I've been a drummer all my life... can confirm that the older you get, the less showy and "filly" and cymbal-crazy you become. All about solid grooves haha
A note from the strings.... same for guitarists mostly... from my tone to the stuff i want to play has changed so so much just in the last ten years. Instead of being floored by speed and wizardry i am like... listen to the sustain on that almost dissonant jazz chord... lord help us. It doesnt go away it just keeps pace doesnt it?
As a drummer in his 20s I find this so accurate lol. Trying to play fast complex prog rock stuff with so many changes. Playing most of it out of time without any percision. Very accurate
The older you get and more experienced you get, you realize other musicians want someone more in the pocket, less BS. Start that early and you'll get more gigs!
Nice to see you here, Jon! As a bass player, in my teenage years it could be really tricky to play with crazy drummers trying to give the 110% (which means that the extra 10% were out-of-time fills) but I sincerely miss that amount of energy and fantasy when I play with more mature people :-)
@@JonSudanoHey I appreciate it, man. Damn...now I feel bad for my original comment lol. I didn't intend to disrespect. Pocket playing is awesome and it does make you a better drummer 👌
I'm a drummer in my 60's and I laughed my ass off at this! I do actually hit the drums, but I'm definitely more about the groove and playing for the song than I used to be.
I love that they went ahead with something so musician oriented. This humor & observations were for the musicians in the crowd and I appreciated it. Great bit.
Like any other instrument - in fact, like any other skill - there’s always a difference between what impresses people and what is genuinely hard to do. The two can overlap, but when we’re younger we’re more caught up in what impresses us and how we can use it to impress others. As we get older, assuming we continue to learn, we start to realise that certain skills which appear unimpressive to others are, in fact, horrendously difficult to get right. For example: when I was younger I was always impressed by ‘melisma’ (the musical, usually vocal, technique of playing as many notes in one phrase as possible (think Whitney or Mariah going up and down the scales). Now I’ve been training as a singer for 20 years and I’ve realised the hardest thing a vocalist can do is to hold a note. Not sing the same note for a long time, but *hold* it at the same precise pitch and intensity. I imagine Fred Armisen began to see this too, and alongside this he learned more styles and worked out which ones he liked rather that which ones would impress others.
When I've taught younger people to play guitar, I show them that one of the hardest things to do is play the same note over and over and over. Most can't do it perfectly past ten seconds. Has anyone ever tried to play Phillip Glass music? That stuff takes super human concentration and intensity.
People don’t think twice about blues drummers… They’re probably the drummers I have the most respect for. Keeping a steady blues beat is SO HARD. Firstly it’s usually sloooooow, which is by far harder than fast. Then it’s that ridiculous kick pattern… dudun dukah dudun dukah.. Maybe my brain is just broken, but I just never could do that stuff right. Such a fumbly rhythm! Hot For Teacher is one of those rhythms that I would never EVER be able to play, ever. I get like 2 bars in and then my feet just start galloping.
Well DAMMIT what if im too tired and depressed to work hard and FUCKIT I don'twant anything to be horrendously difficult--life is already that--how can I make everything easier and feel like a genius at everyhting
I think showcasing a celebrity’s talent makes them seem more human to the masses. It just seems more relatable and sometimes we forget we are all equals. Great bit!
I unwittingly saw Fred's band Trenchmouth open for one of my favorite local KC bands in the early 90s. I was so impressed I bought the CD from the merch girl that night. Twenty-plus years later he mentioned the band on WTF so I dug out the CD, and there he was in the liner notes. He was a powerful and gifted drummer.
Saw them twice in the early-, mid-90s in Lincoln NE (once in a basement). Can confirm. It was also notable at the time, for me anyway, that the drummer was doing all the between-song banter.
It takes a drummer to truly appreciate this humor... I remember once he did a bit about how drummers always lose the wing lug when they spin it off and it falls under the drums and you have to get of the chair to retrieve it... ha ha, I almost fell out of my chair... so true... then they pan to the audience and everyone looks totally confused, like , "was that supposed to be funny"? Loves me some Fred!
a few pro drummers I knew back when I was a lighting director would keep their drum key on a string around their neck, also most drum techs also did this, never lose it
I saw him live at the 40 Watt in Athens a couple months ago. He came out to talk with folks before the show and was so nice. Super cool guy . Love him !!
Wtf are you talking about?? He was born in 1966 and lived in NY until 1988 when he moved to Chicago to join a local post punk band called Trenchmouth. Later in the 90s he was a member of Blue Man Group
I'm a drummer now in my 50s and I totally get this hahaha. You go through all these chapters and changes in your style as you learn and grow on an instrument. So true. Although for me it was types of music. In my teens (the 80s) I was playing classic rock and hair metal. In my 20s (the 90s) I played grunge and alternative. In my 30s and 40s (2000s) it was nu metal. Now I'm full circle playing classic rock again. I predict in my 60s I'll be learning jazz and swing lol
I took a similar trajectory, then I hit my 40s and started making retrowave with drum machines… now I don’t even have drums cause I live in the city, and I miss drums every damn day… I love synthesizers a lot, but it’s hard to beat the immediacy and reliance on different techniques that are key to playing the drums. The way a perfect pair of sticks (SD4 Combo) feels in the hand during a perfect double stroke roll is impossible to explain. It just feels like home.
The perfect pair of sticks is actually Vic Firth AJ3's, and my double stroke roll is far from perfect, but I get it. I too am currently doing the composing-with-drum machines thing. Matter of fact, I don't even have real drum machines, everything I do lately is via virtual instruments "in the box." I say "currently" because I suspect that I can't stay away from playing a real kit forever....
1:08 I was in a band when I was a teenager and our drummer was exactly like that. 2:17 My late dad was a drummer and that reminds me of him when he was in his 40-50s. He died at the age of 60.
…more Armisen genius. The dude can play any style of music, and almost every instrument. He is an artistic and creative genius. There are few people in the history of the world who have possessed such innately brilliant talent.
I'm going with one guy who kicks his ass musically: Wolfie Van Halen. Played EVERY Instrument on his debut album. WON Best Album. Sounds EXACTLY like Dad. Chops out the ass. If I want comedy, Fred's my guy.
You’ve written some overarching, hyperbolic statements here about the quality of skill level you think Fred Armisen possesses. “Artistic and creative genius”… I completely disagree. “Few people in the history of the world who have possessed such innately brilliant talent”…again, I completely disagree. All of the patterns he displayed here might qualify as a beginner/intermediate level of drum set patterns. He is NO WHERE NEAR “advanced” in his musical skills. Comedy? Yes, a genius. Music? Meh. You want to see an artistic and creative genius on drums… Mike Mangini. ruclips.net/video/4wr4sZZcDcc/видео.html
Truly a very talented musician/drummer. He’s definitely got a job in the music biz anytime he wants it & I for 1 would be glad to listen to some of Fred’s chops!!
The funniest thing I've seen Jimmy do in a while is pick up the bag at the end and start playing it 😂 but I only say that because he didn't interrupt his guest 500 times
Now THIS is something totally different, and fun, and what I like to see on late night talk shows. Taking the guests into another element of themselves. I had no idea he was a drummer, and a pretty good one. I totally get his takes on each age. I have a cousin who's 54& a drummer, and a very good friend, who's 55,& a drummer, too,& I've watched,& studied drummers in heavy metal, funk, and rock bands all my life. (Duran Duran's)Roger Taylor😍😛 R.I.P., Tony Thompson 🥁🕯
I’m a bassist, and we’re in the same boat. The older you get, the less “showy” that you become, and less becomes more: the root, groove, feel, and playing what’s right for the song is where it’s at. I’ve gone from playing 16th and 32nd note runs and frenetic slapping and popping on an Ibanez bass (I’m a product of the 80s shredder culture), to doing the same on a Music Man Stingray 5, to playing tastefully (but still with a bit of showiness) on Fender Jazz and P Basses, to holding down the low end on an Englehardt or NS Design upright these days. The evolution to “playing less” is a natural progression.
The three things I have to say are: 1. As a teenager, I have found myself where he was in his 30s. I love that style of hot and heavy go through on the cymbals. 2. Love the guest kit for the show. Super nice finish and sound. 3. People were laughing at that last beat even thought is a super cool, harder, samba based bit. Love Fred armisen.
can confirm, had to play the "when I paint my masterpiece" cover not too long ago. I'm mid 40s and sliding into full time Levon Helm groove. its really all you need.
Wow! That kit is freaking gorgeous! I got to see Fred play with Trenchmouth opening for Jesus Lizard in GR, Michigan way back in the day!! Loudest show I’ve ever been to!
I'm not a drummer but I am a musician I found this so relatable. When you're young you're just so full of energy and passion that you create loud and excessive music, then slowly wind down over the years and chill the hell out lol.
I agree with the toms thing in their 20’s lol and I have one thing to add : always made me laugh when a young drummer came to my studio with an extensive amount of tom toms I was asked to mic individually, BUT never ended up using them. :)
@@shawnmcvey7789 guitar players want to compete for the most amount of tracks for their parts. They get jealous when they see all these tracks for drums.
@@michellegault4122 It's crazy. On my band's last EP I specifically limited myself to a handful of tones that were used all over it and none of them overlapped. It felt more immediate and made it infinitely easier to translate the parts I solidified while tracking to live performances. I also got all my gain out of my amp for the first time ever.
I learned drumming fundamentals from Rock Band and Guitar Hero 15 years ago. I stick to guitar, but having some basic idea of what things sound like is fun whenever I do get behind a kit
This dud makes me crack up every time and everywhere i see him on TV. he is hilarious! especially when he plays a foreigner/out of place character....learning that he can also drum - awesome!
The drummers watching this are DYING! The Instagram drummer thing is spot on. Why cant anyone just play drums without a bunch of crap sitting on them anymore?
Mostly knowing him as an actor, I had no idea he was proficient on instruments (his punk guitar mimicry of 70s-2000 appearance here was soo good). What a phenomenal performer ! 🤩🤩🤩
It’s awesome that he’s serious about drum humour, even if he knows most people don’t really get it, and I love even more that drummers very clearly do get it 🤣🤣🤣
In 2013 I was working at the Sony retail store in Century City and I thought I saw Fred walk in. When I started to talk to him he replied only in Spanish about three octaves higher than I expected and seemed uninterested so I left him alone.
Fred Armisen was going to Pixar Animation Studio, Fred Armisen wants to perform Fantastic Beasts and Fred Armisen is gonna be in PAW Patrol: The Mighty Movie.
This man plays fast beats and really out of time fills, And everyone claps. Quest love lays down one of the tastiest syncopated grooves and no one cares
Talk show audiences are pretty much urged to applaud if the guest even so much as breathes a tune several cents lower from pitch. Quest Love is paid to be a sick-ass drummer, it's expected of him as a pro.
I love how this is clearly not a bit for the masses but Fred never cares, he is all in on it even if it's an audience of 1
Even as a drummer of 30 years half of this was so personally nuanced I did not get it.
Whole thing just to make questlove laugh
I was just about to say that🤣🤣🤣
Clearly the people laughing in the audience don't get the joke
Like a crazy homeless man talking to himself
King of the hipsters
I love how Quest is loving every minute of this. This is for him. Love for all drummers of all ages!
Also Jimmy actually kept quiet for once and let someone finish their joke
I love that he did this because it’s more smart than funny but also niche and entertaining to drummers. Thanks Fred!
annoying jibberish that fools non musicians more like it
Watch his Netflix special “Standup For Drummers”
@@drumtwo4seven what
It's actually pretty random. It's just the way he sells it. I'm not sold on it, however. I really like some of his other stuff, though.
@@drumtwo4seven who hurt you when you were little
Quest cracking up because he totally gets it lol
the best part
I noted that too. His reaction showed how true it is.
Brilliant
Rather because he's getting paid
It's called being polite.
I don't want Fred Armisen to get old. I want to keep him forever
Woah, that was what I thought as well as soon as I clicked on this video. I was like, "Oh, no, Fred's getting old."
Forever rules. Top show
@@Kimm134Saya people get older that’s life. Fuckin moron
He'll be funny far into his aging days!
I think he is going to be stuffed when he passes
I've been a drummer all my life... can confirm that the older you get, the less showy and "filly" and cymbal-crazy you become. All about solid grooves haha
To be fair you don’t look that old 😅
Nothing wrong with showy drummers at any age. Anything else would be disappointing, Gene Krupa, Steve Moore, Tommy Lee, etc.
@@localdrummerweb Not all of them.
A note from the strings.... same for guitarists mostly... from my tone to the stuff i want to play has changed so so much just in the last ten years. Instead of being floored by speed and wizardry i am like... listen to the sustain on that almost dissonant jazz chord... lord help us. It doesnt go away it just keeps pace doesnt it?
@@localdrummerweb Showmanship was the topic dude. And for the record Tommy Lee lays down a solid groove, as does Steve Moore.
As a drummer in his 20s I find this so accurate lol. Trying to play fast complex prog rock stuff with so many changes. Playing most of it out of time without any percision. Very accurate
the last bit was very Bruford too.. not playing at all
@@colinburroughs9871 showing "admirable restraint." As Robert Fripp called it
mike portnoy is that you?
The older you get and more experienced you get, you realize other musicians want someone more in the pocket, less BS. Start that early and you'll get more gigs!
@@bassdrumcreep7884 Truth.
I love that Fred picks up on the tiny little things. Accents, drums, he’s just having fun
he should make a comedy routine instead
Light autism
Niche comedy
This is basically not a joke, just entertaining storytelling.
Thanks Matt
That’s just most of American stand up
Thanks....
Fred in a nutshell
Definitely not a joke, it's on Jimmy Fallon 😁
Fred did this bit with a guitar a while back, and now the drums. He's a talented guy. Quest Love definitely enjoyed this one lol.
Deliberately doing bits that only some get is awkwardly hilarious . . . _in the right hands_ . Fred's hair may expire but his comedy chops will not
@J It's alone enough already!
Lay off the hair bro
What’s left of it
It's well past time to shave it off and grow a mustache
@@Jeremy-hx7zj - Chrome dome + huge out of control soul patch could be comedy gold. Embrace the inevitable Fred . . fuck it. I feel for him tho
Love how he thanks the crowd every time
I like how the crowd is clapping for those early examples because they think he is playing well when hes actually trying to show bad drumming lol
He's right. The older I get the less craziness I end up doing. It makes me a better drummer tbh.
Nice to see you here, Jon!
As a bass player, in my teenage years it could be really tricky to play with crazy drummers trying to give the 110% (which means that the extra 10% were out-of-time fills) but I sincerely miss that amount of energy and fantasy when I play with more mature people :-)
Ah, yes. From the school of... "Less is more" 👍
@@mattdrewdrums I dunno. I like your vids though man, I hope you get more subs. You're really good!
@@JonSudanoHey I appreciate it, man. Damn...now I feel bad for my original comment lol. I didn't intend to disrespect. Pocket playing is awesome and it does make you a better drummer 👌
The younger i get the more craziest i am! Im only 1!
signed,
Joey (age 1)
I will always love Fred Armisen.
Also, his 40s drumming is my favorite.
YES!❤❤❤😂
Absolutely, that’s when he would play for Devo every now and then. Very specific type of drumming but he nailed it
Questlove laughing his ass off at 2:44. Love it.
I'm a drummer in my 60's and I laughed my ass off at this! I do actually hit the drums, but I'm definitely more about the groove and playing for the song than I used to be.
I love that they went ahead with something so musician oriented. This humor & observations were for the musicians in the crowd and I appreciated it.
Great bit.
DUDE! As a drummer, you will realize how accurate and HILARIOUS this is! I love this!
Yes! Haha watch whenever quest is on screen and compare him to everyone else.
Like any other instrument - in fact, like any other skill - there’s always a difference between what impresses people and what is genuinely hard to do. The two can overlap, but when we’re younger we’re more caught up in what impresses us and how we can use it to impress others. As we get older, assuming we continue to learn, we start to realise that certain skills which appear unimpressive to others are, in fact, horrendously difficult to get right.
For example: when I was younger I was always impressed by ‘melisma’ (the musical, usually vocal, technique of playing as many notes in one phrase as possible (think Whitney or Mariah going up and down the scales). Now I’ve been training as a singer for 20 years and I’ve realised the hardest thing a vocalist can do is to hold a note. Not sing the same note for a long time, but *hold* it at the same precise pitch and intensity.
I imagine Fred Armisen began to see this too, and alongside this he learned more styles and worked out which ones he liked rather that which ones would impress others.
When I've taught younger people to play guitar, I show them that one of the hardest things to do is play the same note over and over and over. Most can't do it perfectly past ten seconds.
Has anyone ever tried to play Phillip Glass music? That stuff takes super human concentration and intensity.
An there is the third category: things that aren't hard or impressive, but they are so much fun, you just do them for yourself.
I just want to take a moment to say that I really enjoy your comment. You have a sincere love for your craft, and I always enjoy seeing that.
People don’t think twice about blues drummers… They’re probably the drummers I have the most respect for. Keeping a steady blues beat is SO HARD. Firstly it’s usually sloooooow, which is by far harder than fast. Then it’s that ridiculous kick pattern… dudun dukah dudun dukah..
Maybe my brain is just broken, but I just never could do that stuff right. Such a fumbly rhythm!
Hot For Teacher is one of those rhythms that I would never EVER be able to play, ever. I get like 2 bars in and then my feet just start galloping.
Well DAMMIT what if im too tired and depressed to work hard and FUCKIT I don'twant anything to be horrendously difficult--life is already that--how can I make everything easier and feel like a genius at everyhting
I think showcasing a celebrity’s talent makes them seem more human to the masses. It just seems more relatable and sometimes we forget we are all equals. Great bit!
this guy is a celebrity? Jesus, I'm outta touch - never heard his name in my life.
I unwittingly saw Fred's band Trenchmouth open for one of my favorite local KC bands in the early 90s. I was so impressed I bought the CD from the merch girl that night. Twenty-plus years later he mentioned the band on WTF so I dug out the CD, and there he was in the liner notes. He was a powerful and gifted drummer.
Saw them twice in the early-, mid-90s in Lincoln NE (once in a basement). Can confirm. It was also notable at the time, for me anyway, that the drummer was doing all the between-song banter.
It takes a drummer to truly appreciate this humor... I remember once he did a bit about how drummers always lose the wing lug when they spin it off and it falls under the drums and you have to get of the chair to retrieve it... ha ha, I almost fell out of my chair... so true... then they pan to the audience and everyone looks totally confused, like , "was that supposed to be funny"? Loves me some Fred!
a few pro drummers I knew back when I was a lighting director would keep their drum key on a string around their neck, also most drum techs also did this, never lose it
Aaah that explains why I didn't find it funny... Wasn't sure if it was a cultural thing not being American.
Fred Armisen could release a set of Sample packs based on some of those drum breaks, some of those were tight.
He has a show on Netflix called "Standup for drummers". It's brilliant!!
@@DS-um9hi no, you’re ok. It wasn’t funny.
I love how he’s so over the applause by he gets to 40’s. Love it.
Feels good to see Mlepnos coming out of his shell. Truly a legend
I saw him live at the 40 Watt in Athens a couple months ago. He came out to talk with folks before the show and was so nice. Super cool guy . Love him !!
I envy that. Go Dawgs!
In the early 80’s, Fred was a prolific fixture in the LA Punk scene. Time flies!
Wtf are you talking about?? He was born in 1966 and lived in NY until 1988 when he moved to Chicago to join a local post punk band called Trenchmouth. Later in the 90s he was a member of Blue Man Group
Lol at this exaggerated comment
I knew it!
@@melissap5649 knew that the main comment was exaggerated and false? loll
@@marokokisetter yeppp
I love how he says "thanks" before the applause.
What do you mean? That never happened not even once.
I'm a drummer now in my 50s and I totally get this hahaha. You go through all these chapters and changes in your style as you learn and grow on an instrument. So true. Although for me it was types of music. In my teens (the 80s) I was playing classic rock and hair metal. In my 20s (the 90s) I played grunge and alternative. In my 30s and 40s (2000s) it was nu metal. Now I'm full circle playing classic rock again. I predict in my 60s I'll be learning jazz and swing lol
My people.
Too many fills?.. RIGHT to jail.
Not enough fills, believe it or not also jail
Fred is so talented man, never gets old....love it
I took a similar trajectory, then I hit my 40s and started making retrowave with drum machines… now I don’t even have drums cause I live in the city, and I miss drums every damn day… I love synthesizers a lot, but it’s hard to beat the immediacy and reliance on different techniques that are key to playing the drums. The way a perfect pair of sticks (SD4 Combo) feels in the hand during a perfect double stroke roll is impossible to explain. It just feels like home.
The perfect pair of sticks is actually Vic Firth AJ3's, and my double stroke roll is far from perfect, but I get it. I too am currently doing the composing-with-drum machines thing. Matter of fact, I don't even have real drum machines, everything I do lately is via virtual instruments "in the box." I say "currently" because I suspect that I can't stay away from playing a real kit forever....
Carrying on a decades long tradition of the Tonight Show: Showcasing Drumming. Absolutely Fantastic.
1:07 Jimmy hi-fiving himself in an *ode to percussion instruments*
1:08 I was in a band when I was a teenager and our drummer was exactly like that.
2:17 My late dad was a drummer and that reminds me of him when he was in his 40-50s. He died at the age of 60.
…more Armisen genius. The dude can play any style of music, and almost every instrument. He is an artistic and creative genius. There are few people in the history of the world who have possessed such innately brilliant talent.
Fred, we know that’s you.
I'm going with one guy who kicks his ass musically: Wolfie Van Halen. Played EVERY Instrument on his debut album. WON Best Album. Sounds EXACTLY like Dad. Chops out the ass. If I want comedy, Fred's my guy.
and how would you know that?
You’ve written some overarching, hyperbolic statements here about the quality of skill level you think Fred Armisen possesses.
“Artistic and creative genius”… I completely disagree.
“Few people in the history of the world who have possessed such innately brilliant talent”…again, I completely disagree. All of the patterns he displayed here might qualify as a beginner/intermediate level of drum set patterns.
He is NO WHERE NEAR “advanced” in his musical skills. Comedy? Yes, a genius. Music? Meh.
You want to see an artistic and creative genius on drums…
Mike Mangini.
ruclips.net/video/4wr4sZZcDcc/видео.html
he is also an insufferable asshole IRL who treats his partners like complete shit. Real surprised he didn't caught up in the metoo shit
Extremely therapeutic no matter what stage in life! Bravo Fred!🤣
He does have a point. I agree 100% as i get older i try to play as more basic and clean as i possibly can.
40s drumming is straight later radiohead
That they clap when he plays fast😂 and said that he felt like he needed to prove himself. Whoooooooosh
Fred is extraordinarily gifted!
Fred & his hair are a in some kind of battle, I think.. Time marches on.. 😂
It really doesnt get better than this. I havent laughed this hard in weeks. The guy is incredible
Probably need to start watching funnier things.
@@Diddle1414 fantastic, sounds like you have some suggestions. What would you recommend
@@Diddle1414 or were you just here to be rude and snarky
@@frankmacleod2565 Mainly rude and snarky but I could give suggestions.
@@Diddle1414 if you dont like Fred Armisen, that's fine. nobody cares
Truly a very talented musician/drummer. He’s definitely got a job in the music biz anytime he wants it & I for 1 would be glad to listen to some of Fred’s chops!!
Hit the like button as soon as I saw Fred was on...and was going to play drums. Love U Fred!
Quest love playing at the end is pure respect
Fred is one talented dude….👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Fred acting like he nervous for his first audition😂 gotta love him🙏🏼
*He’s
@@jumpinjojo Thank you Josephine
@@quentingartside2166 Anytime, Quentina.
Armisen has not hit a wrong beat since I first saw him perform even before the SNL gigs.
The funniest thing I've seen Jimmy do in a while is pick up the bag at the end and start playing it 😂 but I only say that because he didn't interrupt his guest 500 times
No matter what Fred does is just hilarious 😂 He just got it!
As a punk and a drummer i commend and thank Fred for being a devout, lifelong nerd. 🎉
Love seeing actors and other artists that are drummers. Fred's a great drummer!
Now THIS is something totally different, and fun, and what I like to see on late night talk shows. Taking the guests into another element of themselves. I had no idea he was a drummer, and a pretty good one. I totally get his takes on each age. I have a cousin who's 54& a drummer, and a very good friend, who's 55,& a drummer, too,& I've watched,& studied drummers in heavy metal, funk, and rock bands all my life.
(Duran Duran's)Roger Taylor😍😛
R.I.P., Tony Thompson 🥁🕯
This guy is a universal genius, isn't he? What an all around talent.
What a versatile talented human being.
That teal drum set is just, lovely!!!🥰💘
Fred Armisen is so supremely talented.
There is NO
ONE
FUNNIER
ALIVE❤😂
FRED!!!!!!
I’m a bassist, and we’re in the same boat. The older you get, the less “showy” that you become, and less becomes more: the root, groove, feel, and playing what’s right for the song is where it’s at.
I’ve gone from playing 16th and 32nd note runs and frenetic slapping and popping on an Ibanez bass (I’m a product of the 80s shredder culture), to doing the same on a Music Man Stingray 5, to playing tastefully (but still with a bit of showiness) on Fender Jazz and P Basses, to holding down the low end on an Englehardt or NS Design upright these days.
The evolution to “playing less” is a natural progression.
I like how he subtly got better as a drummer in general. Really nice touch.
I approve of these impressions on behalf of drummers everywhere.
Preach it Fred! I'm in my 60's--playing the "no frills" beat. Fred understands.
He’s legit good at everything
except entertainment
Alright, Jimmy picking up the Bag and "playing" it during the outro was pretty damn funny.
Lol love when Fred does his musical impressions. So good.
The three things I have to say are:
1. As a teenager, I have found myself where he was in his 30s. I love that style of hot and heavy go through on the cymbals.
2. Love the guest kit for the show. Super nice finish and sound.
3. People were laughing at that last beat even thought is a super cool, harder, samba based bit. Love Fred armisen.
So funny! Something I can look forward 😂
can confirm, had to play the "when I paint my masterpiece" cover not too long ago. I'm mid 40s and sliding into full time Levon Helm groove. its really all you need.
As a drummer, this is what you call Drumming Humour.
Wow! That kit is freaking gorgeous! I got to see Fred play with Trenchmouth opening for Jesus Lizard in GR, Michigan way back in the day!! Loudest show I’ve ever been to!
This man is just bursting with talent. But it's the humility through it all that gets me. Love this guy!
I'm not a drummer but I am a musician I found this so relatable. When you're young you're just so full of energy and passion that you create loud and excessive music, then slowly wind down over the years and chill the hell out lol.
He’s so awesome 👏
Absolutely nailed the 'gram drummer lol!
I agree with the toms thing in their 20’s lol and I have one thing to add : always made me laugh when a young drummer came to my studio with an extensive amount of tom toms I was asked to mic individually, BUT never ended up using them. :)
They're always small toms too.
@@shawnmcvey7789 more than half of them for sure lol
@@michellegault4122 It's like when guitar players have 5 distortion pedals, 3 delays, and 4 reverbs but never use 90% of them.
@@shawnmcvey7789 guitar players want to compete for the most amount of tracks for their parts. They get jealous when they see all these tracks for drums.
@@michellegault4122 It's crazy. On my band's last EP I specifically limited myself to a handful of tones that were used all over it and none of them overlapped. It felt more immediate and made it infinitely easier to translate the parts I solidified while tracking to live performances.
I also got all my gain out of my amp for the first time ever.
That drumkit looks and sounds beautiful.
Fred hits 50, wants to be Tony Allen. Love it.
hah thats exactly what i was thinking.
i’m here from Carvey and Spades podcast, fly on the wall. great show all about s.n.l. cast members. Fred’s episode was amazing!
I learned drumming fundamentals from Rock Band and Guitar Hero 15 years ago. I stick to guitar, but having some basic idea of what things sound like is fun whenever I do get behind a kit
That drum kit is absolutely gorgeous.
Thanks Fred. Loved your drumming through the decades, (your decades), and the bands reactions.
This dud makes me crack up every time and everywhere i see him on TV. he is hilarious! especially when he plays a foreigner/out of place character....learning that he can also drum - awesome!
Is Fred slowly turning into Tom Hanks?
Complete with shitty hair transplant lol
Ya mean like Fredest Gump? 🤔
As a drummer, I thought this was smart, funny, and true. To others, I think you can all relate to this life lesson. Well done, Mr. Armisen.
The drummers watching this are DYING! The Instagram drummer thing is spot on. Why cant anyone just play drums without a bunch of crap sitting on them anymore?
Mostly knowing him as an actor, I had no idea he was proficient on instruments (his punk guitar mimicry of 70s-2000 appearance here was soo good). What a phenomenal performer ! 🤩🤩🤩
You’ve got to give it to American audiences. They’re supportive enough to clap and cheer even when they don’t get it or find it funny.
How would you know they don’t find it funny or get it? Were you there?
It’s because they are forced to clap and laugh…. There is a sign that pops up thag tells them when to clap and when to laugh…
No no, she’s right. This is just so unfunny.
It’s awesome that he’s serious about drum humour, even if he knows most people don’t really get it, and I love even more that drummers very clearly do get it 🤣🤣🤣
In 2013 I was working at the Sony retail store in Century City and I thought I saw Fred walk in. When I started to talk to him he replied only in Spanish about three octaves higher than I expected and seemed uninterested so I left him alone.
It was probably Spanish for “I get this all the damn time”.
Brilliant. Only Fred can pull this off. Like Adam Sandler & Operaman.
I can't tell you enough how much I love this guy❤️❤️
As a drummer this is hilarious
2:06 bro really thought he could play "Fire" by Hendrix and we wouldn't notice
It's difficult to play 'bad' when you're actually good..there's skill right there on top of all his other skills!
I love that Fred was a Jeopardy clue last night!! I guess now he’s really made it 😉
Fred Armisen was going to Pixar Animation Studio, Fred Armisen wants to perform Fantastic Beasts and Fred Armisen is gonna be in PAW Patrol: The Mighty Movie.
That instagram drummer was great.
Quest love like...this guy talking about drums
That's true he did be like that.
Troof
Armison deserves more credit. His cameos are always gold and he seems to do things for the pure love of it.
This man plays fast beats and really out of time fills, And everyone claps. Quest love lays down one of the tastiest syncopated grooves and no one cares
Talk show audiences are pretty much urged to applaud if the guest even so much as breathes a tune several cents lower from pitch. Quest Love is paid to be a sick-ass drummer, it's expected of him as a pro.
I enjoyed this because it felt like insight into Fred, who I think is one of the most interesting and genuine people in Hollywood.