Sometimes you’d be getting ready to count a song off, and he’d wave you off and play something else. Waking from a coma, Chambers didn’t know if he would ever play drums again. Dennis the Menace is back, for sure, and in this heightened musical moment with Wooten’s trio, it’s hard to imagine that less than five years ago he lay near death in a hospital in Alicante, Spain. He has also toured extensively with Steely Dan, and appeared on the band's 'Alive in America' album. Dennis was a member of Parliament-Funkadelic from 1978 to 1985.The ultimate drummer index, designed for mobile first.© Drummerszone.com 2002-2020 Drummerszone.com is a Musicpublishers.nl website.Welcome to drummerszone.com - the more you like, the more you get!July 22, 2014 | area: USA | © drummerszone.com He doesn’t subdivide anything too much. He never wanted to sound boring. Chris Dave, too. Plus he played mad drumset. Yesterday, Gary Husband, who is a good friend, gave the following update: Dennis Chambers is perhaps best known for his work on Santana's live rendition of the instrumental song 'Soul Sacrifice'.
Or what I was hearing, I just heard it in a different way. Dennis Milton Chambers: Born May 9, 1959 (age 61) Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. He has also toured extensively with Steely Dan, and appeared on the band's 'Alive in America' album. And the reason is that anybody can play that music.
I hear something, I go with it, and whatever happens, happens. You know, nobody’s name is on the chart. And I try to explain to them that if you’re a reader and somebody throws a chart in front of you, it doesn’t have your name on it. It doesn’t get any deeper than that. So I look at him, forgetting that John counts everything straight out. I didn’t pick this instrument to pull girls, or to turn it into Dennis Chambers Day every time I walk into the studio. This video is unavailable.
Watch Queue Queue Dennis Chambers is perhaps best known for his work on Santana's live rendition of the instrumental song 'Soul Sacrifice'. His foot is constantly moving, and what you’re hearing and what you’re seeing are two different things. But when it falls apart, I’m learning from this. It’s just…drums.With a gleam in his eye, DC takes control of the out vamp and thrills the Blue Note crowd with a flourish of sweeps and displaced beats, as Wooten furiously nods his bass along to the drummer’s spatial modulations. I had a lot of time to think about it.
Like I’ll play seven on the right hand, five on the left, maybe nine on the bottom half, to, you know, see where the cycles would go, how far the thing would go before it lands on 1. Dennis Chambers has Victor Wooten on the ropes. One of the most influential drummers of his generation, Dennis Chambers has been thrilling and confounding listeners almost since he began playing at the age of three. It doesn’t say Steve Gadd, it doesn’t say Vinnie Colaiuta, it doesn’t say Dennis Chambers or Billy Cobham.
It’s just three fives. So he always kept you guessing. It’s not that.