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- Born: 1945, Rochester, NY
- Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
- Genres: Jazz
- Instrument: Drums
- Representative Albums: "The Best of Steve Gadd," "Gadd About"
| Artist: Steve Gadd |
Similar Artists:
Influenced By:
Followers:
Performed Songs By:
Worked With:
| Wikipedia: Steve Gadd |
| Steve Gadd | |
|---|---|
Gadd in 2007
Photo: Mike Park |
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| Background information | |
| Birth name | Stephen Kendall Gadd |
| Born | April 9, 1945 Rochester, New York United States |
| Genres | Jazz Rock music, Blues, R&B |
| Occupations | Musician |
| Instruments | drums, Tympani, Percussion |
Steve Gadd (born April 9, 1945 in Rochester, New York) is an American session and studio drummer, notable for his work with popular musicians from a wide range of genres.
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Gadd is a native of Irondequoit, a suburb of Rochester, NY. When he was seven years old, his uncle, who was a drummer in the US army, encouraged him to take drum lessons. By the age of eleven he had sat in with Dizzy Gillespie.
After graduating from Irondequoit's Eastridge High School, he attended the Manhattan School of Music for two years before transferring to the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, playing in wind ensembles and concert bands. After Gadd finished college in the late 1960s, he played regularly with Chuck Mangione and his brother Gap Mangione. His first recording was on Gap Mangione's debut solo album, Diana in the Autumn Wind (1968).
Gadd was drafted into the U.S. Army and spent three years as a drummer in the Army Music Program, most of which was spent with the Jazz Ambassadors of the U.S. Army Field Band in Ft. Meade, MD. Following his military service, Gadd played and worked with a band in Rochester. In 1972, Gadd formed a trio with Tony Levin and Mike Holmes, traveling to New York with them. The trio eventually broke up, but Gadd began to work mainly as a studio musician. Gadd also played with Corea's Return to Forever but left the group.
In the 1970s and 1980s, he toured internationally, and recorded with Paul Simon and also with Al Di Meola's Electric Rendezvous Band. In response to confusion over another drummer by the same name, Gadd, while on his We're on a Mission from Gadd tour in 2005, told fans that was not him. Gadd said, "I've never met the other Steve Gadd. We happened to stay in the same hotel once, though. I kept getting his messages and apparently he was getting mine."
In 1976, Gadd and other session musicians in New York City, including Richard Tee, Eric Gale and Cornell Dupree, formed the group Stuff. Their work included appearances on NBC's Saturday Night Live, both performing on their own and backing Joe Cocker.
By the end of the 1970s, Steve Gadd was an accomplished drummer, with transcriptions of his drum solos on sale in Japan. Chick Corea once commented, "Every drummer wants to play like Gadd because he plays perfect ... He has brought orchestral and compositional thinking to the drum kit while at the same time having a great imagination and a great ability to swing."[citation needed]
A short list of musicians with whom Gadd has worked include Paul McCartney, Paul Simon, Steely Dan, Al Jarreau, Joe Cocker, Stuff, Bob James, Chick Corea, Eric Clapton, James Taylor, Jim Croce, Eddie Gomez, The Manhattan Transfer, Michal Urbaniak, Steps Ahead, Al Di Meola, Manhattan Jazz Quintet, Richard Tee, Jon Bon Jovi, Bee Gees, and Michael McDonald.
Gadd showed some of these strengths in his work on the title track of Steely Dan's Aja album – highlighted by Gadd's drum punctuation in the coda of the title cut. Corea's straight-ahead jazz albums Friends and Three Quartets, as well as Jim Hall's 1975 album Concierto are some more examples of Gadd's jazz playing.
In 2009, Gadd is set to return to Eric Clapton's band to play 11 nights at the Royal Albert Hall. He will become part of Clapton's touring band throughout May 2009. Gadd previously played and toured with Clapton in 1994/1995 and again from 1998 to 2004.
Gadd was a featured performer and actor in the 1980 motion picture One Trick Pony starring Paul Simon. Simon's hit "Late in the Evening" was the movie's main title in which Gadd implemented the "Mozambique", a Cuban dance rhythm, into the song.
The song "A Little Green Rosetta" from the Frank Zappa album Joe's Garage lampoons Steve Gadd's status as one of the highest paid session drummers in popular music. Zappa jokingly claims to hire "Steve Gadd's clone" to play the out chorus on the song. Contrary to Gadd's trademark style, the drums sound almost completely at odds with the song itself. The actual drummer on the Zappa song is Vinnie Colaiuta. His performance is completely off the "click track" (which Zappa at one point also mixes into the recording.) Zappa experimented with merging recordings of performances from different shows or even songs at this time. Colaiuta probably plays what he is supposed to in the original song.
Steve Gadd uses Yamaha drums, which he has played since 1976. He has recently changed his gear to a setup consisting of "Birch Custom Absolute" toms and a maple bass drum. He also uses a chrome over brass Ludwig Supraphonic snare drum.
He has been asked to contribute his ideas to develop his own signature series Zildjian K Custom Session cymbals.
Gadd also has Vic Firth sticks with his signature on them. The drumsticks are a very light, thin kind, black in color, and normal "wood color" on the tips. There is also an identical model with nylon tips. The stick is also slightly shorter than the American Classic 5A, and features a barrel tip for improved recording sound. It is 153⁄4 in (40.0 cm) long and the diameter is .550 in (1.40 cm). Along with having his own signature stick, he also has his own signature brushes. These brushes are intended to solve the problem of wire brushes snagging on new coated drumheads by slightly angling the wires in the top 3/4” (1.9 cm) of the playing end. The wires glide across the head, allowing a smoother sweep and a velvet swish sound.
Gadd uses a variety of Remo heads: a coated Powerstroke 3 on the batter sides of the snare, coated Pinstripes on the batter sides of toms, and clear Ambassadors for the resonant sides. He uses a Pinstripe on the bass drum.[1]
As Steve Gadd/ with the Gadd Gang:
With Stuff:
With B.B. King:
With Chick Corea:
With Steely Dan:
With Simon and Garfunkel:
With The Manhattan Transfer:
With Paul Simon:
With Steps Ahead:
With George Benson:
With Joe Brucato:
With Eric Clapton:
With Dr. John:
With James Brown:
With Al Jarreau:
With Rickie Lee Jones:
With Paul McCartney:
With Chuck Mangione:
With Michel Petrucciani:
With Al Di Meola:
With Lee Ritenour:
With Bob James
With Michel Jonasz:
With Sunlightsquare:
With Weather Report
With Funk Factory
With James Taylor
With Art Garfunkel
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
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