Religion & Spirituality1 min ago
Best drummer?...ever!
I'm havin an argument with a friend, who was THE best drummer ever?... from our point of view, it's either John Bonham of Led Zep or Keith Moon from The Who. I go Zep but my mate goes Who. Be interested to see what y'all think, esp you Andy H (happy b'day for prevous!)!
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by country_boy. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.So why should they should be "best". Most prolofic? Technically complex? I asked a drum student for his opinion of Phil Collins and he was lost for superlatives. Lennon reputedly said, when asked "is Ringo the best drummer in the world?", "He's not even the best drummer in the Beatles". Surely he must be among the most prolific, even if it is vicariously through his being a Beatle. He must have been worth a light, though, mustn't he?
There is one I consider highly in this field. I know he plays a special kit but he had to become an accomplished professional drummer twice. And that's Def Leppard's Rick Allen.
You're drummer with a top rock band. Then you lose an arm (yes, an arm!) and you can still be the drummer of a top rock band if you can play. That's like Nelson having to learn to write left-handed to Lady Hamilton! He did a lot of that and he'd never have won even a school prize for this handwriting, yet Mr Allen remained Def Leppard's drummer and he, frankly, rocks (I know; that's his job).
Sandy Nelson is probably one of the most enduringly famous drummers but was he actually that good? I suspect probably not; at least by more recent standards. I'd say today's standards but I'm finding it hard to think of any.
As I seem to begin to sound like Mark Steele, I'm going to shut up and say that, for entertainment value, an outstanding drumming memory that occurs straight away is that of Adam & The Ants (yes, I know there were two) but they undoubtedly had entertainment value and, obviously, enduring effect. Who doesn't remember, absolutely beat-for beat, the intro of "Antmusic"?