Listening to I Talk to the Wind and Wake of Poseidon title track and it really becomes apparent. Although I rarely listen to 68-69 Yes so maybe I am wrong??
Listening to I Talk to the Wind and Wake of Poseidon title track and it really becomes apparent. Although I rarely listen to 68-69 Yes so maybe I am wrong??
I wouldn't go so far as to say "copy"... Bill had a jazzy style that was pretty well established on the first two Yes albums. Michael and Bill were both heavily jazz influenced players of the same generation of British musicians, so certain stylistic crossover is inevitable, I think. You can hear similar jazzy trademarks in the playing of Jon Hiseman, Ginger Baker, Mitch Mitchell, Ian Wallace and many more.
It was his ear for an odd meter and his ringing snare that really set Bill apart in the early days.
Some common touchstones that most of these drummers shared:
Max Roach
Art Blakey
Elvin Jones
Tony Williams
"Philly" Joe Jones
With Bill you can add a little more Joe Morello (Dave Brubeck) than with the others...
AN interesting potential comparison but I don't hear much similarity. Bill has that patented snare drum snap, and he injects some swing into his rock. But it stays rock. I find Giles very orchestral, able to effectively build up to crescendos. Am I remembering correctly that Giles learned a lot in a marching band? It sounds like it. Even something like 21CSM is basically marching band on speed. He doesn't seem to rock much at all, or swing for that matter.
plus Michael Giles often used double bass drums, which Bill Bruford never did. And Giles did much more tom-tom rolls/fills: that "orchestral" sound as arturs above me so accurately described. When Bill was in Yes/70's Crimson he basically only utilized one tom and one floor tom (the traditional jazz kit set-up).
Yeah, I don't hear the similarity. Giles created a template a lot of early prog drummers copied, but Bill was off in another space entirely. To my ear, Bill brought a lot more snappy attack to his playing while Giles laid down a textural foundation (that orchestral thing, I suppose.) Also, I feel that Bill pushed the beat a lot more than Giles did.
I'm holding out for the Wilson-mixed 5.1 super-duper walletbuster special anniversary extra adjectives edition.
I don't think that Bill Bruford tried to copy Michael Giles but IHMO I feel that another King Crimson drummer, Andy McCullogh, tried to copy Giles playing style on Lizard (or as I've heard, Robert Fripp wanted him to play in the manner of Michael Giles on the LP).
Classic case from which McCullough came out admirably and way better than when Dave Greenslade asked him to play like Bruford!
McCullough was great, but sadly his very own "voice" hardly came to show on much else than the Fields album. I still enjoy the hell out of his contribution on Lizard, though - one of the highlights of what I personally regard as their second-finest record.
"Improvisation is not an excuse for musical laziness" - Fred Frith
"[...] things that we never dreamed of doing in Crimson or in any band that I've been in," - Tony Levin speaking of SGM
I don't think BB had it in him to copy anyone. He's too much of an individualist for that, even in the early days.
Other than both were influenced by jazz, I don't really hear a similarity. Giles's signature "triplet style" is clearly heard in both McCulloch's and the guy in PFM playing.
Hell, they ain't even old-timey ! - Homer Stokes
Don't think so.
.
You also need to take on board that players like both Giles and Bruford (as well figures such as Aynsley Dunbar and Ginger Baker) were very heavily influenced by post-War British jazz and big band drummers such as Phil Seaman; a figure whose importance in the evolution of UK rock cannot be understated, but who is virtually unknown outside of musician's circles. Parallels can be drawn with another seminal musician of the period, Davey Graham, with respect to the impression he made on a generation of aspirant British guitarists in both folk and rock. Like Seaman, Graham had a distinct lack of commercial success and chaotic private life, but both were extremely important in providing a blue print for others to follow on their respective instruments.
copying was an 80's thing.
Funny my mind goes to Carl Palmer, the jazzy section of Schizoid Fan reminds me in style of something Palmer went on to do. That busy left hand. And of course ELP rehearsed the track when they first got together .
I'd go so far as to say that England only produced a handful of drummers in the 60s that you could point to as NOT being influenced much by jazz. I'd put Ringo, Keith Moon and Graham Edge on that list. The vast preponderance seem to have been brought up on jazz in terms of technique and style and it shows in their playing.
I'm holding out for the Wilson-mixed 5.1 super-duper walletbuster special anniversary extra adjectives edition.
I'm a jazz drummer, so yes I know of Phil Seaman. I think his influence was strongest on Ginger Baker, stylistically speaking. I would never claim my post as some sort of "definitive" list of influences, anyway. Some people simply don't take the jazz influence into consideration when examining that generation of drummers. Certainly the artists themselves are good enough to mention it!
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