[FairfieldLife] Re: Harry Chapin's father!

2014-06-28 Thread cardemais...@yahoo.com [FairfieldLife]

How would you analyze the drum beat in See you later, Alligator?

Bill Haley - See You Later Alligator (HQ) 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ch1UQ47rWKU 
 
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ch1UQ47rWKU 
 
 Bill Haley - See You Later Alligator (HQ) 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ch1UQ47rWKU Bill recorded and released this 
song in 1956 and the catchphrase of the title is still used to this day...
 
 
 
 View on www.youtube.com https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ch1UQ47rWKU 
 Preview by Yahoo 
 
 
  


I gather the basic shuffle/swing is playing a triplet without the middle note, 
or something
like that. In Alligator, the swing seems to be stronger than that, eh?

[FairfieldLife] Re: Harry Chapin's father!

2014-06-26 Thread cardemais...@yahoo.com [FairfieldLife]

 Advanced Techniques for the Modern Drummer, Vol. I In the early 1940s, Chapin 
began working on a drum instruction book that was eventually published in 1948 
as “Advanced Techniques for the Modern Drummer, Volume I, Coordinated 
Independence as Applied to Jazz and Be-Bop.” This book has been known as the 
definitive study on coordinated independence for jazz drummers. After the 
release of the book, he carried a pair of drumsticks in his back pocket at all 
times in case he was called upon to demonstrate a particularly difficult 
passage so as to prove that every pattern in the book could be played. Still in 
print today, it became known among drummers simply as “The Chapin Book.”Jim 
Chapin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Chapin#cite_note-1
 
 
 Jim Chapin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Chapin#cite_note-1 James Forbes Jim Chapin 
(July 23, 1919 – July 4, 2009) was an American (New York born and bred) jazz 
drummer and the author of popular texts on jazz drumming, the first two volumes 
of which are Advanced Techniques for the Modern Drummer, Vol. I, and Advance...
 
 
 
 View on en.wikipedia.org http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Chapin#cite_note-1 
 Preview by Yahoo 
 
 
  


[FairfieldLife] Re: Harry Chapin's father!

2014-06-26 Thread salyavin808

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, cardemaister@... wrote :

 Harry Chapin's father, lost twin brother of J.R.Ewing?
 

 I think there's some Bill Clinton in there somewhere too...
 

 

http://drummerworld.com/Videos/jimchapinfeellikedancing.html 
http://drummerworld.com/Videos/jimchapinfeellikedancing.html


 





Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Harry Chapin's father!

2014-06-26 Thread Bhairitu noozg...@sbcglobal.net [FairfieldLife]
I've written about this book before here on FFL, card.  I also have 
written that Jim Chapin was Harry Chapin's father so that non-drummer 
folks here could relate.  I also have written that I took drum lessons 
during the summer of 1962 which I spent in Seattle and my teacher, Dave 
Coleman, taught from Chapin's book.  He also taught many other local 
drummers apparently including Mitch Mitchell.  Coleman suggested that I 
try applying the patterns in the book to rock.  Hence was born the 
Seattle Beat that emerged on records coming out of the Northwest from 
groups like the Wailers, the Sonics, Dave Lewis whose drummers all 
studied with Coleman.


Coleman also suggested I try playing a double time swing pattern instead 
of straight eights for rock.  That pissed off a lot of small town 
musicians I played with because it wasn't like the record! Of course I 
explained to them the record was what that drummer played on that 
particular take and of course that didn't endear much either.  
Apparently Jimi Hendrix didn't mind as Mitch Michell played like that on 
his albums.


I taught many students from Chapin's book but later adopted Rick 
Latham's Advanced Funk Studies for students, even beginners. This 
book, like Chapin's, takes the student from very simple rock patterns to 
complex ones that top fusion drummers of the 1980s were playing.  
Students who went through that book with me could play about anything.


On 06/26/2014 03:38 AM, cardemais...@yahoo.com [FairfieldLife] wrote:



Advanced Techniques for the Modern Drummer, Vol. I

In the early 1940s, Chapin began working on a drum instruction book 
that was eventually published in 1948 as “Advanced Techniques for the 
Modern Drummer, Volume I, Coordinated Independence as Applied to Jazz 
and Be-Bop.” This book has been known as the definitive study on 
coordinated independence for jazz drummers. After the release of the 
book, he carried a pair of drumsticks in his back pocket at all times 
in case he was called upon to demonstrate a particularly difficult 
passage so as to prove that every pattern in the book could be played. 
Still in print today, it became known among drummers simply as “The 
Chapin Book.”^Jim Chapin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Chapin#cite_note-1





Jim Chapin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Chapin#cite_note-1
James Forbes Jim Chapin (July 23, 1919 – July 4, 2009) was an 
American (New York born and bred) jazz drummer and the author of 
popular texts on jazz drumming, the first two volumes of which are 
Advanced Techniques for the Modern Drummer, Vol. I, and Advance...


View on en.wikipedia.org 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Chapin#cite_note-1


Preview by Yahoo