPursuit & imprimis just started class for Purple Music 102 . In a recent interview(last 2-3months?) Bobby Z talked in further detail about all he had to do in the studio - live to replicate the sounds Prince wanted all the while trying to watch Prince for all the changes and breaks Prince was triggering 2 the band. That even at sometimes because of the stage set, he could not see Prince. | |
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The Hit-and-Run '86/Parade Tour was the apex of intelligent control and integration of the electronic drums with acoustic live playing. Done more cleverly, all things considered, and satisfyingly than in any tour before or since. . [Edited 2/21/17 8:23am] | |
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The Linn LM-1 had a few interesting features which made it sound unique among drum machines. First, there was an extremely small amount of silence (talking milliseconds here) before each drum sample. So when the sample was triggered, the sound was just the tiniest bit delayed. This made the LM-1 play in the "pocket," or just behind the beat, which gave it a funky feel. Also the machine was imperfect and tended to drift a bit, which also gave it character. And finally, it had a swing function which made the beats groove. All of that combined made it feel more lifelike than a computer. + To my ears, on recordings, if the drums sounded like the LM-1, chances are it was sequenced with the LM-1. An exception might be "Raspberry Beret," where it sounds like the Linn, but when the hi-hat comes in, that sounds like someone playing. So as others have pointed out, Prince was an innovator at enhancing performance with technology. | |
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PeteSilas said: not trying to be rude, most of the people around say that Bobby was limited on drums. Pop music doesn't have to be technically hard and Prince never really pushed his musicians in those days to really show their stuff. The revolution had an excellent chemistry but as musicians, they had their limits, i think wendy said recently that some of his later guitarists could play circles around her and it's true. The thing about rock music is that sometimes it's not about how well you can play, it's about the energy that a collective has. Elvis' early musicians weren't nearly the best but they had a chemistry between them that impacted music history, lots of examples of this. Very, very true. I noticed that some of his live drumming back then was off beat too.. | |
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Even some of Prince's drumming was off beat.
it's life
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- Yes, it´s true. When I said Bobby wasnt the most skilled, I wasnt trying to offend him. He worked well for that period of time and Revolution had such a great chemistry. I was only saying that, compared to real skilled people like Sheila, Michael B, John Blackwell, Omar Hakim, Dennis Chambers, etc etc etc etc etc, he was indeed limited. | |
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I think we have to also consider (and others have said it) that Prince going for a sound, and to get his sound out there, he wanted his music translated from album to stage. that is something that sets a lot of the 80s time period apart in being such a founational period of purple music. If the music sounded too much like something away from the album music, it would not have had the effect. And most of the album drumming as timeless and electric as I still find it, was not 'flashy'. The beat carried through out the song like Lady Cab Driver or Let's Go Crazy or Head etc and too much could easily mess up the vibe of the music. Off night shows like the First Avenue 3.8.1982 show was a lot looser and his drumming was more free...
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TrivialPursuit said:
--Loads of people have said Bobby Z was not that good of a drummer nothing agaisnt him as a person he seemed to have been a good friend to Prince and I think it was great that he could be so loyal to people. | |
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