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Liquid_Drummer wrote:He may never drum again. Sad day. For those of you that never heard Phil drumming in the 70's when Peter Gabriel was singing for Genesis you may not know that he is one of the best right up there with any of the greats dead or alive. His drumming during Genesis's more progressive era is untouchable. As a drummer of 27 years now I can tell you that Neal Peart ripped off Phil big time in many ways. You would have to be a drummer and a close listener to pick it up but any way. Here is the article. At least the guy has the balls to be honest that he is done... Cough... Cough.. Poor guy cant even hold a spoon from the damage. According to Phil the damage was caused by the way he sat at the drum kit all those years. Hunched over too far.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/musi ... 71b0d4%2C0
Here is phil rocking out some Jazz.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0xklB7dl ... re=related
Liquid_Drummer wrote:Poor guy cant even hold a spoon from the damage. According to Phil the damage was caused by the way he sat at the drum kit all those years. Hunched over too far.
Liquid_Drummer wrote:As a drummer of 27 years now I can tell you that Neal Peart ripped off Phil big time in many ways. You would have to be a drummer and a close listener to pick it up but any way.
S2M wrote:I also believe Neil was ahead of his time. Arguably the best rock drummer of all time. He just never varied, or progressed. IMHO.
Rick wrote:I don't think many musicians really rip others off, intentionally. People are influenced by things they hear that they like, and as such, adopt them into their style. It's the same with Steve Perry and Sam Cooke. There are so many Sam Cooke influences in Perry's vocalizations, but I wouldn't call it ripping off Cooke. It's someone taking what they hear, putting their own spin on it, and elaborating on it.
I think it should be considered a huge form of flattery for any musician to hear their style in someone else. How can you not take it as an enormous compliment?
Liquid_Drummer wrote:He may never drum again. Sad day. For those of you that never heard Phil drumming in the 70's when Peter Gabriel was singing for Genesis you may not know that he is one of the best right up there with any of the greats dead or alive. His drumming during Genesis's more progressive era is untouchable. As a drummer of 27 years now I can tell you that Neal Peart ripped off Phil big time in many ways. You would have to be a drummer and a close listener to pick it up but any way. Here is the article. At least the guy has the balls to be honest that he is done... Cough... Cough.. Poor guy cant even hold a spoon from the damage. According to Phil the damage was caused by the way he sat at the drum kit all those years. Hunched over too far.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/musi ... 71b0d4%2C0
Here is phil rocking out some Jazz.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0xklB7dl ... re=related
Liquid_Drummer wrote: For those of you that never heard Phil drumming in the 70's when Peter Gabriel was singing for Genesis you may not know that he is one of the best right up there with any of the greats dead or alive. His drumming during Genesis's more progressive era is untouchable.
S2M wrote:I know opinions will vary, but I don't consider the Gabriel-era progressive at all. Peter was doing his best Bowie. Genesis, to me, was art-rock. I consider Trick the first 'progressive' album, and my overall favorite.
Voyager wrote:Liquid_Drummer wrote:Poor guy cant even hold a spoon from the damage. According to Phil the damage was caused by the way he sat at the drum kit all those years. Hunched over too far.
It's not from hunching over - it's from holding a hard wooden stick and beating on drums and hard metal cymbals for 30 years. This is why I don't play drums in a band anymore. I got tired of having numb hands and wrists after playing 45 songs a night on the drums.
johnroxx wrote:S2M wrote:I know opinions will vary, but I don't consider the Gabriel-era progressive at all. Peter was doing his best Bowie. Genesis, to me, was art-rock. I consider Trick the first 'progressive' album, and my overall favorite.
As a life-long Genesis fan, Trick remains my favorite as well. It's hard to pick just one to call their "best," but if I was to be allowed only one to listen to from this point forward, it would have to be that one.
;^)
No Surprize wrote:Voyager, your avatar creeps me out dude.
No Surprize wrote:I'm never going to bumfunk Egypt, wherever the fuck that is!
Voyager wrote:No Surprize wrote:Voyager, your avatar creeps me out dude.
Good - that's the reaction I was hoping for.
No Surprize wrote:I'm never going to bumfunk Egypt, wherever the fuck that is!
It's right next to Bumfuck Egypt. Some of the residents didn't like having a curse word in their city's name, so they started a new city next to it.
Melissa wrote:Found this article on FB today interesting (I have him listed on my music "likes" so that's how it showed up)
http://www.philcollins.com/news/breakin ... ssage-phil
ebake02 wrote:Here's a good one:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zGk13o5X ... re=related
Eric Clapton, Nathan East and Phil Collins on this one.
S2M wrote:I know opinions will vary, but I don't consider the Gabriel-era progressive at all. Peter was doing his best Bowie. Genesis, to me, was art-rock. I consider Trick the first 'progressive' album, and my overall favorite.
Liquid_Drummer wrote:S2M wrote:I know opinions will vary, but I don't consider the Gabriel-era progressive at all. Peter was doing his best Bowie. Genesis, to me, was art-rock. I consider Trick the first 'progressive' album, and my overall favorite.
I love trick of the tail as well but for me Foxtrot owns all of them. Suppers Ready and watcher of the skies !! Man. Those two knock me out.
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