Recorded 1/14/2022
Part 1: 2002==============
This is mostly a reflection of how I immersed myself in Jazz when I started taking formal drum lessons in college. My drum instructor made me join the big band so I had a lot to learn fast. This is not a history of jazz or what I think the most important jazz songs are. This is an attempt at identifying the songs that I came across that greatly affected me in one way or another. Some of these songs are very emotional for me, some are just influential to me as a musician or drummer, and some I just like. I also talk a bit about the difference between subgenres of jazz, the history of the drumset, flaws in the perception of music history, and the nature of striving during a performance.
Preamble
00:00 Intro
01:24 Old School recording with Roland Vs1680 and some NFT talk
25:46 Frank Turner lyrics and why I respect KISS’s political stances
Topic
39:12: my first drum lessons with jazz drummer Joel Fulgham
47:56 Playlist riffage begins.
*Note* Big screw up, around the 2 hr 26 min mark, I forgot that Ella Fitzgerald did Solitude not Billie Holiday. Both are amazing but different, listen
Spreadsheet
https://drive.google.com/file/d/12PXQ5Fz4Q3hIPYgU_H_0HnWpjmcYs69_/view?usp=sharing
Playlist
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDy9MGihz1ehcxkRXE4UaBijlEo55mdxe
Buddy Rich - Mercy, Mercy
Miles Davis (trumpet) - So What, Milestones, Seven Steps to Heaven
Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers - The Opener
Max Roach - For Big Sid
Louis Armstrong & His Hot Five - Heebie Jeebies
Duke Ellington - Black Beauty
Count Basie - Jumpin At The Woodside
Sonny Rollins - St. Thomas
Weather report - Birdland
Gordon Goodwin - Count Bubba
Billie Holiday - Strange Fruit
John Coltrane (tenor) - Pt. 1 Acknowledgement
Roy Hargrove (trumpet) - O My Seh Yeh