Powered by RND
PodcastsMusicThe 8020 Drummer Podcast
Listen to The 8020 Drummer Podcast in the App
Listen to The 8020 Drummer Podcast in the App
(398)(247,963)
Save favourites
Alarm
Sleep timer

The 8020 Drummer Podcast

Podcast The 8020 Drummer Podcast
Nate Smith
Asking Great Drummers The Questions You've Always Wished Somebody Would Ask Them

Available Episodes

5 of 36
  • Stan Bicknell on Creating A Life Around The Drums
    Itā€™s fitting that two weeks after hearing from Chris Turner, a man with one of the most whimsical, intuitive approaches to drums Iā€™ve ever encountered, we encounter one Stan Bicknell, whoā€™s built a brand around a mindful, deliberate, disciplined approach to the drums, and to architecting a life around it. Stan wowed audiences with his appearance on Drumeo 5 years ago. Around this time, his touring career was taking off. But after the birth of his child, Stan made the decision to put his life front-and-center, move back to his native New Zealand, and design a role for drums, drum practice, drum teaching, and drum performance, that served his life goals. Stanā€™s story resonated with me, because I made a similar decision around a decade ago, when I decided to start the 8020 channel. (I should say, I wasnā€™t turning down touring opportunities.) Speaking to Stan was a great ā€œmeeting of the mindsā€, because weā€™ve read many of the same books, and thought along the same lines. Itā€™s just that heā€™s doing practically all of it better than I am. Which inspires an adage - ā€œfind the person whoā€™s doing what you want to do better than you are, and draw inspiration from them.ā€ Stan is like the Qui-Gon Jinn of the drums, with his disciplined practice routines, mindfulness, goal-setting, and integration between drums and life. And it shows in his playing. Stan is almost 100% self-taught, which is to say he emulated his drum heroes like Weckl and Vinnie largely without teachers as intermediaries, and while he wouldnā€™t recommend that for everybody, all that extra work left him with some revised first-principles. He also coaches drummers in not-only the instrument, but in life-satisfaction, and, as the episode title says, building a life around the drums. I hope youā€™ll find this discussion as fascinating as I did. Chapters 0:00 - setting a goal without assuming you're entitled to the results 6:44 - finding humility by removing gatekeepers 12:05 - the paradox of putting in the time without feeling locked in 17:15 - small world - Richie Martinez shout-outs 20:54 - why routines are necessary for improvement 24:44 - does it ever get any easier? 29:58 - inside Stan's system for improvisation 38:10 - spending a lot of time practicing something abstract 43:49 - identity diversity and being a "whole drummer"
    -------- Ā 
    54:46
  • Chris Turner on Falling in Love With The Drums Every Day
    Chris Turner is kind of the undisputed modern ā€œdouble kick kingā€. Which, if that was all he was, might be of less interest to my audience. Luckily heā€™s also one of the most musical and creative drummers, and one of the most interesting and inspiring humans Iā€™ve met recently. One of the underrated benefits of getting to speak to great drummers is seeing the variety of different ways theyā€™ve achieved, well, greatness. And you learn there are really very different archetypes, from the ā€œacerbic everymanā€, to the ā€œsystems and discipline personā€, to the ā€œrocket-fueled motivation machineā€. (The last might describe Isac Jamba and Richie Martinez, among others.) Chris Turner has the seemingly-bottomless-pit-of-motivation that some of the other guests have, but itā€™s combined with an easy-going, ā€œcome-what-mayā€ kind of whimsy. He literally says he structures his life to avoid doing anything he doesnā€™t want to do in a given day. If youā€™re wondering about the obvious paradox between that approach and the discipline and longevity required to reach his level on drums, I was wondering the same thing, and his answer mildly floored me. Chris says for his entire life, heā€™s strung together a series of independent days of falling deeply in love with the drums. When I asked him if heā€™s seen 50 First Dates, the Adam Sandler/Drew Barrymore rom com, he agreed ā€œitā€™s like that.ā€ I was rather pleased that in this hour-long conversation with the worldā€™s foremost double-kick player, we only broached double kick twice: once as an aside as Chris described his relationship with teaching, and a second time when I say Iā€™m ā€œnot going to ask him about that.ā€ Instead we talk about motivation, psychology, finding a relationship with what you love, and his newest object-of-focus, YouTube. Chris has an energy I think youā€™ll find infectious, and I know youā€™ll enjoy this convo regardless of the genre youā€™re interested in. Ā  Chapters 0:16 - Chris' unique approach to motivation 6:42 - the "50 First Dates" approach to drums/Chris following his talent 10:42 - finding motivation from adversity 15:30 - Alex Honnold 20:09 - ok, but how does he motivate students? 25:14 - the definition of a "career"? 28:31 - what's the creative direction that's firing up Chris the most 33:33 - how did he come out of the gate with such high quality on YouTube 36:55 - Chris' favorite YouTube inspirations
    -------- Ā 
    52:22
  • Rob Brown on The Importance of Gigs, Whether Feel Can Be Taught, and The Future of YouTube Drumming
    Throughout the years, Iā€™ve had a running mental catalogue on the go-to videos for certain subjects. Jazz swing, building a solo on the drums, tuning, timing, etc. And when I look back, in a surprising number of categories, the ā€œbest resourceā€ comes from Rob ā€œBeatdownā€ Brown. Rob was among the ā€œOGsā€ on Drumeo, with a great video about Stewart Copeland, and consistently drops authentic takes on his channel. Thatā€™s why Iā€™ve been meaning to have a conversation with Rob for some time. I finally caught up with him in early August, and opened the conversation with a question thatā€™s been on my mind a bunch: What does he make of this situation where everybody practices chops, but nobodyā€™s ā€œallowedā€ to use them? And has that created a situation in which theyā€™re not taught very well. Rob didnā€™t hold back on that subject, and was equally candid in speaking about the importance of real-world playing experience for the ā€œinternet generationā€. We veered a bit into the nature/nurture debate as well, speaking about whether ā€œfeelā€ can be taught - my hobby horse is the crowd that seems to think that, even for people with the capacity for good feel, thereā€™s no recourse except to ā€œfeel itā€. Rob was a bit more open minded to the idea that some people have a better innate capacity. Finally, we spoke about YouTube as a mature medium, and the future of careers in drumming. If you want some unfiltered wisdom from one of the OGs, I know youā€™ll enjoy this interview! Ā  Chapters 0:00 - how does Rob feel about groove vs chops 10:61 - who are "hot" drummers who play clean but not "showoffy" 16:41 - did it take Rob a lot of effort to learn to "flow"? 23:31 - how important is real-world experience for drummers? 27:00 - does Rob have take-aways from his gig experience? 31:29 - what has Rob learned about his audience that's surprised him? 36:15 - is "just feel it" inadequate advice? 41:07 - is feel teachable, or are some people just born with it? 49:10 - what career advice would Rob give to a young graduate?
    -------- Ā 
    1:04:06
  • Ofri Nehemya on Flow States, Lessons From The Greats, and Letting It Cook
    Ofri Nehemaya is barely in his ā€˜30s, but has already played and toured with Shai Maestro, Aaron Goldberg, Avishai (Bass) Cohen (the same drum chair where Mark Guiliana got his first big break), and Gilad Hekselman. Heā€™s also no stranger to bandleading, releasingĀ a viral, self-produced, straight-to-YouTube single called Just Sayin at ageā€¦I think it was 19;) Ofri has been on my radar since then, and I was excited to ask him about how he practices, how he channels flow, how he approaches moving to a new scene and ā€œfitting inā€, and more. Youā€™ll see in the opening minutes Iā€™m trying to pull some practice details out of him, and he just wants to talk about flow state and making music, so we go in that direction. (I still suspect he has some juicy shed secrets. Perhaps weā€™ll explore those in a Part Two.) Ā  Chapters Ā  0:00 - what has Ofri been practicing lately? 4:10 - applying practice to music 10:15 - how he practiced playing in flow 15:33 - why we get nervous to perform 19:15 - lessons Ofri has learned from musical greats 27:05 - Ofri's advice on plugging into a scene 33:15 - approaching people with authenticity 36:51 - the story behind Ofri's most famous song
    -------- Ā 
    53:38
  • Joshua Crawford on Pocket, Influences, Efficiency in Drums
    ` Two years ago, I did a virtual drum shed with former podcast guest Raghav Mehrotra, the always-entertaining David Cola, and this weekā€™s guest, Josh Crawford. Josh, who rose to fame doing reaction videos to jaw-dropping drummers, is himself an elite player, and in this conversation I wanted to hear his opinions on both sides: becoming the player he is, and also influencer lyfe. Josh is one of the most efficient players Iā€™ve seen - he plays the most intricate stuff while expending a level of energy that looks more like heā€™s reading a newspaper. We get into some detail as I try to pick his brain about sticking and his approach to playing around the drums in general. We also discuss the ever-present cold war of chops vs pocket, a subject on which Josh has dropped many-a-humorous-instagram voiceover - whether itā€™s Nick Canon footage from Drumline or Russell Croww and Denzel Washington - of famous movie characters ā€œarguingā€ about pocket vs chops. When I pressed him on the subject, Josh had an unexpected take. And of course we discuss the genesis of his internet fame, whether it was planned or serendipitous, and what he reckons heā€™d be doing if he hadnā€™t blown up on YouTube. Joshua is both funny and insightful, which is why I have no double youā€™ll enjoy this little chat. Ā  Chapters 0:00 - how does josh think of pocket vs chops? 5:00 - the best way to work on subdivision/placement 6:38 - how is josh so efficient? 10:54 - the Matrix/early influences 15:10 - what are the things josh has *passed* on learning for now 18:55 - estepario 21:33 - shed stories and the utility of sheds 27:58 - red light training 29:50 - how josh got started on youtube 33:55 - josh's non-drum youtube influences
    -------- Ā 
    43:31

More Music podcasts

About The 8020 Drummer Podcast

Asking Great Drummers The Questions You've Always Wished Somebody Would Ask Them
Podcast website

Listen to The 8020 Drummer Podcast, DISGRACELAND and many other podcasts from around the world with the radio.net app

Get the free radio.net app

  • Stations and podcasts to bookmark
  • Stream via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth
  • Supports Carplay & Android Auto
  • Many other app features

The 8020 Drummer Podcast: Podcasts in Family

Social
v7.11.0 | Ā© 2007-2025 radio.de GmbH
Generated: 3/18/2025 - 6:27:35 AM