I recently joined a Facebook group called Old School Drummers. I did it at the invitation of a friend and former fellow drummer, Mark Paulus of Lima, Ohio.
I also did it against my better judgment. Mainly because I haven’t been anything like a real drummer in decades. But then, again, if you’ve ever been a drummer, it’s something that stays with you for the rest of your life.
Truth be told, I can
still read the music and hear the licks in my head, even if my hands and feet
stubbornly refuse to reproduce them with anything close to accuracy. And I have
instant recall of the feeling of being at the top of my game—never great,
surely, but good. Maybe even very
good.
Every day, I find myself
lamenting the fact that I ever stopped playing. I know that if I’d continued,
still today I would be as good as I was way back when. Perhaps better. But after
having stopped for several decades, having timidly taken it up again is, I
suppose, self-indulgent. I will clearly never be even a shadow of the performer
I once was. Playing now will never be anything but a salve to help relieve the
sorrow of having neglected and lost something once so hard-earned, precious and
vital to me.
But, okay, it is what it
is. No crying over spilt milk. And here we are. Starting over, like a false
toddler learning to walk again.
In the end, I decided to
take up my friend’s invitation to join the group, because, as I say, the acute
memory of what it’s like to play and play well makes me conversant on many of
the subjects that this group generates. Even though, I can’t, like many of the
other older members who never quit,
post videos of myself cookin’ on the drum kit at age seventy-something. The
reality is that, if I were to post myself playing, the proverbial jig would be
up!
People talk about all sorts of things on the OSD site. It’s a highly populated and very active community. Drumming, it seems, is something we’re really passionate about. It’s incredible the range of topics members find to discuss. There are all sorts of opinions about which drums are the best and why. The size, weight and quality of drumsticks. Which bass pedals and hi-hats are most effective. Why one brand of cymbals is better, brighter, mellower, etc. than another. And, by the way, what’s the best way to clean cymbals…or should you clean them at all? How to best restore pearl finish and metal hardware. Best drum heads and why. Drum tuning and how it affects sound quality. Different configurations of drum kits and why one might be more effective than another. Ways to get around symptoms of aging like arthritis and hand and wrist pain and still keep drumming.
Dan (middle) with fellow Wapakoneta High School drummers Jane Siferd and Mike Krebs. |
And then the more obvious
discussions about who “the world’s best drummer is/was.” Which groups from
which eras were the most outstanding in the worlds of jazz, hard rock, soft
rock and fusion music. Which learning aids are the best to buy. And then there
are myriad videos of great drumming to wow us and bring back memories of some
of the greatest old school drumming ever heard.
So anyway, the other day,
there was a sort of “remember when” post that featured a pair of VeriSonic hollow
aluminum drumsticks from the nineteen-sixties and asked if anyone remembered
them. I did. Quite well. I immediately recalled when we got them in at Porter's Music Store, where I worked in Lima, from age sixteen through eighteen. We
had them in a special display in all sorts of sizes, from light jazz sticks to
thick 3S sticks used for marching band. I also remember that, for a little
while, the Wapakoneta High School drum section I was in had them in the school
team colors of red and white—red shafts, white tips and butts.
They came in a variety of colors—all with white tips and butts: metallic red, green, blue and gold being the most popular. Most of the Facebook Old School Drummers reacted with laughing face emojis. Some said they’d remembered seeing them but never bought any. Others said they’d bought a pair but never could see the advantage or didn’t like the sound they produced. One guy said he’d had a pair and that they’d lasted him about ten minutes. Most, obviously, being old school, thought them an absolute travesty. If sticks weren’t oak, maple or hickory, they simply couldn’t be considered sticks.
But I can still recall
how trendy we were in the sixties. It was a time when the new generation was
out front and emerging, an era when even many older middle-class people were
trying to keep up with the trends, wanting to be cool and hip. It was the Age
of Aquarius. The New Age, when liberal was the height of cool and conservative
was the enemy Establishment. Clothes, music, art and writing were all embracing
the trendy nature of the times. If it was new and cool, we wanted it. So would
I try aluminum drumsticks? Hell yeah!
So, here’s a funny story.
I had just bought myself a couple of pairs of VeriSonics. One pair metallic
green, the other gold, if I remember right. I wasn’t convinced they were what I
needed for my work as a nightclub musician. I felt good old hickory lent itself
better to jazz and fusion music. But in my “sage” seventeenth year, I had a
theory about why the VeriSonic sticks were better for concert work than
traditional wooden sticks. They were, I reasoned, identical, and so, perfectly
balanced, with perfectly molded and matching tips. That meant, I told myself,
that they were much better designed, scientifically speaking, for the absolute
precision required by symphonic band and symphony orchestra work.
No matter how much I sought
to reason and justify my trendy purchase, the truth was unavoidable. I’d bought
them because I thought they looked cool as heck. The rest was just
window-dressing.
With fellow scholarship-winner Dave Stroh |
I ended up doing well,
however, being chosen in performance challenges to be the head percussionist
for both the symphony orchestra and the symphonic band. Personally, I think it
was because I was the only percussionist with broad knowledge and ample
experience playing tympani (kettle drums), on which the others failed to
impress, but who knows?
The orchestra was
directed by talented Ohio musical educator Charles Minelli. It was my first
experience with a real symphony orchestra. I thoroughly enjoyed it, mostly
sticking to tympani for challenging pieces of classical music including the
Grieg Piano Concerto, which featured my new friend from Cleveland and
extraordinarily talented pianist Curtis Jefferson, Cesar Franck’s Symphony in D
Minor, and Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons, among others.
But it was in the
symphonic band that I felt most at home, since I had been playing in local and
all-area concert bands since junior high. The man in charge of the band was probably
the most renowned of the instructors at the workshop—Lt. Colonel William H.
Santelmann, US Marine Corps (retired), who had been the twenty-first director
of "the President's Own" First Marine Band, which was founded at the end of the
eighteenth century and one of whose directors had been “the March King”, John
Phillip Sousa. The colonel's own father, William F. Santelmann, had been the band's nineteenth director.
Lt. Colonel William H. Santelmann |
Anyway, all went
swimmingly, with me performing at the top of my game, also mostly on kettle
drums, while meticulously keeping the rest of my section in check as well. But
during the last rehearsal before the event, I decided to play the snare drum
part in Modest Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition. And, of course, I broke
out my lovely gold VeriSonic sticks for the occasion.
It was as we were playing
the climactic crescendo to The Great Gate of Kiev that, for the first time, the
colonel's ice-cold eyes locked on me, and he suddenly cut the band off in
mid-crescendo snare roll. You could have heard a pin drop—and might well have
heard me peeing down my leg, had I not quickly gotten my panic under control—when
he stared me down and said, "Young man, are those knitting needles that
you are using?"
I laughed. He didn’t.
"No sir," I
said, recovering a bit. "They're balanced aluminum sticks for a cleaner,
more even sound."
I think I half expected
him to say, "Oh, how interesting. May I see them?"
Instead, he gave me the most withering of glares and hissed, "Newfangled
trash. I hope you have a traditional hardwood pair with you, or you can leave
now and not come back."
Luckily, I did.
Yes, the colonel was
indeed, old school.
1 comment:
Lol 👍👍👍
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