danny Carey from tool has the autograph from this sir. danny Carey uses a gong , Carmine paicey, John Bonham, mike mangini. about carter from Dave Matthews what I know and listened about the glove usage. it's because injuries or some other problem. but he might be a Stewart Copeland fan. got to love Stewart and the police
Steward Copeland plays as a drummer and as a percussionist in the same time. He manages to pull out a steady pulse while bringing in these amazing fills at unexpected moments. His fills are so diverse in rythm and sonic texture, it never gets old and never sounds as a gimmick. And, more important, it always serves the music. It’s very tasteful, never « tacky ».
exactly, I thought the same thing when I heard him on message in a bottle for the first time. He achieves so much more than just “drumming” at his best
No one has ever come close to Stewart’s style. What an amazingly dynamic drummer. And the even gnarlier part is he doesn’t repeat anything, every 4/4 groove is completely and insanely different.
I've always loved Stewart Copeland's drumming. He's one of my favorite drummers of all-time. Super unique. John Bonham, Neil Peart, Stewart Copeland, Phil Collins - all great!
Don't forget Manu Katche with Peter Gabriel and his unique African vibe. Him and Stewart are so different to the norm and are my favourite influences plus Bonham of course!
Stewart Copland was and is a highly underrated drummer. His drumming concepts, techniques, and his syncopations go unmatched even today…he’s in a league all by himself…the man is legendary. The RRHF should add categories to their inductee ceremonies. Guitarists, bass players, drummers, piano players, synth’s, singer, songwriters, etc…
Not only did Stewart create the band but when you listen to the demos and the last exit versions of the early songs that went on the first three albums, they were nothing like the police version because Stewart’s reggae and Middle Eastern background created their signature unique sound & style. And he was able to take those raw songs that sting had and make them something magical. Stewart’s home studio is amazing. He calls it the Sacred Garden. He has videos on RUclips from there because it gets whole thing is mic’s up and they are cool videos. In one video, he’s with Taylor, Hawkins and Taylor talks about how it was Stewart that took those sting songs and really made them come to life. Stuart and Sting had a volatile relationship, but they really brought out the best of each other and Stewart really knew how to harness and shape the songs that Sting wrote.
@@prokopiskranidiotis1951 Well basically. Stu found Sting and went out of his way to meet Sting and recruit him. Stu was the one driving their signature sound on the first 3 records. Stu’s brother was their manager. Stu named the band before he met Sting. And the list goes on! So yea it was Stewart’s band. And don’t forget, Stewart was in a pretty successful band already. Curved Air. And it was Stewart that took those early Sting demos and Last Exit songs and make them classic Police songs. And it was Stu that pursued Andy who’s skills flipped a switch for Sting. Take Stewart Copeland out of the equation and there is no band called the Police and no one ever hears of Sting or Gordon Sumner. And of course, last but not least their record contract was with another one of Stewart’s brothers.
Welcome to the Stewart Copeland fan club! You need to listen to the whole Police back catalog, starting with Ghost In The Machine. The fills he does on that album are incredible.
@@DimitriFantini He likes Buddy Rich and Joey Jordison as regular and standard answers. I cannot pinpoint a favourite, because as with pretty much everything else, he switches up when you least expect it.
Sweet vid! Always loved Stew’s unique style as well as The Police trio. I’d love to see a vid of you explaining the drums ending of “ it’s alright 4 u” I guess some it are overdubs.
Well, I left N.Y. in November 1978 and there was no Police there yet, for me. I moved to LA and began to go to auditions. EVERY band I audit for said “play like Stewart Copeland”!! I had a lot of catching up to do, a lot of woodshedding! Stewart, ah what an influence and a source of inspiration to drive a drummer to massive practice and to strive for excellence!! Great to see here that he is still doing that today! Oh, I did join a band called “Ioneyes” and we were together for just one amazing year ha ha!
Besides being an awesome drummer, he's a musical genius. His creativity, his musical knowledge, his vision... There's a reason why he made the music for one of the most iconics videogames trilogy for PlayStation: Spyro the Dragon
I think Stewart Copeland should play with Rush now. He’d be up to the task and add a different angle to Rush’s sound. I think it would be amazing. Great video!
What's even more impressive and often overlooked, is that you can copy his playing, note for note, but still never be able to sound like him. Something about the way he accents everything he plays, together with a feel and groove that is hard to describe, let alone match...
I think that's true and impressive for sure! But it's also true for all the greats. We can only sound like ourselves!! The sooner we can learn that, the higher we'll soar :)
Also… Stewart used primarily Tama Imperialstars which have luaun shells… very dry and fundamental tone. they respond really well to high tunings and hard hitting.
Stewart is a phenomenal drummer! Truly one of the greats. I really love how he tuned his drums: such great snap and personality, and it fit his style - and the band - perfectly. My favorite snare sound of his is on "Spirits In The Material World". One of the best snare sounds ever recorded! Thanks for sharing the video!
I saw the Police reunion tour, Stewart the GOAT has incredible energy and intensity in his playing even now and he is in his seventies probably. Best drum /percussion solo I ever heard, so musical, dynamic and importantly FUN!
You should listen to more Police. Stewart also is the king of doing a fill with no cymbal at the end. The studio version, Stewart also plays a different drum part for every verse of Message in a bottle. He layers stuff. Also good of sting to add a little distortion and chorus on the bass to help everything out.
No one knows everything. The fact that you've only discovered Copeland's brilliance now is no issue, just explore him more. He's commonly listed in the top 6-7 rock drummers of all time. The Police were insane, all 3 were brilliant in their own right.
The Police Synchronicity Tour was the first live show I attended. I was, like, 8-years of age! Think I slept through most of the show but (possible when your 8) I vividly recall the band wearing the outfits shown your clips. Memorieees.
Yeah, Copeland's cross stick technique is insane... and the way he smashes that bass drum!!! He has a very improvisational style, which helps to keep the music fresh. The downside of that is that I tend to miss some drum parts, such as the ones he recorded in One World. For I long time I thought Copeland carefully composed them for the song (a la Neil Peart), but after listening to the live versions I guess he probably came up with those on the fly at the recording session. Maybe there was some equally tasteful editing involved. Anyway, from a compositional point of view, the studio drum parts are really genius. Also, great observations about the frequency range of the toms and cymbals.
Thanks! Really glad I’m starting to dig into Copeland, after a recommendation from my friend Madden Klass :) If you have other drummers or performances you think I should analyze on the channel, lemme know!!
The reason Stewart is able to improvise in ways that other drummers don’t, and can’t is because he was raised on jazz music by his father but his mother loved classical. So think about that. He comes from a musical family. His dad played in jazz bands. His mother loved classical. And he’s being raised in the Middle East with a unique style of music That shaped his drum playing and he talks about that often.
@DimitriFantini If you haven't seen it already find The Police playing "Wrapped Around Your Finger" live, there's a relatively recent performance of it where Stewart is using a gong, kettle drums, chimes, I think a glockenspiel too? It's really cool.
My favorite drummer of all time. I like him more than Peart because as spectacularly good as Peart is, Peart is predictable. Stewart is unpredictable, and is very hard to air drum with, but in spite of the unpredictable beats, they all sync up perfectly, Stewart is also a master of space, and that space was one of the magic factors in playing with Andy and Sting.
"Message in a Bottle" has long been my favorite example of Stewart's drumming performance. Especially the flurry of activity at the end. But thank you for pointing out all this nuance going on earlier in the song!
When I was a teen, listening to him on Message in a Bottle made me just - wow. All his drumming is inventive and progressive, he never just played the "root notes" of drumming. A total legend, and the best The Police could've had, he just "made" their music on another level.
My admiration and inspiration for Stewart Copeland has grown so much over the last year or so. And when I watch his interviews, he has no filter, which i love! The drumeo interview is amazing. I love when he rips into Sting. But you can tell he loves Sting and Andy.
Dimitri how you point out Copeland's insane drumming is amazing. He was one of a kind. Similar to Jeff Porcaro even though their styles were miles apart, their incredible ability and uniqueness is untouchable.
Per 7:10 I think SC used a repeater (sorry, don't know actual name of device) on his toms during live performances to add an extra note -- and, YES, I think you articulate his use of empty space within the trio really well! Thanks for posting!
@@DimitriFantini JUST in case your curious: At 4:09 on the video below you can see him hit his tom twice, but it produces three notes. Some sort of delay. Ok, that's enough SC conspiracy theory for today: ruclips.net/video/HPtKYbggCqE/видео.html
Great video, mate! 😀👍 Stewart has been one of my favourite drummers since I was 10, and The Police's third album 'Zenyatta Mondatta' was among those I'd started to teach myself the drums to, back then 😊 And I definitely dig that higher-pitched tom sound myself! 😍 Another great example for it would be Rush's Neil Peart; Maybe check out their song 'Digital Man' some time, from their '82 album 'Signals', which has my favourite drum sound on it 😊 No doubt Stewart had been the inspiration for Neil to tune his toms higher from around 1980 onwards and compared to Rush's 70's albums 🙂
@@DimitriFantini - You're welcome! 😊 That particular song sounds very Police-y, too! And I guess their influence on Rush's music during the early 80's had also helped with me getting instantly hooked on them (in '89), via their '84 album 'Grace Under Pressure'; Neil had even nicked Stewart's cross-stick rhythm from the 'Don't Stand So Close To Me' intro for said Rush album's opener 'Distant Early Warning'! 😅 Greetings from NZ! 😀👍
Stewart is so original, so talented, and had so much swag man. This dude is so cool looking on stage then he's actually a massive nerd. But the duct tape, the shorts, the flowing blonde hair. Dude played and looked like few else. Never seen someone more confident in being different.
I love a lot of drummers, but I think it's safe to say that Copeland is the most unique rock/pop drummer ever, full stop. Nobody plays even remotely like him. Nobody can groove the sh*t out of a song with only a kick and high-hat. When I was learning to play drums in my high school cover band I loved playing Police tunes but they were so difficult to get right. You have to fight every normal drummer instinct - crashes are never where you expect, fills begin and end in insane places, everything is so tight and snappy there are no moments of "letting go and rocking out." There were passages I'd figure out and be stunned they were so "simple" because they grooved so damn hard! Maybe "minimal" is a better description. Just incredible economy of strokes. He's in a category all his own as far as I'm concerned - kind of transcends the "best" drummer competition. Great video, glad i found you!!
Thanks for doing this, love the format! Copeland is a absolute beast for sure, probably the hardest drummer ever to try and imitate or sound like. My one suggestion would be to maybe pause a little less and let the footage play out for a minute or so before pausing to interject. But, you may be doing that for copyright reasons so it doesn't get blocked so I get it!
I appreciate the feedback!! You are right, playing back certain parts do create some issues with copyright. Depending on the performances I’m reviewing in the future, this won’t always be an issue! Thanks for watching :)
Man, I am enjoying watching all the videos in your channel! such funny, witty, well edited and informative analyses! Been a fan for a couple of years. thank you for your service to music appreciation!
Brilliant job with this, Dimitri. I was (and still am) a massive fan of the Police and in particular Stewart (my favorite drummer of all time) when this was current. I almost broke body parts trying to emulate him as a teenager. Yes, lots of echo effects and overdubs in the studio but you have laid out what I've know all these years - he was legendary playing live behind his Chariot of Thunder. Thanks for this, it made my day. -- Jay
I was a drummer for most of my life til a nasty little accident occurred. But when I played our band was greatly influenced by Ska and Reggae and even some African rhythms. I loved watching Stewart back in the day and still do. I like that you teach a bit while watching Stewart. So thanks again. Keep up the good work. I’m 71 now and still love to watch other drummers. I liked Squeez’s drummer a lot too. Phenomenal live performances.
Awesome job. This song and that video of the performance from Japan, leaped into my brain the other day, and voila - here we are. What you touched on are what I also think are the hallmarks of his drumming - the four on the floor/interplay with the toms, and the dancing on the hi-hats/crazy cross-stick.
I’m drawing a blank on a good, drum-focused tune that hasn’t been looked at much 🙂 I’ll get back to you. Looking forward to whatever comes next though.
There's a very funny interview with Stewart at the NAMM show 2015, where he mentioned he is impressed by the Police coverbands playing the drumparts, not only that but with the drum overdubs live all at the same time. "I never did that" lol
Killer video. Informative and entertaining. When I was a 12 year old and Synchronicity first came out (1983) I would listen to "Walking on the moon" on that album and wonder what sticking Stewart Copeland used on his hat rolls on that cut. Recently I watched the Police Synchronicity live video and perhaps, those hi hat rolls are made with a digital delay and you can hear from the mix at the live Synchronicity concert video. In that Synchronicity live video it sounds more like a reggae dub out effect from the board than him actually playing it live. So I wonder if he played in the studio on the original cut for the album.
Great analysis. Got my name in his new book. Had to. As a percussionist, been a fan since the beginning. Still trying to figure out everything SC does.
My favorite all-time drummer, Carl Palmer, was using a gong back in the very early 70's. Buddy Rich agreed with me and said that Carl was the finest drummer in Rock music.
I was a fan of The Police when I was young. Stewart has always been my number one drummer ever. When I watch these videos and his own youtube I still get amazed by things he does that I hadn't even noticed before. All that being said, this band was great because it was the three perfect people to make music together. Sting was an excellent lyricist and bass player, Andy is one of the most underrated guitar players, and Stewart is Stewart. What most people, including Sting, don't want to admit is that they were all responsible for the way their songs turned out. Andy wrote his guitar pieces, Stewart put together his own drum parts, yet Sting got sole writing credit for a lot. See Andy's statement about how they wanted to throw away Every Breath You Take before he introduced his part or Sting's hatred for what Stewart did to Roxanne after he wrote a bossa nova song and Stewart just said hold his beer and went to town. There is video done in later years where the two of them tried to do it the original style with Stewart playing his part on a little frying pan, and he still couldn't hold it in and went crazy near the end, and the look on Sting's face said it all lol. These guys were all musical geniuses and their styles fit perfectly, even if their personalities didn't.
A few recommendations for you that really showcase Stewart's talent No Time This Time,One World,Demolition Man,Regatta De Blanc,Deathwish(great bass drum play)Synchronicity 1,Murder By Numbers, just a few examples of a genius at work in my opinion.
Finally, everyone now realizes the unique immensity of these three musicians. The alchemy produced remains a landmark in the history of pop/rock. Stew Copeland has a rare finesse, a strike so "narrow" and a complex sense of the rarest ryhms, quite the opposite of a J.Bonham or Phil Collins.
I am pleased to see a younger professional drummer praise STEWART COPELAND. My answer to his place in Drumming History was that he was born to do this, and he works at it to this day. He goes out on Tour with an Orchestra, so his dual gifting of Percussion and Drumming are active now. P.S. I saw THE POLICE from their early NYC gigs to their final stadium shows and Sting played for STEWART COPELAND, not the other way around. He has the longest career between the pair of them, and has an expansive range of projects. x!
@DimitriFantini You are Drumming though Dimitri, I could not get the discipline when I was younger to learn any instrument and am too much of a lazy slacker now. I dance instead x!
The show from 83 was their last tour. They were supporting Synchronicity. I saw them in Rochester (in 93 degree heat and no clouds). What I loved about Copeland was if the beat was "here", he was behind it, in front of it, around it, opposite to it and then back on it. It all seemed improvised, too. His work on Regatta de Blanc and Zenyatta Mondata was is best, in my humble opinion ;-)
I saw The Police in Montreal, I think it was 1983, and there was an effects rack beside Copeland's drum set and I watched a roadie/technician working on setting the slap back echo rate for the hi hat, so he used that for the Dub-type songs. FYI, the roadie was an excellent drummer himself, and that was about the time that musicians started having very talented people doing their setups, and it makes sense because big acts can't tour AND do all their setting up, so you really need people who know 'how' the musician actually plays their instrument. I did see RUSH once in 1975 though at the Ottawa exhibition and we watched them set up all their own gear with just the help of maybe two roadies. Neal Peart had his ridiculously massive drum kit and Getty Lee and Alex Lifeson had their Marshall Stacks and whatnot. They were doing a summer tour of Canada so it meant setting up and tearing down every couple of days, but that was just when they were starting off so they really had to bust their asses. I was just a young teenager and didn't even know who they were, we just watched them setup all this crap on and off all day long in a small field behind the fire station and then we came back just before the show started that night and man, they really kicked ass! I did become a bit of a fan and learned some of their songs (I play guitar), but even if you weren't a fan, just one listen and you KNEW these guys were going to be huge because they were excellent musicians, super tight and loud as hell! It was like opening a jar of plutonium or something! LOL. 😆
I love how he not only never overpowers the rest of the sound, he layers it to sound round and rich. A lot of drummers will drum to drive the rest of the instruments, whereas Stewart drums to enhance them. It's an entirely different thing.
I read something years ago by Stewart C that he tuned his toms high to get a response. He mentioned that they sounded bad but he let the PA or Studio engineer guy eq them to sound good.
copeland bought the exotic to the backbeat - my favourite drummer. i think i read somehwhere that he described himself as a 'frustrated guitarist' and that figures in the way he plays! he’s dominant but not overpowering, intricate but not flashy, precise and yet somehow always seem to be flying by the seat of his pants! he’s as fascinating to watch as he is exciting to listen to.
4:32 the reason Copeland cross sticks like that is because he uses traditional grip. Zooming in on his hands while he’s cross sticking would help demonstrate that.
Dimitri I'm 66 and I agree, I enjoyed Steward's playing. I'd like to mention a few drummers--Billy Cobham with John mclaughlin, album Inner mounting flame song vital Transformation. Mike Clarke on Herbie Hancock's Actual proof. Lenny White on Return To Forever Romatic Warrior. And last Mike Clarke played with phil Collins with Brand X , Do They Hurt. Hope someone enjoys the info and Enjoys Life
I think Stewart plays a lot of paradiddles and flams. He's number two in my list of drummers. He used to be number one until I heard Phil Gould. I think what makes Stewarts playing unique is a) his talent, b) his composition, c) his nous and d) he's left handed playing right handed. Similar to Ringo. If you notice his octobans go the wrong way because he plays them with a left hand lead.
I like him because he doesn’t play exactly to the record, he improvises every live performance
I love that too
As Carter Beauford too.
Just did a video on Carter!!
@@DimitriFantini i'll search
That's what he has to do because he improvised on the record also. All he does is improve off of his basic parts.
My favorite drummer for 44 years. Thank you.
I’m really glad you liked the video!! Thanks!!
danny Carey from tool has the autograph from this sir. danny Carey uses a gong , Carmine paicey, John Bonham, mike mangini. about carter from Dave Matthews what I know and listened about the glove usage. it's because injuries or some other problem. but he might be a Stewart Copeland fan. got to love Stewart and the police
Steward Copeland plays as a drummer and as a percussionist in the same time. He manages to pull out a steady pulse while bringing in these amazing fills at unexpected moments. His fills are so diverse in rythm and sonic texture, it never gets old and never sounds as a gimmick. And, more important, it always serves the music. It’s very tasteful, never « tacky ».
He's the Rhythmatist
exactly, I thought the same thing when I heard him on message in a bottle for the first time. He achieves so much more than just “drumming” at his best
Him doing "wrapped around your finger" live is one of the best things i have ever seen.master percussionist.
I will have to check that out!
I agree - it’s mesmerizing. I’m drawn to rewatch it every few days.
Watch that video frequently
@@paulcarr5918 its great.
And he's admitted on several occasions that song is his least favorite! Still puts together an amazing version.
My love and admiration for Copeland are infinite. I grew up on The Police and it sets a pretty high standard when it comes to drum.
No one has ever come close to Stewart’s style. What an amazingly dynamic drummer. And the even gnarlier part is he doesn’t repeat anything, every 4/4 groove is completely and insanely different.
I've always loved Stewart Copeland's drumming. He's one of my favorite drummers of all-time. Super unique. John Bonham, Neil Peart, Stewart Copeland, Phil Collins - all great!
Truly one of a kind!
Don't forget Manu Katche with Peter Gabriel and his unique African vibe. Him and Stewart are so different to the norm and are my favourite influences plus Bonham of course!
Stew Copeland in first , others after !...
1-Stewart Copland , 2- Bonham, 3- Phil Collins, 4-Neil Peart. Great list, mate
Peter Gabriel’s records have been a huge influence on me… and therefor Manu has as well! He’s definitely high on the list to bring to the channel!
people, even most drummers, never know how truly awesome Copeland is until they see him live. he's untouchable.
Carl Palmer is also AWESOME. My favorite all time.
Stewart Copland was and is a highly underrated drummer. His drumming concepts, techniques, and his syncopations go unmatched even today…he’s in a league all by himself…the man is legendary. The RRHF should add categories to their inductee ceremonies. Guitarists, bass players, drummers, piano players, synth’s, singer, songwriters, etc…
In the era of gated reverb, Stewart's sound was SO crisp, clean and unique.
Good point! And I did an entire episode about gated reverb too hehe
Most people don't know that The Police was Stewart's band, not Sting's band
can't argue with that!
Not only did Stewart create the band but when you listen to the demos and the last exit versions of the early songs that went on the first three albums, they were nothing like the police version because Stewart’s reggae and Middle Eastern background created their signature unique sound & style. And he was able to take those raw songs that sting had and make them something magical.
Stewart’s home studio is amazing. He calls it the Sacred Garden. He has videos on RUclips from there because it gets whole thing is mic’s up and they are cool videos.
In one video, he’s with Taylor, Hawkins and Taylor talks about how it was Stewart that took those sting songs and really made them come to life. Stuart and Sting had a volatile relationship, but they really brought out the best of each other and Stewart really knew how to harness and shape the songs that Sting wrote.
Not entierly true
@@prokopiskranidiotis1951
Well basically. Stu found Sting and went out of his way to meet Sting and recruit him. Stu was the one driving their signature sound on the first 3 records. Stu’s brother was their manager. Stu named the band before he met Sting. And the list goes on! So yea it was Stewart’s band. And don’t forget, Stewart was in a pretty successful band already. Curved Air. And it was Stewart that took those early Sting demos and Last Exit songs and make them classic Police songs. And it was Stu that pursued Andy who’s skills flipped a switch for Sting. Take Stewart Copeland out of the equation and there is no band called the Police and no one ever hears of Sting or Gordon Sumner. And of course, last but not least their record contract was with another one of Stewart’s brothers.
I agree but Sting did write the songs but astheticslly stu gave them personality...Andy texture and style that's what being in a band is!
I think one of the aspects of Stewart’s playing that isn’t always mentioned is his amazing ability to swing for a rock drummer.
A post on a video I saw one time said that Copeland is the drummer every band wishes it had. I think that about sums it up.
I like that!
Welcome to the Stewart Copeland fan club! You need to listen to the whole Police back catalog, starting with Ghost In The Machine. The fills he does on that album are incredible.
Doing my homework!!
Stewart Copeland: your favorite drummer’s favorite drummer.
Ok but then who is Stewart’s favorite?
@@DimitriFantini
He likes Buddy Rich and Joey Jordison as regular and standard answers. I cannot pinpoint a favourite, because as with pretty much everything else, he switches up when you least expect it.
Stewart Copeland is a legend! Love the vid ❤
Thank you Christian! Means a lot :)
Sweet vid! Always loved Stew’s unique style as well as The Police trio. I’d love to see a vid of you explaining the drums ending of “ it’s alright 4 u” I guess some it are overdubs.
Always loved Stewart's flams. They sound HUGE, especially in that 1983 concert.
Huge Flams is gonna be the name of my next album
Well, I left N.Y. in November 1978 and there was no Police there yet, for me. I moved to LA and began to go to auditions. EVERY band I audit for said “play like Stewart Copeland”!! I had a lot of catching up to do, a lot of woodshedding! Stewart, ah what an influence and a source of inspiration to drive a drummer to massive practice and to strive for excellence!! Great to see here that he is still doing that today! Oh, I did join a band called “Ioneyes” and we were together for just one amazing year ha ha!
That’s so cool to hear! Thanks for sharing man 👊
Cool analysis of one of my favorite all time drummers; Stewart is a BOSS Behind the kit!
Couldn't agree more!
Amazing how many of his tracks on their studio albums were first - and only - take.
I’m a guitar player but I remember as a kid in the 80’s being completely hipnotize by the drums when listening to The Police
Besides being an awesome drummer, he's a musical genius. His creativity, his musical knowledge, his vision... There's a reason why he made the music for one of the most iconics videogames trilogy for PlayStation: Spyro the Dragon
I think Stewart Copeland should play with Rush now. He’d be up to the task and add a different angle to Rush’s sound. I think it would be amazing. Great video!
Cool to think about!
What's even more impressive and often overlooked, is that you can copy his playing, note for note, but still never be able to sound like him. Something about the way he accents everything he plays, together with a feel and groove that is hard to describe, let alone match...
I think that's true and impressive for sure! But it's also true for all the greats. We can only sound like ourselves!! The sooner we can learn that, the higher we'll soar :)
I saw Stewart play a few months ago and he is still brilliant
Also… Stewart used primarily Tama Imperialstars which have luaun shells… very dry and fundamental tone. they respond really well to high tunings and hard hitting.
Makes sense to me!
Stewart is a phenomenal drummer! Truly one of the greats. I really love how he tuned his drums: such great snap and personality, and it fit his style - and the band - perfectly. My favorite snare sound of his is on "Spirits In The Material World". One of the best snare sounds ever recorded! Thanks for sharing the video!
Yes, you can tell it's him playing from one crack on that snare!
I saw the Police reunion tour,
Stewart the GOAT has incredible energy and intensity in his playing even now and he is in his seventies probably.
Best drum /percussion solo I ever heard, so musical, dynamic and importantly FUN!
Honestly that’s incredible! Wish I had seen them live for that tour
You should listen to more Police. Stewart also is the king of doing a fill with no cymbal at the end.
The studio version, Stewart also plays a different drum part for every verse of Message in a bottle. He layers stuff.
Also good of sting to add a little distortion and chorus on the bass to help everything out.
No one knows everything. The fact that you've only discovered Copeland's brilliance now is no issue, just explore him more. He's commonly listed in the top 6-7 rock drummers of all time. The Police were insane, all 3 were brilliant in their own right.
I appreciate the sentiment! Looking forward to doing more of these :)
The Police Synchronicity Tour was the first live show I attended. I was, like, 8-years of age! Think I slept through most of the show but (possible when your 8) I vividly recall the band wearing the outfits shown your clips. Memorieees.
That is so cool you remember that!
@@DimitriFantini I also recall wanting haircut to be like Rod Stewarts when I was little. Lol. Good times! Keep up the great work!
@happiaxxident aha nice!! I’m glad you dig the videos!
Yeah, Copeland's cross stick technique is insane... and the way he smashes that bass drum!!! He has a very improvisational style, which helps to keep the music fresh. The downside of that is that I tend to miss some drum parts, such as the ones he recorded in One World. For I long time I thought Copeland carefully composed them for the song (a la Neil Peart), but after listening to the live versions I guess he probably came up with those on the fly at the recording session. Maybe there was some equally tasteful editing involved. Anyway, from a compositional point of view, the studio drum parts are really genius. Also, great observations about the frequency range of the toms and cymbals.
Thanks! Really glad I’m starting to dig into Copeland, after a recommendation from my friend Madden Klass :)
If you have other drummers or performances you think I should analyze on the channel, lemme know!!
The reason Stewart is able to improvise in ways that other drummers don’t, and can’t is because he was raised on jazz music by his father but his mother loved classical. So think about that. He comes from a musical family. His dad played in jazz bands. His mother loved classical. And he’s being raised in the Middle East with a unique style of music That shaped his drum playing and he talks about that often.
@DimitriFantini If you haven't seen it already find The Police playing "Wrapped Around Your Finger" live, there's a relatively recent performance of it where Stewart is using a gong, kettle drums, chimes, I think a glockenspiel too? It's really cool.
My favorite drummer of all time. I like him more than Peart because as spectacularly good as Peart is, Peart is predictable. Stewart is unpredictable, and is very hard to air drum with, but in spite of the unpredictable beats, they all sync up perfectly, Stewart is also a master of space, and that space was one of the magic factors in playing with Andy and Sting.
Disagree. Neil Peart was the greatest.
Totally agree…🎯
The man is in my top 3 of most badass drummers of all time.
I see why!
And of course Buddy Rich would be on that list. Virtually untouchable.
Always felt he sounded like a 32nd behind or ahead of where snare should be normally. What a Master!!!!!!!
"Message in a Bottle" has long been my favorite example of Stewart's drumming performance. Especially the flurry of activity at the end.
But thank you for pointing out all this nuance going on earlier in the song!
When I was a teen, listening to him on Message in a Bottle made me just - wow.
All his drumming is inventive and progressive, he never just played the "root notes" of drumming. A total legend, and the best The Police could've had, he just "made" their music on another level.
My admiration and inspiration for Stewart Copeland has grown so much over the last year or so. And when I watch his interviews, he has no filter, which i love! The drumeo interview is amazing. I love when he rips into Sting. But you can tell he loves Sting and Andy.
❤ Best breakdown of Stewart Copeland's genius I've seen yet❤
7:32 Stewart's stick goes flying and he's right back to keeping time!
it's crazy!!!
THANKS MY MAN. HE IS THE BEST DRUMMER EVER AND I NEEDED IT SO MUCH - YOU WILL NEVER KNOW WAY - ONE2
This video is fantastic! More, please!
As you wish!
Dimitri how you point out Copeland's insane drumming is amazing. He was one of a kind. Similar to Jeff Porcaro even though their styles were miles apart, their incredible ability and uniqueness is untouchable.
I’m really glad you dig the video Jack, thank you!
Also, this is why he's my favorite drummer.
I saw them in San Francisco during that tour. Never forget. They opened with this song
Per 7:10 I think SC used a repeater (sorry, don't know actual name of device) on his toms during live performances to add an extra note -- and, YES, I think you articulate his use of empty space within the trio really well! Thanks for posting!
Thanks, glad you enjoyed the vid! I’ll have to look into what kind of delay pedal he used specifically
@@DimitriFantini JUST in case your curious: At 4:09 on the video below you can see him hit his tom twice, but it produces three notes. Some sort of delay.
Ok, that's enough SC conspiracy theory for today:
ruclips.net/video/HPtKYbggCqE/видео.html
Great video, mate! 😀👍 Stewart has been one of my favourite drummers since I was 10, and The Police's third album 'Zenyatta Mondatta' was among those I'd started to teach myself the drums to, back then 😊
And I definitely dig that higher-pitched tom sound myself! 😍 Another great example for it would be Rush's Neil Peart; Maybe check out their song 'Digital Man' some time, from their '82 album 'Signals', which has my favourite drum sound on it 😊
No doubt Stewart had been the inspiration for Neil to tune his toms higher from around 1980 onwards and compared to Rush's 70's albums 🙂
ah I know some Rush but not Digital Man or Signals! Thanks for the rec!!
@@DimitriFantini - You're welcome! 😊 That particular song sounds very Police-y, too! And I guess their influence on Rush's music during the early 80's had also helped with me getting instantly hooked on them (in '89), via their '84 album 'Grace Under Pressure'; Neil had even nicked Stewart's cross-stick rhythm from the 'Don't Stand So Close To Me' intro for said Rush album's opener 'Distant Early Warning'! 😅
Greetings from NZ! 😀👍
Stewart is so original, so talented, and had so much swag man. This dude is so cool looking on stage then he's actually a massive nerd. But the duct tape, the shorts, the flowing blonde hair. Dude played and looked like few else. Never seen someone more confident in being different.
Not to mention the headband!
I love a lot of drummers, but I think it's safe to say that Copeland is the most unique rock/pop drummer ever, full stop. Nobody plays even remotely like him. Nobody can groove the sh*t out of a song with only a kick and high-hat. When I was learning to play drums in my high school cover band I loved playing Police tunes but they were so difficult to get right. You have to fight every normal drummer instinct - crashes are never where you expect, fills begin and end in insane places, everything is so tight and snappy there are no moments of "letting go and rocking out." There were passages I'd figure out and be stunned they were so "simple" because they grooved so damn hard! Maybe "minimal" is a better description. Just incredible economy of strokes. He's in a category all his own as far as I'm concerned - kind of transcends the "best" drummer competition. Great video, glad i found you!!
You have a great way of explaining it!! Glad you’re here!
You did a great job of interpreting the fills!
Thanks Dave! Glad it was helpful!
Thanks for doing this, love the format! Copeland is a absolute beast for sure, probably the hardest drummer ever to try and imitate or sound like. My one suggestion would be to maybe pause a little less and let the footage play out for a minute or so before pausing to interject. But, you may be doing that for copyright reasons so it doesn't get blocked so I get it!
I appreciate the feedback!! You are right, playing back certain parts do create some issues with copyright. Depending on the performances I’m reviewing in the future, this won’t always be an issue! Thanks for watching :)
Saw them in a small place in 81! Was amazing.
Moon like energy.
I hate that a generation of kids will not know about the brilliance of a guy like SC.
He's Mount Rushmore of drummers for me, no doubt
Have faith!! I was turned on to Copeland by my friend Madden Klass, and she is still a youngin’ !!
With a perks of social media I think they will/are
Man, I am enjoying watching all the videos in your channel! such funny, witty, well edited and informative analyses! Been a fan for a couple of years. thank you for your service to music appreciation!
ah Diego thank you so much!! And stay tuned for a whole lot more soon!
Brilliant job with this, Dimitri. I was (and still am) a massive fan of the Police and in particular Stewart (my favorite drummer of all time) when this was current. I almost broke body parts trying to emulate him as a teenager. Yes, lots of echo effects and overdubs in the studio but you have laid out what I've know all these years - he was legendary playing live behind his Chariot of Thunder. Thanks for this, it made my day. -- Jay
Thanks Jay it means a lot to hear you say that!
The dude is a treat to watch! and you're a blast too! Thanks
Ah that really means a lot!! Thank you!!! 🙏
I was a drummer for most of my life til a nasty little accident occurred. But when I played our band was greatly influenced by Ska and Reggae and even some African rhythms. I loved watching Stewart back in the day and still do.
I like that you teach a bit while watching Stewart. So thanks again. Keep up the good work.
I’m 71 now and still love to watch other drummers. I liked Squeez’s drummer a lot too. Phenomenal live performances.
@@moondogaudiojones1146 if you have any video recommendations I should check out I'd love to see them! Thanks for being here!
My toms on my 26" kick are 10"and 12"
I love the high toms cutting thru.
Copeland live in his young days was an ANIMAL..
Watch his movements on Wrapped Around Your Finger. They are so precise on that bell set that creates the mood for the whole song.
I was at that concert in 1983. That was recorded at The Omni in Atlanta, GA.
that's incredible!!
It was a great concert. I also saw The Police in 1980 at a smaller venue (Fox Theater in Atlanta) and that show was even better. @@DimitriFantini
@gregtthomas I have some homework to do!
Awesome job. This song and that video of the performance from Japan, leaped into my brain the other day, and voila - here we are.
What you touched on are what I also think are the hallmarks of his drumming - the four on the floor/interplay with the toms, and the dancing on the hi-hats/crazy cross-stick.
Thanks I’m so glad you liked it! What do you think I should do next?
And the syncopation on the ride bell.
I’m drawing a blank on a good, drum-focused tune that hasn’t been looked at much 🙂 I’ll get back to you. Looking forward to whatever comes next though.
Let me know when you have something!!
Cream - Sunshine of Your Love
Deathcab For Cutie - Grapevine Fires
Fleetwood Mack - Tusk
Jimi Hendrix - Purple Haze
Sweet - Ballroom Blitz
The Meters - Cissy Strut
Enjoy!
Brutal 🙏Fan since 1979 ✌
S.C. Is THE G.O.A.T.
I worked with Stewart on the drum solo week for the letterman show. In fact I own the entire set up
He was great .
I HAVE to hear more about this!
anytime@@DimitriFantini
There's a very funny interview with Stewart at the NAMM show 2015, where he mentioned he is impressed by the Police coverbands playing the drumparts, not only that but with the drum overdubs live all at the same time. "I never did that" lol
He’s a riot- I can definitely relate to his attitude and spirit 😂
We need to see a video on Vinnie Colaiuta playing with sting on his Soul Cages tour!
Hey Paisan. Good playing. I’m so glad you’re studying the masters. Oh by the way my cousin says damn good playing.
J. Passantino
Thanks Jeff and tell your cousin I said thanks too!
Killer video. Informative and entertaining. When I was a 12 year old and Synchronicity first came out (1983) I would listen to "Walking on the moon" on that album and wonder what sticking Stewart Copeland used on his hat rolls on that cut. Recently I watched the Police Synchronicity live video and perhaps, those hi hat rolls are made with a digital delay and you can hear from the mix at the live Synchronicity concert video. In that Synchronicity live video it sounds more like a reggae dub out effect from the board than him actually playing it live. So I wonder if he played in the studio on the original cut for the album.
Thanks! I’m gonna have to check out Tea in the Sahara!
@@DimitriFantini Actually, I meant to say "Walking On The Moon". That is the song.
A real nice breakdown of Mr Copeland. Like Bonham, they never played a tune the same way. That's just incredible groove
Great analysis. Got my name in his new book. Had to. As a percussionist, been a fan since the beginning. Still trying to figure out everything SC does.
Tell me more about that book please!
My favorite all-time drummer, Carl Palmer, was using a gong back in the very early 70's. Buddy Rich agreed with me and said that Carl was the finest drummer in Rock music.
I’ve heard the same! Here at the studio we actually have an original Moog modular… signed by Keith Emerson!
I was a fan of The Police when I was young. Stewart has always been my number one drummer ever. When I watch these videos and his own youtube I still get amazed by things he does that I hadn't even noticed before. All that being said, this band was great because it was the three perfect people to make music together. Sting was an excellent lyricist and bass player, Andy is one of the most underrated guitar players, and Stewart is Stewart. What most people, including Sting, don't want to admit is that they were all responsible for the way their songs turned out. Andy wrote his guitar pieces, Stewart put together his own drum parts, yet Sting got sole writing credit for a lot. See Andy's statement about how they wanted to throw away Every Breath You Take before he introduced his part or Sting's hatred for what Stewart did to Roxanne after he wrote a bossa nova song and Stewart just said hold his beer and went to town. There is video done in later years where the two of them tried to do it the original style with Stewart playing his part on a little frying pan, and he still couldn't hold it in and went crazy near the end, and the look on Sting's face said it all lol. These guys were all musical geniuses and their styles fit perfectly, even if their personalities didn't.
A few recommendations for you that really showcase Stewart's talent No Time This Time,One World,Demolition Man,Regatta De Blanc,Deathwish(great bass drum play)Synchronicity 1,Murder By Numbers, just a few examples of a genius at work in my opinion.
Guys it's Stewart Copeland. He always was. Unmatched and unique style. My all times favourite and not only mine. Every drummer love Copeland come on.
One of my Stewart faves is “Can’t Stand Losing You.” Funky and fun.
I’ll have to check it out, thanks!
Finally, everyone now realizes the unique immensity of these three musicians. The alchemy produced remains a landmark in the history of pop/rock. Stew Copeland has a rare finesse, a strike so "narrow" and a complex sense of the rarest ryhms, quite the opposite of a J.Bonham or Phil Collins.
Copeland is truly unique.incredible. thx for breakdown
Glad you dig the vid!
I am pleased to see a younger professional drummer praise STEWART COPELAND. My answer to his place in Drumming History was that he was born to do this, and he works at it to this day. He goes out on Tour with an Orchestra, so his dual gifting of Percussion and Drumming are active now.
P.S. I saw THE POLICE from their early NYC gigs to their final stadium shows and Sting played for STEWART COPELAND, not the other way around. He has the longest career between the pair of them, and has an expansive range of projects. x!
That’s fantastic you got to witness that!!! I’m jealous!
@DimitriFantini You are Drumming though Dimitri, I could not get the discipline when I was younger to learn any instrument and am too much of a lazy slacker now. I dance instead x!
Stewart Copeland was and is like a coiled spring of brilliance. The best.
That’s a great way to put it
@@DimitriFantini👍🏼
I didn't know that The Police was Stuart's band? Phenomenal drummer 👍
Sting had nice songs, good lyrics, regular stylings. Enter Andy and Stuart... BAM!!!
Please join up with Geddy and Alex. You were Neil’s favorite drummer.
The show from 83 was their last tour. They were supporting Synchronicity. I saw them in Rochester (in 93 degree heat and no clouds). What I loved about Copeland was if the beat was "here", he was behind it, in front of it, around it, opposite to it and then back on it. It all seemed improvised, too. His work on Regatta de Blanc and Zenyatta Mondata was is best, in my humble opinion ;-)
What was that?
What was that?
I love this bloke's humility and admiration.
Thanks bro
Should really have reacted to the 1980s live versions. Edit: ohhh shit he did!
I saw The Police in Montreal, I think it was 1983, and there was an effects rack beside Copeland's drum set and I watched a roadie/technician working on setting the slap back echo rate for the hi hat, so he used that for the Dub-type songs. FYI, the roadie was an excellent drummer himself, and that was about the time that musicians started having very talented people doing their setups, and it makes sense because big acts can't tour AND do all their setting up, so you really need people who know 'how' the musician actually plays their instrument. I did see RUSH once in 1975 though at the Ottawa exhibition and we watched them set up all their own gear with just the help of maybe two roadies. Neal Peart had his ridiculously massive drum kit and Getty Lee and Alex Lifeson had their Marshall Stacks and whatnot. They were doing a summer tour of Canada so it meant setting up and tearing down every couple of days, but that was just when they were starting off so they really had to bust their asses. I was just a young teenager and didn't even know who they were, we just watched them setup all this crap on and off all day long in a small field behind the fire station and then we came back just before the show started that night and man, they really kicked ass! I did become a bit of a fan and learned some of their songs (I play guitar), but even if you weren't a fan, just one listen and you KNEW these guys were going to be huge because they were excellent musicians, super tight and loud as hell! It was like opening a jar of plutonium or something! LOL. 😆
a superbly talented band 😀
I love how he not only never overpowers the rest of the sound, he layers it to sound round and rich. A lot of drummers will drum to drive the rest of the instruments, whereas Stewart drums to enhance them. It's an entirely different thing.
Great Breakdown and Appreciation of El Maestro Stewart Copeland . . . ! . . . :-)
(-,
Glad you liked it! Thank you!
Thank you. that was fun
So glad you liked it Marcel!!
He's such a beast
For real!
Great job 👏…. Just curious 🧐 what kind of drumheads do you use on your kit…. Especially on your toms?! Thank you 🙏!
These were no name two ply heads I bought as an experiment. Very comparable to any standard two ply!
Stewart has said his high tuned tom is intended to sound like Joe Morello's rack tom.
I read something years ago by Stewart C that he tuned his toms high to get a response. He mentioned that they sounded bad but he let the PA or Studio engineer guy eq them to sound good.
Mahavishnu Orchestra started concerts with Billy Cobham hitting gong. Only drummer I remember Buddy Rich say he admired
For good reason I would say
Yes, in interviews Carter Beauford has said Stewart was a big influence.
Well an episode on Carter is coming next so watch for that! :)
The fact that Stewart was left-handed but played a mostly normal kit surely added to his unique style 🤷♂️
That’s gonna help!
Man , check out the Omni in Atlanta gig , he is also a left handed. This attributes to his technique
well I'm gonna have to check that out then!
I told you back at SoR in Columbia that Copland was a monster drummer.
Took me long enough huh!!!
copeland bought the exotic to the backbeat - my favourite drummer. i think i read somehwhere that he described himself as a 'frustrated guitarist' and that figures in the way he plays! he’s dominant but not overpowering, intricate but not flashy, precise and yet somehow always seem to be flying by the seat of his pants! he’s as fascinating to watch as he is exciting to listen to.
4:32 the reason Copeland cross sticks like that is because he uses traditional grip. Zooming in on his hands while he’s cross sticking would help demonstrate that.
Dimitri I'm 66 and I agree, I enjoyed Steward's playing. I'd like to mention a few drummers--Billy Cobham with John mclaughlin, album Inner mounting flame song vital Transformation. Mike Clarke on Herbie Hancock's Actual proof. Lenny White on Return To Forever Romatic Warrior. And last Mike Clarke played with phil Collins with Brand X , Do They Hurt. Hope someone enjoys the info and Enjoys Life
I love all of these drummers!! I’ll start cooking!
I think Stewart plays a lot of paradiddles and flams.
He's number two in my list of drummers. He used to be number one until I heard Phil Gould.
I think what makes Stewarts playing unique is a) his talent, b) his composition, c) his nous and d) he's left handed playing right handed. Similar to Ringo. If you notice his octobans go the wrong way because he plays them with a left hand lead.
Tell me more about Phil Gould!!