loader from loading.io

John Riley on Nature vs Nurture, How Students Have Changed, Making The 1 O'Clock Lab Band, and More

The 8020 Drummer Podcast

Release Date: 10/30/2023

Stan Bicknell on Creating A Life Around The Drums show art Stan Bicknell on Creating A Life Around The Drums

The 8020 Drummer Podcast

It’s fitting that two weeks after hearing from Chris Turner, a man with one of the most whimsical, intuitive approaches to drums I’ve ever encountered, we encounter one Stan Bicknell, who’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...

info_outline
Chris Turner on Falling in Love With The Drums Every Day show art Chris Turner on Falling in Love With The Drums Every Day

The 8020 Drummer Podcast

Chris Turner is kind of the undisputed modern “double kick king”. Which, if that was all he was, might be of less interest to my audience. Luckily he’s also one of the most musical and creative drummers, and one of the most interesting and inspiring humans I’ve met recently. One of the underrated benefits of getting to speak to great drummers is seeing the variety of different ways they’ve achieved, well, greatness. And you learn there are really very different archetypes, from the “acerbic everyman”, to the “systems and discipline person”, to the “rocket-fueled motivation...

info_outline
Rob Brown on The Importance of Gigs, Whether Feel Can Be Taught, and The Future of YouTube Drumming show art Rob Brown on The Importance of Gigs, Whether Feel Can Be Taught, and The Future of YouTube Drumming

The 8020 Drummer Podcast

Throughout the years, I’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 “best resource” comes from Rob “Beatdown” Brown. Rob was among the “OGs” on Drumeo, with a great video about Stewart Copeland, and consistently drops authentic takes on his channel. That’s why I’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...

info_outline
Ofri Nehemya on Flow States, Lessons From The Greats, and Letting It Cook show art Ofri Nehemya on Flow States, Lessons From The Greats, and Letting It Cook

The 8020 Drummer Podcast

Ofri Nehemaya is barely in his ‘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. He’s also no stranger to bandleading, releasing  at age…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 “fitting in”, and more. You’ll see in the opening minutes I’m trying to pull some practice details out of him, and he just wants to...

info_outline
Joshua Crawford on Pocket, Influences, Efficiency in Drums show art Joshua Crawford on Pocket, Influences, Efficiency in Drums

The 8020 Drummer Podcast

` Two years ago, I did a virtual drum shed with former podcast guest Raghav Mehrotra, the always-entertaining David Cola, and this week’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 I’ve seen - he plays the most intricate stuff while expending a level of energy that looks more like he’s reading a newspaper. We get into some detail as I try to pick...

info_outline
Gordy Knudtson - The Hand Whisperer show art Gordy Knudtson - The Hand Whisperer

The 8020 Drummer Podcast

When Gordy Knudtson was gigging in the late 70s, he was using almost exclusively traditional grip, and suffered an injury he says caused doctors to doubt he’d be able to continue playing. Desperate to “work around” his tension, Gordy switched to matched and did one of the great deep-dives on hand technique. You could say he “John Dahaner’ed” drumstick mechanics, but it’s more accurate to say John “Gordy’d” jiujitsu. One of the points I bring up with Gordy is that just as before and after Danaher, plenty of practitioners embodied solid mechanics, if you watch the hands of...

info_outline
Benny Greb - Be An Entertainer show art Benny Greb - Be An Entertainer

The 8020 Drummer Podcast

I had a suspicion Benny Greb would be an interesting and thought-provoking conversation partner, and I wasn’t wrong. I was interested to compare notes with the master-clinician on a number of things that have been top-of-mind, like nature/nurture, the paradox of the subjectivity of - but requirement for skill in - art, gap-click, and overrated drum advice. Benny surprised me at turns, and confirmed my suspicions at others. One of his most-interesting insights, in my opinion, was that he wants to be an entertainer/craftsperson, not just an “artist”. We also managed to touch on Pablo...

info_outline
TaRon Lockett (And His TaRon Lockett (And His "Life Coach") on Humility, Creativity, Erykah Badu, and Hard-Won Lessons

The 8020 Drummer Podcast

TaRon Lockett, who was Prince’ last drummer, who cut his teeth with Erykah Badu, and who was a key member of a scene that spawned Robert “Sput” Searight, Cleon Edwards and Mike Mitchell among others… …showed up to our interview in character as his own life coach. And from that point I knew this wasn’t going to be an “average” podcast episode. It’s perfectly in-keeping with TaRon’s entire approach to music and creativity, though. There’s the dedication to “the bit”, evidenced by TaRon’s philosophy to dedicate himself 100% to assuming the character necessary to...

info_outline
Ed Soph - Ed Soph - "I Don't Teach Jazz Drums, I Teach Improvisation"

The 8020 Drummer Podcast

Today we have an interview I’m very excited about. One of the forefathers of jazz drum instruction - though as you’ll hear he doesn’t like the taxonomy, preferring to say he’s an “improvisation teacher”. The biggest surprise for me upon speaking to Ed is that he’s an iconoclast. His energy is pure punk-rock, and he has no time for the idea of “handedness” on the drums, nor the “walling off” of jazz from other forms of improvisation. Ed and I chat about hierarchies in music, how Denton, TX became a music powerhouse away from either of the coasts, teaching psychology, the...

info_outline
Raghav Mehrotra - Playing With The Late Night Band, Bonham, School of Rock, and Musical Maturity show art Raghav Mehrotra - Playing With The Late Night Band, Bonham, School of Rock, and Musical Maturity

The 8020 Drummer Podcast

Today’s podcast guest first caught my attention with his clean, slamming Instagram clips. Picture closing your eyes and hearing a mix of Clyde Stubblefield, Bonham, and Nate Smith, then opening them and seeing a skinny teenager with a big mop of black hair and an infectious smile, and thinking “this guy is playing this”? To the degree we use the word “prodigy”, Raghav Mehrotra is that. Someone who exhibits a degree of artistic maturity we usually don’t expect until many years later, even though he’s barely in college. (Studying economics at Harvard, btw.) Raghav played drums and...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

The last lengthy conversation I had with John Riley before this interview was probably when I was still a college student. That’s why it was super rewarding to catch up with one of drum teaching’s deepest thinkers, and pick his brain about a great many things I’ve experienced and thought about in the intervening years.

John and I begin by discussing nature-vs-nurture, when I ask him about a passage in his first book. That kicks off a thread about John’s own musical journey, whether he ever thought twice about drumming, and what really happened during what I’ve come to think of his “magical summer”, between his freshman and sophomore years at UNT, after which he won a seat in the prestigious One O’Clock Lab Band, and a teaching position at the end of the year.

John also holds forth on the importance of curiosity to guide practice, and why at a certain level of experience, it can be good to practice abstractions even if they don’t directly affect your day-to-day playing.

Finally we speak about how students have changed in the 20 years since I was his student (I feel ancient writing that), and how his approach to teaching has changed. (Of course I can’t avoid bringing up Whiplash.)

Like many of my guests, John was extremely generous with his time, and didn’t hold back on his thoughts. I’m sure you’ll enjoy this conversation.

 

Chapters

1:15 - what does John think about nature vs nurture
6:35 - did John ever think twice about the drums as a career path?
9:39 - what happened during John's "magical summer"?
13:25 - why John doesn't like to use written music if he can avoid it
19:35 - John's lesser-known influences
22:45 - how structured are John's practice sessions these days
26:10 - did John reach a point when he felt mostly confident?
29:53 - how have John's students changed in 20 years
37:48 - what's changed about John's teaching approach