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Billy Cobham's Signature
Stick (SBC) has a full round
tip for excellent rebound. The back end of the stick
is cut with a unique finger groove for enhanced gripping
and control. L = 16 1/4", Dia.=.605" |
Percussive
Notes is an official publication
of The Percussive Arts Society. This article
is reprinted with permission.
The Percussive
Arts Society is the world's largest
percussion organization. Find out more about
joining this important organization and its
annual convention by visiting PAS online
at http://www.pas.org. |
Born May 16, 1944 in Panama, Billy
attended Music and Art High
School in New York City and was active in drum corps.
His career began in New
York after he got out of the Army. In the late
1960s, Cobham played with pianists Horace
Silver and Billy Taylor. Both bandleaders
were coming out of a strong hard-bop jazz
approach, and at the time Billy’s jazz playing
was similar to that of Louis Hayes or
Mickey Roker.
After breaking onto the scene playing
small group jazz, Cobham’s career took a
decided turn. Billy became one of the first
drummers to combine the jazz and rock approaches. Tony
Williams, Alphonse
Mouzon, Lenny White, and Jack DeJohnette
were also creating unique blends of jazz,
rock, and funk, but Billy’s audacious and
over-the-top approach was unmatched and
very different.
“The first time I saw Billy Cobham was in
1974,” says Steve Smith, “and it changed
my
life! I had heard Mahavishnu’s The
Inner Mounting Flame, and I didn’t understand
it at the time since I had mainly been listening
to big band music and rock. But in ’74, when
I was going to Berklee in Boston, I saw Billy
with his first band at the jazz club Paul’s
Mall. He was playing super funky with a
powerful approach I had never seen before.
He’d play these huge fills around his clear
Fibes kit, and sometimes he would be so
into it that he would stand up when he
played a fill. It was truly awesome. I went
back to school the next day and tried to play
like that, but I couldn’t even get close. The
teacher running the ensemble yelled at me
and told me to calm down.”
Billy was playing with the funk band
Birdsong in New York, when he joined the
jazz-rock band Dreams (whose two recordings sound like
a more aggressive and looser
Blood, Sweat & Tears). According to Dreams
trumpet player Randy Brecker, it was when
Billy was playing with Dreams that he was
first heard by Miles Davis. That meeting led
to Billy’s inclusion on Miles Davis’ Bitches
Brew, the first recording session where Billy
began to fuse his jazz and rock approach.
Billy played on the song “Corrado,” although
this track was not heard until the recent release of
the complete Bitches Brew
sessions. Everyone first heard Cobham with
Miles in 1970 when Davis used Billy on the
entire Jack Johnson recording. Cobham brought a funkier
approach to Miles’ recordings. The groove on the
Jack Johnson track “Right Off” is among
the strongest and funkiest grooves Davis recorded during
this period, and “Corrado” is
one of the most unique parts of the Bitches
Brew sessions. Billy also appeared on one
track of Miles’ album Live
Evil.
While contributing to the Davis recordings, Cobham
also made two recordings
with Dreams, whose self-titled debut recording is an
outstanding example of early
jazz-rock.
Cobham soon left to join John McLaughlin and the Mahavishnu
Orchestra in 1971. It was on the Mahavishnu recordings
The Inner Mounting Flame and Birds
Of Fire that Cobham
firmly established his
rightful place in drum history. Cobham and
the rest of Mahavishnu took musical virtuosity to new
levels, and Cobham’s technical
prowess and odd-time grooves laid the
groundwork for the band’s dense sound.
From The Inner Mounting Flame, listen
to the relentless “Vital Transformation” (in
9/8) and “The Dance Of Maya” (a shuffle in
10/8). One overlooked aspect of Cobham’s
drumming that often comes to the forefront
on the Mahavishnu recordings is his ability
to play very intensely at a low volume. You
can hear this on “You Know You Know” as
well as on a great deal of the recently released Lost
Trident Sessions. This is a very
aggressive recording, but Cobham is often“burning
high on a low flame” on the recording. To see
a great example of this,
watch Billy’s solo on the Zildjian Day in
New York video, where he brings much of
his performance down to a whisper. Billy is
more often remembered for his speed,
strength, and sheer endurance behind the
drums, but his musicality and his touch is
often overlooked.
For
an example of Cobham’s classic “over
the top” fusion drumming check out “One
Word” (from Birds Of Fire). However, pay
close attention to the dynamics of his single
strokes on the amazing intro to the tune, as
well as on the volcanic climax of the drum
solo at the end. The long and very controlled crescendo
on “Meeting Of The Spirits” is
also worth close examination. For two recordings featuring
contemporary interpretations of the Mahavishnu music
and Cobham’s superhuman drumming, check out Vinnie
Colaiuta on Visions Of An Inner
Mounting Apocalypse and
Gregg Bendian with The Mahavishnu
Project.
About his interpretations of
Cobham’s playing, Bendian says, “Billy
Cobham is the father of odd-meter drumming. While it’s
now commonplace for tunes to move in and out of many
different complex meters, Billy paved the way for this
with his rhythmic
contributions to tunes like ‘Vital Transformation,’ ‘The
Dance of Maya,’ and my
favorite, ‘Trilogy,’ which is in seven.
Of course, it
didn’t hurt that he could make these somewhat
arcane time signatures groove as effortlessly as a
typical four-beat bar. I think it’s safe to say
that anyone dealing with
complex, dense or aggressive drumming today owes a
debt of gratitude to Billy Cobham—and that most
definitely includes
me! His inspiration and influence on myself,
and all drummer/composer/bandleaders is
profound and immeasurable.”
Cobham also made an impact on the
equipment we play. He plays a right-handed
drumset with a ride cymbal mounted on his
left, and a very low mounted hi-hat, playing
both with his left hand. “Playing melodically,
as well as rhythmically, is very
important to me,” Cobham told Modern
Drummer in 1986. “Left-hand ride gave me
the strength and independence to play patterns in any
direction, so I could make a
musical statement in any way.”
While Chinese cymbals were used extensively during
the Swing and Big Band eras,
Billy popularized their use in “modern” drumming.
But not only did Billy bring back a forgotten voice from
the past, he changed
the way it was mounted. Billy began mounting China
cymbals “upside down,” with the
edge turned away from the drummer. Billy
also was integral in
the creation of the
original Gong Bass
Drums.
Cobham did not
initially play a large
kit with two bass
drums (The Inner
Mounting Flame and early
live Mahavishnu gigs
were done with a
smaller, single bass
drum kit), and he
wasn’t the first jazz drummer to play with
two bass drums. But he pioneered the ultra-aggressive
and virtuosic double bass drumming style. Pay close
attention to the double
bass drum groove in 9/8 on the song “Birds
Of Fire” from the album of the same name,
as well as on “Miles Beyond” and “Open
Country Joy.” Billy’s double bass drum
shuffle on the composition “Quadrant 4” (from
his Spectrum album) is one of the most influential
drum grooves ever recorded. It has borne many offspring,
from
Simon Phillips’s “Space Boogie” shuffle
to
Alex Van Halen’s “Hot For Teacher” groove.
Cobham’s flawless matched grip, machine-gun
approach served notice to the rest
of the drumming world that drumming
would never be the same. It was also his
thumbs-up matched grip that began to legitimize that
specific approach to the
drumset. “I found that French grip is an
easier way to gain response from the head of
a drum,” Cobham told Modern
Drummer in
1998. “I picked that up from watching great
timpanists, like Vic Firth. It works particularly well
on smaller, more tightly tuned
drums in that it incorporates the smaller
muscles of the fingers. I can play singles for
longer periods of time with the French
grip.”
After Cobham departed the Mahavishnu
Orchestra, he established himself as a
bandleader. His first recording as a leader,
Spectrum, pioneered a new rock/jazz fusion
sound that was followed by bandleaders
such as Jeff Beck. It should be noted that
Cobham composed all of the music on this
classic, which included the fusion anthem“Stratus.” Although
his soloing has always been what people have focused
on, Billy’s
grooves on this recording are essential, especially the super funky “Taurian
Matador,”“Stratus,” and “Red Baron.” Many of Billy’s
other releases as a bandleader are outstanding. Check out
Crosswinds, Total Eclipse, Glass Menagerie, Flight Time, and The
Traveler.
Like
Art Blakey and Miles Davis, Cobham’s
bands exposed many musicians that would
become stalwarts in the jazz and fusion
genre. It was with Billy that John Scofield,
John Abercrombie, Michael and Randy
Brecker, Gil Goldstein, George Duke, Mike
Stern and others received some of their first
wide exposure.
For some great Cobham recordings as a
sideman, check out Larry Coryell’s influential
all-star fusion recording Spaces and
Coryell’s recent Spaces Revisited, and Dean
Brown’s Here. In the ’80s Billy played in
Bob Weir’s band, Bobby and the Midnites
(there is a terrific self-titled video of this
band). Billy can also be seen on the his own
videos Drums By Design and Live
Jazz Legends 1989,
and on the videos Cobham Meets
Bellson, and With Gil Evans and his Orchestra.
In the ’90s Cobham helped start the band
Jazz Is Dead, recording its Blue
Light Rain album. Both Bobby
and The Midnites and Jazz Is Dead also featured bassist
Alphonso
Johnson. Cobham has often recorded with
Johnson, and their funky and slinky time
concept creates a wonderful pad for great
music to be created upon.
Cobham’s drum sound is wide open,
while his snare sound remains high pitched
and bright. The solos “Anxiety” (from Spectrum)
and “Funky Kind of Thing” (from the
album A Funky Thide Of Sings) capture
Cobham’s drum sound perfectly. This sound
was usually achieved with an oversized
drumset and multiple toms, which Billy
popularized. Steve Smith remembers, “After
doing my first tour with Jean-Luc Ponty in
1976 using a small jazz kit, Jean-Luc asked
me if I’d get a ‘big, double bass drumset,
like
Billy Cobham’s.’ After the tour I bought
my
first Sonor kit with two 24" bass drums!” Although
Cobham uses larger drumsets with two bass drums and
multiple toms, his cymbal setup has always remained
relatively small, relying on larger crashes and brighter
rides, while occasionally using a rack of special effects
cymbals mounted behind him.
In 2001 Cobham was named one of the
25 Most Influential Drummers by Modern
Drummer magazine. Although there are
many all-time greats, Billy Cobham is one of
the very few who can truly be called a pivotal drummer
in music history. He changed
the way we set up our drums and cymbals,
he changed the way we play them, and he
changed the way we play music.

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