History of Punk Rock Drumming - Fred Armisen
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- Опубликовано: 27 окт 2024
- This is the history of punk rock drumming by Fred Armisen (Best known for being in Portlandia). I hope you like it.^^
This video was taken at the Sunshine Theater in Albuquerque, New Mexico on May 13 2019.
This guy is so talented, he is a comedian who can do so many accents, play guitar n now drum.. Wow..
The Fugazi bit is brilliant! Great sketch / demonstration
Thanks.
@@maxromero23 your supposed to reply , " I agree." Or something simular to that , saying thanks is like taking credit for what Fred did , just saying , but thanks for the upload i see your comedy taste is good ❤❤❤👍👍👍
@@mattasticmattattack8546 thanks
build-ups into nothing are the point. they keep constant tension, they keep your attention on. the best band on the planet.
And right on the money.
It's obvious he loves that era, entertaining stuff!
He certainly does. It's a show for both musicians and music lovers alike.
lol the Fugazi part was hilarious. i love watching his takes on everything and hes always so accurate on the different sounds through time...
I loved the whole show. Everyone keeps commenting about Fugazi. They must be a really famous punk rock band.
@@maxromero23 im about to watch the special on Netflix. It looks so funny
And yeah they are fuckin amazing!
MrBeans do u know the actual song by Fugazi??
@@jonaspundzius4995 waiting room
@@maxromero23 Is this response irony?
A lot of punk artists he could do some really interesting stuff on. Butthole Surfers come to mind first given their atypical rhythms and playing styles. Or if he wanted to go earlier, The Velvet Underground or The Stooges.
This was all I caught. I would've uploaded the full segment.
Not fair! The Buttholes had two drummers.
or Scratch Acid and the drumming style of Rey Washam that started with the Big Boys, and how punk sometimes integrated funk elements.
@@iliketowatch. true but you can approximate it with some high level skill lol
@@maxromero23 sorry I didn't mean he did it, I was just making suggestions for artists he could've done
even tho that was a good impression of tame impala drumming, it was random to include tame impala in a list of punk bands
Also their drum sound isn’t muddy
@@aotwtelevision Muddy was the wrong word but I know what he's getting at. It's the muted, dampened thing. Pillow in the kick, towel on the snare
Not random, but irrelevant.
Is tame impala big in the U.S.A?? As an ozzie I wonder
@@ashmuntz612 Aussie as well. I mean yeah Kevin Parker's working with everyone. He did that Miguel remix, Tyler mentioned tame in a song, I've heard a Jaden song that was for sure tryna be them, Kevin played bass for Travis Scott on SNL, Rihanna covered "new person, same old mistakes," a$ap rocky used a tame instrumental as a beat
... They're pretty globally huge
*THINK*
*PINK*
@@maxromero23 DRINK
I love Fred, he sits in occasionally on Seth Myers late night show with the 8 G band.
He's the bandleader
the bloc party bit was perfect
The chick that kept saying "Yess" was annoying as hell!
Like she had to make sure everyone knew that she knew the bands he was talking about.
😂😂😂
I was more invested in actually shooting the video than the background noises. I'm surprised this video ended up being my most popular video on RUclips so far.
So what? She's enjoying herself and it's harmless to anyone but herself.
Incredible artist
He was in the Chicago band Trenchmouth. They were cool.
I love that fugazi song
Same!!
Sad he didn’t even attempt descendents lol, I guess Stevenson’s stuff is too hard for a lot of people. I know damn well I can’t play half the things he can and I’ve been playing drums for 7 years
Keep in mind, this is a very very brief history of punk rock drumming. He can't name every single punk group under the sun, but he definitely called out the most notable styles.
Thanks for this Mr. Max❤❤👍👍👍👍😎
How could you do this without the D-beat?
0:45
What Liam said
@@liamcoffey1150 Nope. Thats a fast Skank beat.
Dbeat is a totally different beat with more bass drum
@@liamcoffey1150 Yeah that is a fast hardcore beat that you would hear in Minor Threat or Negative Approach or something like that. The D-beat is a different pattern that was popularized by Discharge. You can hear it really clearly if you listen to early Anti Cimex. Anyways I've gotta assume that stuff isn't really on Fred's radar. Some people ignore crust and everything after 83 or so.
@@liamcoffey1150 d-beat and hardcore double time are not the same.
Who was supposed to be the first one, before Pistols/Clash bit? The Ramones?
I'm trying to remember myself. But I will keep you posted.
probably
Sounded like the opening to "Rock and Roll High school".
I need a Perkins Janes Addiction tribute in the middle as a solo
Sorry ma'am. Not here. This is all I've got.
@@maxromero23 Armisen is a polymath full stop
What kind of show is this? Is it like a variety comedy show or drumming specific or??
Variety you could say. The drumming part was specifically made for musicians or music lovers in mind.
Yeah
Didn't get what he said about italy..?
He mentioned Italian music and culture early on in his show.
Fucking Fred. Dude is mad talented.
This was amazing. Do you have the full video?
Homeboy conspicuously skipped heel-toe 🙄
2:20 build ups into nothing...
New Subscriber!! 🥇🏆🎈🎈🎈🎈💜💜💜🎉🎉🎉🎉🥂
No D-Beat?
Crowd full of yes-men/women
I didn't hear any double kick drum or blast beats. Can you do those?
That's because it was the history of PUNK ROCK drumming, not Metal drumming
@@maxromero23 Good point. 🎼🎶📀🥁📀🎵
OK, I know those discs icons are supposed to represent CDs or DVDs. I just thought they looked a lot like cymbals.
@@iliketowatch. Looking at it again, I see your point.
Blastbeats came from hardcore punk, grindcore is a subgenre of hardcore
Is that a Red Special guitar on the left.
No, that’s a Fano most likely
of course he couldn't cover everything.. I like when he talked about Steve Shelley, reminded me of the beats he did with the Crucifucks... than, he goes on to imitate Discord records-type beats.. so cool.
LOL.. so that fano guitar from Ian Rubbish sketch is his own guitar 😬 .. i thought SNL prop
How many drummers have SNL had?!
At least Armisen and Paul Brittain.
I think Chevy Chase was a jazz drummer?
And then...
Missed the fast punk beat style whatev
This was all I could get for the moment. MAybe see him on tour when COVID is less of a problem and see if he does this skit. This is just an excerpt. I get people complaining how certain bands and styles are missing all the time!
no love for discharge? booo
It’s time to meet your makers!
I knew him from SNL
I knew her from women and women first bookstore in Portland.
@@dublplus He started in blue man group as a drummer.
Nice
I swear he left out Green Day and Tre Cool
I didn't even notice, but it would be nice to add them
As he should have. Green Day isn’t really impressive drumming wise except for the one fill on “Basket Case” and besides that the production on the drums hasn’t been worth anything since “Insomniac”
@@theplourde Tre's a good, solid drummer, but nothing revolutionary or anything. I see your name is "theplourde." If we're talking top tier punk drummers, Derrick Plourde is my guy. Other punk drummer greats: Dave Raun, Bomer, Jordy Samolesky, Jordan Burns, Smelly, Bill Stevenson, Brooks Wackerman, Ty Smith, Sean Sellers, the list goes on and on. I'll even put Marky Ramone up there. That guy is straight up SOLID.
@@ScarsUnseen24 DH Peligro?
During Green Day's punk rockier years, Tre's signature beat was pretty much a copy and paste of the Stiff Little Fingers' beat. He'll straight-up admit to it, too... they were very vocal about being heavily influenced by the Stiff Little Fingers. Great drummer, but he definitely wasn't the first one to do what he did.
People paid money for this?
Yes, believe it or not.
"Al" M.D.C.
😆
Skipped over the 90s skate punk d beat , I’m guessing cuz he can’t play it
Jesus fucking Christ!! People are SO picky about certain parts he missed!! This is all I got? Don't like it? Then go away!
@@maxromero23 😭
The D-Beat wasn't from the 1990s skate scene, it was invented in the 1980s by the band Discharge.
Wire and and REM were not punk, and no-one considered them as such at the time. He was right to touch on the beginning of the hardcore thing, but completely overlooked the UK ‘82 scene, which was evolved concurrently. For fuck’s sake, there’s an entire sub genre named after Discharge’s summer’s style.
Moreover, ignoring the drumming of Steve “Slayer Hippie” from Poison Idea, the finest punk drummer and one of the finest rock drummers of any genre pretty much announces to the world that this guy is as much a dilettante as his “comedy” partner Carrie.
who cares
Everybody's a critic
Okay? Lol, quit being a gatekeeping punk weeb and enjoy the fact that this is even a bit
Wire retrospectively weren't punk...but without punk, where would they have been? Still jamming in art college. An entire sub genre name after Discharge's drummer style.??! What?! If you mean ..... cringe... "D Beat" no one over the age of 14 outside the internet uses that stupid term....
punk elitism at its finest.. REM did a cover of Revolver by Mission of Burma, that's punk, even though elitist punks(what I call people like you) used to say they weren't. And Wire are protopunk like the Stooges were but who cares, they were punker than let's say, The Exploited, in my eyes... they're not dilletantes, it's like saying Thurston Moore is a dilletante. It's comedy, you have to make it more general. He could've talked about Mark Trombino's drumming style and a lot of people wouldn't know who the hell he is.
This is insanely pretentious