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After the Windwaker, Thornhill, Invent Animate, and Northlane show, my wife and I decided to just walk around the streets of Lawrence, Kansas to digest the epic performances we just witnessed. We decided to start heading back to the car and we saw Brody and Keaton walking around too! Both were so down to earth and chill. Brody had a Pickleman sub in his hand😂 I tried not to turn into a fanboi. All bands were epic but IA brought the fire that night.
Man Dave is a fucking gangster. Insane musician. Saw Jarhead live a few weeks ago in LA, was right in front of his kit killer work on it and his vocals are absolutely gnarly haha really cool dude too. Hell yea💪🤘
This was such a great interview. Thank you for making it happen. HUM was a massive influence on both my brother (drums) and myself (guitar). It was interesting to hear Bryan's thoughts on his playing and their albums.
Greetings from Australia 🦘 Great job with this track...drums fit beautifully with the music...love the crisp snare patterns and what a cool outro. Have enjoyed your interviews as well..John Stanier being a particular hero of mine. Keep up the great work...
I got into steely Dan for a while. It's pretty good. Great interview. Learned some techniques by listening to angel corpse. Like puting your drumming to a meter or metronome or tempo adjust to bring up the stbility
Oddly enough theres a phenomenal drummer called Dan Ford who played for Sikth a Uk math metal band or whatever you'd call them. really top notch drumming
My band is playing in Amblare's release show (Which contains Bryan's last recordings) in Evansville next month and I came here to learn more about the dude since it's being done in his honor, thank you for doing this interview and sharing it with us.
I can't believe this exists, but I'm glad it does. I too balked at Tim suggesting that he might've gone too far on the Shiner albums, but I get what he meant, especially listening to stuff like Play Dead on The Egg that feels flashy but fun too in a way that Tim never totally unlocked. Still tho, the drumming on My Life as a Housewife is my definition of "perfect." Thank you both for the perspective!
Rod was a fabulous front man on stage, he was a pro, a natural, who commanded the moment. audio and Montreux don't do him justice compared to the shows I saw in Hollywood '72, the whole band had such a groove that the words flowed like magic. what a testament to Bobby's vision and dedication.
@@thethrillainmanilla1412 they played many SoCal clubs but opened twice at the Bowl for Alice Cooper then Black Sabbath and more than held their own on the big stage.
John was really nice when my drummer pal and I met him back in 1992. (We snuck in to watch sound check, and after we met Page, he lied to the club manager and said we were his friends). He took my buddy up on stage and showed him all around his drum kit, spent time just shooting the shit with us. We asked him if he liked Don Caballero, and he said "dude, they're my favorite band!" And years later, he formed Battles with Ian!
loved listening to this, really chill interview and brandon seems like such a cool guy - plus obviously his drum ability speaks for itself. I still can't get some of those 'no effects' beats right!!
John's grooves on Meantime changed my guitar playing... the John Bonham of the 90' his groove and signature snare sound still ringing... timeless... many thx for the best interview with John!