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Hal Blaine, RIP


Dave James

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Died today at 90.  He was one of those behind the scenes players like Tony Tedesco, Don Randi and Carol Kaye who had a huge hand in the popularization of rock music in the 60's.  During his career, he played 40 #1 singles and on 150 songs that made the Top 10.  He was easily the most prolific drummer in the history of popular music. 

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10 hours ago, medjuck said:

IIRC (and I may not) in the documentary about the wrecking crew both Blaine and Carole Kaye say they started out wanting to be jazz musicians but couldn't make a living at it. 

 He started out as a jazz drummer, and even went on the road with Basie. When he came to LA, Shelly Manne was the top studio drummer, and Shelly turned down all the rock dates he was called for, because he thought they were beneath him, and gave them to Hal. 
Next thing you know, Hal played on every hit record of that time. 

In the 80's, drum machines took over the studio scene, and HB wasn't as busy as he used to be. His sixth wife took everything he had in a bitter divorce, and HB would've been broke if not for his Union pension. 
RIP. 
 
 
 
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RIP Hal Blaine!  I'd say that in my lifetime, he was the country's #2 self-promoter, behind only Stan Lee.

He often bragged that he was on more Billboard #1 hits than anyone else, but I don't think he should be remembered for that.  I think that he should be remembered as the drummer on The Tijuana Brass's "A Taste of Honey."  It was Herb Alpert's idea for the group to just stop briefly, and he told Blaine to just think of something to fill in the space. 

I'd say that that and Ron Wilson's Wipeout solo were the two most famous drum solo's of the decade.

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8 minutes ago, GA Russell said:

RIP Hal Blaine!  I'd say that in my lifetime, he was the country's #2 self-promoter, behind only Stan Lee.

He often bragged that he was on more Billboard #1 hits than anyone else, but I don't think he should be remembered for that.  I think that he should be remembered as the drummer on The Tijuana Brass's "A Taste of Honey."  It was Herb Alpert's idea for the group to just stop briefly, and he told Blaine to just think of something to fill in the space. 

I'd say that that and Ron Wilson's Wipeout solo were the two most famous drum solo's of the decade.

Remember, you said "famous", not "good".  We played this drum solo in unison on our lunch room tables at school:

Image result for iron butterfly

And this one was famous and good, "Soul Sacrifice" from Woodstock:

Image result for santana at woodstock soul sacrifice

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1 hour ago, Dave James said:

I'm going all in on this one:

 

I always avoided that one when I played "Wheels of Fire".   And avoided "Boom" when playing this one (the whole second album was an indulgence/rip-off.  At least "Wheels of Fire" had "Crossroads" and "Spoonful" on the second, live album.):

Image result for rascals freedom suite

Edited by felser
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6 hours ago, sgcim said:
 He started out as a jazz drummer, and even went on the road with Basie. When he came to LA, Shelly Manne was the top studio drummer, and Shelly turned down all the rock dates he was called for, because he thought they were beneath him, and gave them to Hal. 
Next thing you know, Hal played on every hit record of that time. 

In the 80's, drum machines took over the studio scene, and HB wasn't as busy as he used to be. His sixth wife took everything he had in a bitter divorce, and HB would've been broke if not for his Union pension. 
RIP. 
 
 
 

He also gives  credit to Earl Palmer who had so too many  studio gigs and  he recommended Blaine for the ones he couldn't make.  Palmer may have played on even more records than Blaine:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earl_Palmer

Edited by medjuck
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56 minutes ago, medjuck said:

He also gives  credit to Earl Palmer who had so too many  studio gigs and  he recommended Blaine for the ones he couldn't make.  Palmer may have played on even more records than Blaine:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earl_Palmer

Yeah, I think Shelly kind of regretted not getting into that circle like Earl and Hal. He called up Hal and asked him why he was getting so many more calls than he was getting.

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33 minutes ago, Milestones said:

Is he the most-recorded drummer ever?  I'e heard it's about 6,000 recordings.  I imagine some jazz guys would at least give him a run for money.

Billy Higgins?  I think I read that Earl Palmer played on even more records. 

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