Best Drum Solos


I'm finding that I've been REALLY enjoying drum solos on my system lately. They seem to work the whole speaker, from the kick drum in the woofers, to the tom-tom in the midrange, and the cymbals and high hats in the tweeters. And when it all comes together, they are the instrument I have the easiest time seeing in front of myself.

I searched the forums titles to see if there were any good drum solo discussions going on, but I didn't see any. So here we go. In no particular order, here are some drum solos I've found to be very high quality:

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers - The Drum Thunder Suite
Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers - Caravan
Dave Brubeck Quartet - Far More Drums
Led Zeppelin - Moby Dick
Max Roach - Max's Variations

What are your favorite drum solos to listen to on your system? 
heyitsmedusty

First of all, Ginger’s drums and cymbals sound terrible---terrible! The drums are thin and ringy, no body or tone, like an unplugged Telecaster. The cymbals are dissonant (the overtones being out-of-tune with the fundamental) and clangy, without the percussive "click" of good cymbals, or their melodic pitch and tone. Listen to the cymbals of Jim Gordon (Derek & The Dominoes, Joe Cocker, Delaney & Bonnie, Traffic) and many Jazz drummers (as well as Don Lamonds in the aforementioned "Beyond The Sea"), then Gingers. The man had no taste! Likewise, his drums just don’t sound good. Just as with his cymbals, their overtones are out-of-tune with the fundamentals, creating dissonance. Ugly and unpleasant. Some drummers never learn how to tune drums. He also used really thin heads on his drums. Ask any guitarist about what super-thin strings sound like---no body, no substance. To hear what good drums and cymbals sound like, listen to Levon Helm’s on the Band’s albums, particulary the 1st and 2nd. Listen to the opening of "The Weight", the three simple quarter notes Levon plays on his mounted and floor toms. Fantastic! Then listen to his cymbals---beautiful musical instruments, very much like Jim Gordon’s.

As for the substance of Ginger’s "Toad" solo, when you take away all the repetitions of patterns and figures that he plays, you have only a couple minutes of actual ideas. He just repeats them over and over and over again in a row, making the solo sooo repetitious and (imo) boring. And those ideas themselves are just not interesting, at least not to me. They sound awkward and clumsy, without quality flow, structure, and development. Each to his own!

There is a story told of when Miles Davis went to a club to watch and hear The Buddy Rich Big Band. Miles expressed his surprise at discovering that Buddy wasn't just displaying his astounding chops, but that he was playing parts that set up the song for what the other players were about to play.  That's called ensemble playing, and that's the way the best musicians play. Ginger Baker was not one of the best, whether he was soloing or playing a song. It doesn't bother me that others like his playing, I don't know why it should bother anyone else that I don't!

Regarding being a "professional musician and all", that does not make an opinion any more valid than that of anyone else, including non-musicians, professional or otherwise. I have known non-musicians with far better taste (imo) than many musicians I’ve known. And taste is what we’re talking about here. That, and the lack of it ;-).

Wow bdp. Don’t ever miss a chance to dump on Cream. But thanks for sharing your O-pinion. Hmm..."miserable".  That sure changes my view of Toad. Buddy Rich calling Baker a "clown" just sealed the deal. Curious though, you being the professional drummer and all, what exactly makes that solo miserable? 

Since you brought it up...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YIqa27Ml3jI&ab_channel=GingerBakerTheMovie

Comments are worth reading too. I guess not everyone shares your appreciation.




See: That's the difference between Cool and not Cool. I'll bet President Nixon would pick Buddy Rich over Ginger Baker.

Don Lamond in Bobby Darin’s version of "Beyond The Sea". Lamond had been Woody Herman’s drummer in the 1940’s. Don's two short little drum "breaks" on "Beyond The Sea", especially the second, are insanely cool.

The worst drum solo is probably Ron Bushy’s in Iron Butterfly’s "Inna Gadda Da Vida". Second place for me is Ginger Baker’s in Cream’s "Toad". Just miserable. Buddy Rich characterized Baker as a "clown".

...we get it you obviously like RUSH...now if they only had a lead singer ! I left one of their shows because of that voice ..... I have always wondered if somebody actually told him that he could sing  
Any comparison to Led Zeppelin is valid, as Heart wanted to be the female version of LZ.
How oft, doth we forget...

Not really a drum solo, but the main driving force behind "Barracuda"!!!
I'm really enjoying this one everyone! You have introduced me to a lot of new very talented artists as well as brought back some great memories from my past.

Allow me to share some of my favorite percussionists. 
Aric Importa
Neil Peart- I've personally seen Rush Live 12 times
Mike Portnoy-check him out with Liquid Tension. It includes Toni Levin blazing on the Chapmin stick! 
Carl Palmer 
Nick D'vergilio- from prog rock band Spocks Beard. Also worked with Genesis, Peter Gabriel, Cirque du Soleil, Tears for fears and session drummer for Sweet water Studios.

N

Just my 2c, the best 'drum' vinyl is Ed Graham 'hot stix' direct master to disc -45rpm. It can be tricky to track down a copy, on the 'bay' it can go over $100, it's a great disc to push your system and a/b all components. 

Take a look for Tommy Igoe. He is one of the best drummers and drum instructors out today. I have heard him with the Birdland Big Band. There are a few of their recordings. He has moved to LA and he has some new recordings.
Check out Ginger Baker's "Basil" from Middle Passage album. The whole song is nothing but a 5 1/2 minute drum solo.

Gentlemen, I give you Gergo Borlai!  As far as Fusion power drumming goes, while there's truly been so many exceptional drumming forces to be reckoned with, I believe the 1st generation belonged to Billy Cobham, the 2nd generation was Dennis Chambers, and currently the reigning champ is Gergo Borlai!  Check him out!

https://youtu.be/6_18gwqAYW4

https://youtu.be/sBN9i_NIbxQ

https://youtu.be/e5NyqFiSfrM

BTW, the last clip is from bass phenom (and Tribal Tech member) Gary Willis's latest; Larger Than Life.  This is one of the great Fusion Jazz recordings of the 21st century!

Somehow, I'm getting a great drum vibe from my gear from the drums (not a drum solo itself) of this band's debut album.

The Reign of Kindo - Something In The Way That You Are

The drummer's finesse is making the drums livelier in my system
What, no grateful dead? I saw them a couple dozen times before Jerry died and really enjoyed the "drums" portion of there concerts. They would play (Bill & Mickey) for about 20 minutes on there own without the rest of the band. Good stuff & very talented musicians.  
Ginger Baker TOAD off the Wheels of Fire Album - hard to find one better if you got the equipment to reproduce it.
KISS - Peter Criss, Alive or something. Don't get me wrong, I'm not a huge KISS fan. But I will never forget listening to this solo when I was a kid, even if I can't remember the album. It goes on forevah! 
Tony Williams on Miles' "Nefertiti"; brilliant.  The tune is all about Williams soloing throughout while the front line just plays the melody and don't solo.
Nice input everyone! I'm assembling a Spotify playlist the best I can with what they have available. Here's the playlist:

https://open.spotify.com/user/1250668582/playlist/0atitBeCQDCcWwoj78ZBpK

I made it collaborative so people can add and remove at will. Think of it like a wiki playlist!
I saw Roy Haynes do a solo during a lecture/demonstration in a university performance hall ca. 1980.  It was quite impressive.
Any drum solo by Omar Hakim, Tony Roy Jr.
Frenchman marc cerrone always has a good sounding drum set.. even though is not a 1st class drummer.  check out "2nd chance"  with tony allen for intersting afro beat or cerrone's drum solo live at versailles 2005.
Phil collins did an entertaining solo live in paris I believe.
And now for something completely different:

I was driving today and Culture Club's immortal hit "The War Song" (key lyric: War is stupid, People are stupid) popped up on XM.  I had completely forgotten that this song featured a real, honest to goodness drum solo!  Maybe not a solo for the ages, but a solo nonetheless.
The live recordings in Carnegie Hall might be OK, but as far as venue acoustics go it's probably one of the very worst.

Well the best I've heard in regards to tantalizing sound was at Carnegie hall so I'll guess the best recorded one is from there as well. 
At Carnegie Hall, (Dave Brubeck Quartet album), Castillian drums song.
Recorded in 1963, solo drum of 14 minutes, not bad at all for a 50 years old recording.
Also a an one hour recording of drum call "the drums flights" played by a body builder by the name of Rob Schuh. Very special experimental album.
Enjoy  
Drum Solos???
Thanks guys! Now i really feel old...:-)
Back in the sixties it was almost mandatory in the middle sets to have a long one!
Always wondered what the poor drummers did to not get a "break" in the show...:-)
Drum Solos???
Thanks guys! Now i really feel old...:-)
Back in the sixties it was almost mandatory in the middle sets to have a long one!
Always wondered what the poor drummers did to not get a "break" in the show...:-)
There are lots of very good percussionest.
Personally, I've always likes Buddy Rich.
My nomination is not really a drum solo per se, but two little "breaks" played by Don Lamond, Woody Herman's drummer, in the Bobby Darin recording of "Beyond The Sea". Too cool for words!
+ 1) falconquest: Patricia Barber "Cafe Blue" ..."Nardis", Mark Walker
Any time Carl Palmer can be "let loose".
All great entries above....+1 on all of them.

A few more suggestions;

- Don't know if you can qualify them as a 'solo' performance per se, but every member of ONDEKOZA is at virtuoso level on their individual parts.
Any album by them qualifies as among the 'best drumming' performances....

- Kim Hok Man, "Master of Chinese Percussion"

- And finally, without a doubt, IMHO, anything by Neil Peart from RUSH!!! In particular his many iterations of the drum solo from "Working Man" over the years, his playing on Cygnus X-1 (both parts across 2 albums), Bytor and the Snowdog, La Villa Strangiato, Xandau, 2112, Tom Sawyer, YYZ,...the list goes on and on. What he does, how he plays and the orchestra-like 'force of one' he demonstrates blows me away every time.

As an aside,...if you have not read Peart's book "Ghost Rider, Travels on the Healing Road", I would highly recommend it.  A very deep, touching and immersive read,...
 The Sheffield Lab Drum record.Entire LP nothing but drumming about the best Drum sound I heard.I also like Terry Bozzio on Zappa's the Black Page.
Sorry, Two More:

Louis Bellson – Skin Deep
Steve Gadd – Keep the Customer Satisfied

2nd - Dave Brubeck Quartet/Joe Morello – Far More Drums
Buddy Rich – Channel One Suite, Norwegian Wood

Great picks on Ginger Baker! Totally agree.
Gene Krupa - Sing Sing Sing is indeed classic!
Want to add Mark Nauseef -- Dark and lately impressed by Brian Blade.

Patricia Barber - Black Magic woman - around the seven minute mark it gets going good . Slow steady build to climax - from Companion
Well you have to include "Nardis" from the Cafe Blue album from Patricia Barber. Another poster mentioned Mick Fleetwood which made me think of "Tusk" which is not really a solo but worthy no doubt.
Batuka - Santana lll - not a solo but percussion forefront
Drum Opera - INXS - drum machine 
The drum solo from Soul Sacrifice by the guy who was playing for Santana at Woodstock.....absolutely awesome!!