Most recognizable session musician?
m_dejean
Quadratisch. Praktisch. Gut. 2,946 Posts
I nominate Chuck Rainey.
I can always pick this guy out in the rhythm section, jazz, r'n'b, rock, whatever.
Never fails. His sound is so distinct, dynamic 16th notes and subtle slapping.
Ron Carter, Idris Muhammad, Bernard Purdie are others that come to mind.
Who do you nominate?
I can always pick this guy out in the rhythm section, jazz, r'n'b, rock, whatever.
Never fails. His sound is so distinct, dynamic 16th notes and subtle slapping.
Ron Carter, Idris Muhammad, Bernard Purdie are others that come to mind.
Who do you nominate?
Comments
Steve Gadd.
Larry Carlton.
Hal Blaine
Harvey Mason
Steve Cropper
Al Jackson
James Gadson
The Bar-Kays(numerous Stax projects)
Little Beaver(damn near all the T.K. projects)
No, no: part of his genius is the wild diversity of his sound!
Are you familiar with his studio project, "The Beatles"?
I would list these folks as well:
-Joe Sample.
-Wilton Felder.
-Michael (RIP) and Randy Brecker.
-Greg Phillinganes.
-Michael Boddicker.
-David Foster.
-Jeff Porcaro (RIP).
-Steve Khan.
-John Robinson.
-Louis Johnson.
-Marcus Miller.
Peace,
Big Stacks from Kakalak
The single most recognizable to my ears.
I totally agree!! He was known & very respected for his diversity. He could play & sound like he was the OG drummer of everyone he played for. That was the main thing Jerry Wexler loved about him.
Paul Humphries
Paul Jackson
Alphonse Mouzon
Wilbert Longmire
Ralph McDonald
Earl Palmer
Rhodes, Chalmers & Rhodes
Charlie McCoy (most harmonica you hear on country records from the sixties and seventies is Charlie)
Joe South
Floyd Cramer
Sweet Inspirations
Allen Toussaint
Blossoms (even when they were trying to "sound white" you could pick them out)
I started to say the Motown house band, but then it dawned on me that that's them playing on John Lee Hooker's "Boom Boom," and they sound nothing like they do on 1960's hits by the Supremes, Miracles, Tempts, etc.
NOLA session dudes that extremely recognizable to me: Zigaboo, Leo Nocentelli, James Black on drums, of course Earl Palmer. maybe Huey "Piano" Smith?
other folks: is it fair to name jazz dudes? Airto. Lee Morgan; Art Blakey, Paul Chambers, McCoy Tyner, Wayne Shorter, Jimmy Smith, Steve Gadd, Coltrane, Grant fuckin Green all day.
What's the real deal about these claims Purdie's made? Did he really "fix" Beatles/Sly records by playing over them? I kinda think it sounds like him on Slys "Trip to your heart", plus it sort of sounds like there's two drum tracks.
I would fully except a natural born promoter like Purdie to wildly embellish these kinds of stories though - if not make a thing or two up completely.
Still one of the best drummers - and one of the most recognizable.
I knew you'd come with some interesting choices. One tends to forget the backing vocal groups like The Blossoms and The Sweet Inspirations.
And speaking of Motown, James Jamerson definitely stands out.
The real story I've heard - which logically makes more sense - is that he did drum overdubs on "Ain't She Sweet," which came out in the States on Atco (1964). Pete Best was the drummer with the Beatles when it was recorded (1961). I understand they brought in Purdie to update a three-year-old recording with a beefed-up "twist" tempo.
Of course, leave it to Purdie to "beef up" the story to make it sound like he's on all the records.
(And leave it to Soul Strut to touch on this topic on Ringo Starr's birthday yesterday!)