A few weeks later when Nigel had a break, he came
into the plant, and we set a new course. The maple sets and Rolling
Stone Magazine ads were the result of that and you can see these
sets at: http://www.angelfire.com/ca/nigelfanclub/nigelpix1.html
I get asked about the first recording of the
set. Honestly, I don’t remember; it could have been on “Philadelphia
Freedom” because I hear a weird, fat snare drum. Then, again,
I hear the cracking toms on the single “Someone Saved My
Life Tonight”, so, it could have been there.
There are feelings I sometimes get about people
and things. I never knew what to make of this, but the first time
I got this feeling was while I was talking with Nigel in his first
plant visit. Later, I learned this gift would come in handy in
scouting drummers for endorsement. One time it even saved my life.
I asked Nigel who he was with, and he politely said Elton John.
I said, “I have a feeling about this, I think you guys are
going to do well". He thanked me for all my help, and added
he hoped that I was right. As he walked away, I thought, who in
the hell is going to buy a record from a person named Elton John?
Sure glad I wasn't an A&R guy.
The first time I saw Buddy Rich was December
23, 1969, at a place called George's Show lounge which was about
2 miles north of Slingerland and is now a pizza place. The night
we went to see the band, Donny and I had to play a concert at
school but as soon as that was over we were in the car and on
our way.
We pulled into the lot and I saw the band bus.
When we entered the club, it was small and crowded with tables
pulled tight. They put about 3 tables together and I was sitting
with Armand Zildjian, Morey and Jan Lishon owners of Franks Drum
Shop, Leonard Feather from Downbeat magazine, and a few others
from Slingerland. I think Remo Belli was there too that night.
It was like a Hollywood night for me. My folks never had money
for anything like this. For a seventeen-year-old kid this was
the big time. As I turned to the right looking around the room,
Tom Osborne nudged me and said "Hey Pic (a nickname the boys
gave me) there's B". Sure enough, it was Buddy Rich. I saw
the guy on TV 3 or 4 times but this was Buddy live and 10 feet
from me. He was a lot smaller then I thought. He wore a pink dress
shirt, navy sports coat and gray slacks. He chatted with Armand
and Don Sr. Laughing, and joking around. Suddenly he turned to
the band and they snapped to attention. It was like an army.
They introduced Buddy and they were off and running
with Rotten Kid. I could not believe it. He didn't seem real.
The band didn't either. Rick Stepton and Mike Price were in the
band and the stuff he played through West Side Story was nothing
I ever saw or heard him do ever again. He played for his friends
that night at the front table.
Buddy had an amazing aura. Even when listening
to you there was a sincere intensity about him. He was a star;
a nice man and a genius. The most amazing story I experienced
with him took place at the Randhurst Ice Arena. I with the help
of 4 people brought 2 full sets of drums to him. I also brought
extra snare drums. Buddy was a snare drum fanatic. It had to be
right. I could never figure out what he wanted. Just when I thought,
I had him figured out and happy he'd change course. I told Don
senior that one day after he left Slingerland and Don just said,
"Join the club". I asked Buddy if he would give a snare
drum try as I just had it built and was experimenting with a new
idea.
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