Living Colour drummer Will Calhoun has been widely recognised with accolades like the Buddy Rich Jazz Masters Award to top ratings from major drumming and music publications. This drummers’ drummer embraces electronics as he continues to broaden his musical horizons. He spoke to digitalDrummer editor Allan Leibowitz on a recent tour Down Under.
digitalDrummer: We generally begin these by asking about drummers’ first encounters with the craft. So, how did you get started?
Will Calhoun: My older brother, Charles, played drums. He’s roughly six years older than I and played multiple styles of music. We grew up in a fantastic community in the North East Bronx. We lived in a two-family house, and my mom converted the basement into a rehearsal/jam studio for the entire community. My brother performed with salsa bands, jazz bands, gospel groups, and funk/ fusion combos. I would simply walk into my basement and watch my brother play all these different styles of music. This was quite an impressive and very educational experience. There were also two massive influential drummers from my neighbourhood. Steve Jordan, who lived around the corner from me he turned professional at age 14, and the other drummer was Errol Pumpkin Bedward, who was a massive game-changer in the history of music because in 1972, he was selling beats to record labels before hip-hop really became a style. Pumpkin played brilliant classical piano, great jazz fusion and was the most dangerous pocket drummer I’ve ever heard, after Clyde Stubble field, and Jabo Starks from James Brown’s band. One afternoon I went over to Pumpkin’s house to listen to him practise and, much to my surprise, I saw Steve Gadd and Ralph MacDonald hanging out listening as well. My influences began with those three guys; they introduced me to many important recordings, live shows, drumming techniques, and drumming etiquette. At that time I wasn’t interested in becoming a professional musician.
Bu hikaye digitalDrummer dergisinin August 2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye digitalDrummer dergisinin August 2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Where There's A Will
Living Colour drummer Will Calhoun has been widely recognised with accolades like the Buddy Rich Jazz Masters Award to top ratings from major drumming and music publications. This drummers’ drummer embraces electronics as he continues to broaden his musical horizons. He spoke to digitalDrummer editor Allan Leibowitz on a recent tour Down Under.
Feel The Beat
In search of a drummer-friendly metronome, Allan Leibowitz gets a feel for a new innovation.
My Monster Kit
Bobby James from Vancouver, BC, Canada has combined e-drums and DJ gear into his monster kit.
Simmons Pulls The Trigger
There are plenty of options for external triggers, and now there’s one more. digitalDrummer looks at the new Simmons ST1.
Head 2 Head - The Third Wave
digitalDrummer continues to put mesh heads under the microscope in our ongoing quest for the quietest, best-feeling playing surface. This month, we add four more tests to our growing catalogue.
To Midi Or Not
Is MIDI drumming still drumming, or is it removed from the art and skill of percussion? This is something Bill McCarthy has been pondering.
10 Things To Love About SD3
Last month’s release of Superior Drummer 3 may be a bit overdue, but was certainly worth the wait. Here are some of the features which make this VST offering a new benchmark.
A Bad Case Of Loving E-drums
digitalDrummer’s first edition back in 2010 detailed a case of GAS (Gear Acquisition Syndrome). That was nothing compared to Anthony Nalli’s affliction.
The 'Original' Simmons Returns
Simmons is back again, with a new kit and a new direction.
Advanced Trigger Variants
ATV’s long-awaited pad, cymbal and hardware pack is now shipping, giving the fledgling e-drum company a complete offering. Allan Leibowitz tested the aDrums artist kit.