It all began with an innocent-if-somewhat-narrow observation: people I observe through the windows of some of the more "scholastic" practice spaces I frequent generally play more tentatively and with a narrower dynamic range than "pro" drummers I've seen up close.
Then I'd sit down in the adjoining room and notice I was hitting way harder on standard beats. (Then still getting told to hit harder by people like sound engineers.)
Which caused me to reflect on the differences between how hard I'd assumed some of my favorite players were playing when I'd only listened to audio recordings - people like Steve Gadd, Vinnie, Jeff Porcaro, etc - and how hard they were actually hitting if you watched the videos.
But lest you think I'm only advocating a one-way change: I'm not.
I understand as well as anybody the importance of the soft end of the dynamic spectrum, having played in hundreds of restaurants, coffee-shops, and small venues, and having been told to turn down countless times, and realizing it on my own in situations like playing with a singer without mics.
So what I'm railing against isn't necessarily that 100% of players are playing too soft...
...it's more that when you watch the masters of playing soft: people like Brian Blade...
...they're sure not boring. And they're sure not tentative.
(And also I've watched Blade almost break a hole through the kick drum with Wayne Shorter.)
Today on 80/20 - "hitting harder" as a way into playing with more dymamics and intensity, and the epidemic of "tentativeness" amongst today's drummers.
Enjoy this one, and see you soon,