Name 3 under appreciated pop/rock drummers


Since the best rock drummer thread has garnered some interest, this thread could create some diverse and interesting respones. My 3 are as follows...
1-Gil Moore-Triumph-Being Canadian.
2-Jerry Shirley-Humble Pie/Fastway-Didn't sell enough records.
3-Roger Taylor-Queen-Overshadowed in his own band.
dayglow
Okay ...I give in and seeing how we have about three of the same threads going on at the same time and with the same answers and usual suspects so how about : Butch Trucks and Jaimoe ? .......or even Billy Kruetzman and Mickey Hart ? ......they are pretty damm good drummers to me that have not been mentioned.    
+ 1 Rob Hirst and Steve Ferrone

Dave "Smokey" Smelko of Rastas - you have to listen - this guy is totally unknown but could give David Garibaldi a run for his money.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=H_E0uKMnKH8

Great to see Roger Taylor mentioned here by OP - really distinct style and sound!
My favorites include...
- Simon Phillips
- Bill Bruford
- Ginger Baker

- Johnny Barbata, L. A. studio drummer turned Turtle, later in Jefferson Starship. Amazing song parts, and Buddy Rich liked his playing! His name is rarely mentioned, for a reason I don't understand.

- Bobby Graham, British studio drummer who is heard on the early Kinks singles. A very dynamic, exciting player.

- Nashville studio legend Buddy Harmon, that town's Hal Blaine. Runner-up Harry Stinson, a great musician, singer, songwriter, and producer. Currently playing in Marty Stuart's band The Fabulous Superlatives.

Albert Bouchard of BÖC
Corky Laing of Mountain & WBL
Simon Fox of Be-Bop Deluxe
Phil Collins of GENESIS
B.J. Wilson of Procol Harum
Barriemore Barlow of Jethro Tull
Clive Bunker of Jethro Tull
Bill Ward of Black Sabbath
Steve Smith of Journey
Michael Shrieve of Santana
Phil Ehart of Kansas
Aynsley Dunbar (of Journey)
Deen Castronovo of Journey ("young" generation)

Under appreciated rock drummers, to be exact.
The drummer for Phoenix is incredible. And the one for Local Natives is very talented.

neal
Memories!

I saw Little Feat in Central Park NYC in the '70s and it was one of the best shows I've ever seen. Special Bonus: the opening act was a band called Seatrain and Lowell George sat in on guitar for their whole show. An unbelievable night of music

Marty
Not sure if anybody mentioned the recently passed Richie Hayward who was the Little Feat powerhouse who seemed to have 6 hands and 4 feet...he was one of the reasons Little Feat were considered by many (including me) to be the best live band in its day...and he sang too. He gave up nothing to the best jazz drummers, and killed it live as an insanely funky monster. Feat were astonishing in the 70s Lowell George era (and later not too shabby) and were faves of Zep, the Stones (famously Lowell refused to let Mick jam with 'em at a show...thought he wasn't good enough for Feat) and pretty much any working musician. That music still kills me...Richie is missed.
"Not to minimize what these people do, but they just don't have to play with as much continual creativity or energy as the others."

Well, in the pop rock/folk/country realm, neither do the guitarists nor other instrumentalists play with the creativity or energy as those in jazz or metal, no?
Pop/Rock drummers are always going to play second fiddle to drummers in the jazz and prog/metal genre's. Those drummers play a more up front role in the sound of the band, where in pop the percussion tends to be more behind the scenes backing the vocalist.

Not to minimize what these people do, but they just don't have to play with as much continual creativity or energy as the others.
Some interesting responses--many because of their obscurity and several (Joe Morelo, Ringo Starr, Ginger Baker) who are among the most appreciated and celebrated ever.

I would add Trilok Gurtu, known in guitar circles for playing with John McLaughlin but hardly a mainstream name.
Many great responses especially...Clive Bunker-Phil Ehart-Graham Lear and Rod Morgenstein. I will add another 3 that have not been mentioned...Eric Carr-Troy Luccketta and Floyd Sneed.
Gotta love the guys (and gals) who can really lay it down, and have their own distinctive sound despite the punkish nature of their bands:

David Narcizo - Throwing Muses
Janet Weiss - Sleater-Kinney
Tré Cool - Green Day
Rob Hirst - Midnight Oil

Russ Kunkel - James Taylor, Jackson Browne, Linda Ronstadt, Carol King, etc.

David Robinson - The Cars
Mitch Mitchell, Keith Moon ,Jim Gordon, Jim Keltner,Danny Serafine, Joe Morello--underappreciated? By who?? These were some of the best drummers that were widely known! Now we just need someone to suggest Neil Peart.
The vast majority of the people mentioned above were very well-appreciatated in their day - Dino Danelli, Jim Gordon and Jeff Porcaro, in particular, were some of the most highly-regarded players of their time. I will vote for Graham Lear, who I saw with Santana. Incredibly good player. Also - Clive Bunker, who played like a cross between Keith Moon and John Bonham, IMO. Check out Tull's You Tube video on My Sunday Feeling for a good example of his playing. BTW, Ian Anderson's outfit in that video is absolutely the most outrageous/ridiculous thing I've ever seen. And I've seen quite a bit. Tights, knee-high boots and a bathrobe thrown over the whole thing. Yet, it made sense back in '69 or so.
I'm not sure anybody who knows rock and roll would consider Keith Moon an under appreciated drummer.

Crazy as a loon but a great drummer.
Can't think of three but tend to agree with Ryriken. I don't think Ringo gets the respect he deserves as drummer in the Beatles. Maybe because he wasn't so much a straight ahead rock drummer but (to my mind) more a percussionist/accompanist. (And "yes", I'm aware that on some tracks, McCartney played drums).
Ringo Starr.........really give him a chance, he fit in perfect with the Beatles........
Ian Hollingsworth of the Throwdowns: reminds me of Larry of U2.

Loved Rob Hirst of Midnight Oil. Very under-rated Aussie band that pre-dated grunge and post punk.

Branden Canty of Fugazi. 13 Songs was epic.
Hey Priz - where are you from ????? I am in Syracuse, NY and Frank Briggs was scarey !!!!! I can't tell you the amount of times that I saw 805 but it was allot......wasn't really into their music as I was other bands from that time and area like Duke Jupitar - but Frank was amamzing ....don't know how else to say it. I also just saw Michael Shrieve's name mentioned. He was what ...a whole 18 yars old at Woodstock and that stuff he layed down was also amazing !!!!!
Jean Yves Tola from 16 Horsepower. Not for technique, per se. But, IMHO, few drummers define the sound of their band the way Tola does. This is a particularly difficult trick in this circumstance, since the band's lead singer, David Eugene Edwards, is such a powerful and distinctive presence.

Winston Grennan from Kid Creole. A (THE, if you believe Wikipedia) definitive one-drop player.

Wilfredo Reyes Jr and Taku Hirano. Lindsey Buckingham's drummers. Very different styles, but both are great players IMHO.

Marty
1. The drummer from Jethro Tull.
IF you've ever seen the
MTV Closet Classic Capsales, and you
got the chance to see the video for
Aqualung LIVE, Or better yet, Listen to the
song Hunting Girl from J.T. TONS of Fusion Jazz,
and multi-time changes.
2. Nicko McBrain and Clive Burr from Iron Maiden.
3. Steve Zimmerman and Mark Zonder from
Fates Warning.
The BEST rated would be:
1. Neil Peart
2. Simon Phillips
3. Mike Portnoy
4. Stewart Copeland
5. Steve Smith
6. Ansley Dunsbar
7. Tommy Aldridge
The drummers from Overkill, Black 'N' Blue, Grim Reaper.
Can't go wrong there with any of these.
Govt Mules, Matt Abts but that may be on fringe of this topic.
Kansas drummer, Phil Ehart gets a vote from me.
The ultimate pop drummer? IMO Stewart Copeland.
Cozy Powell. Modern Drummer said it best by stating that Cozy never reached Bonham like status because he was never associated with one band like Bonham or Paice.

Tommy Aldridge is another drummer associated with multiple bands and a great talent who is probably not given enough credit.

I am not sure Alex Van Halen received the credit he deserved—may be overshadowed by Eddie and contemporaries like Peart.

On a smaller level there was Frank Briggs from an 80’s upstate New York band called 805. I was lucky enough to see them many times and Frank was mesmerizing. He has gone on to record with his own band and perform at clinics. Check out http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6k67ptMisUM&feature=related and watch his solo from 1986 (amateur quality). The first 4 minutes or so he plays melodically on Simmons drums which were popular at that time. If you do nothing more, check out from about the 6:30 mark and watch his snare drum work and amazing patterns between the snare, bass drum and china cymbals.
Dino Danelli (Young Rascals)
B.J. Wilson (Procol Harum)
George Grantham (Poco)
Ringo

Great job, Oregon (Clive Bunker is killer) and Cmalak (Ian Paice is wonderful).
Ron Wilson from the "Surfari's", whose simple drum exercise became a number two hit in the USA......"Wipeout" was recorded as a "B" side and a throwaway tune and caught on and captured the imagination of everyone who held drumsticks in the 1960's.He died in 1989.Other two? Sandy Nelson would have to be one.Remember there were hits in the 60's centered around the drums before everybody started smoking pot and nobody wanted to hear all that banging.Innocence lost i presume.
Not sure if he is underappreciated but I always thought Ian Paice (Deep Purple) was just amazing.
...check out Graham Lear when he was with Santana - good choice ...also, Ansley Dunbar as I saw him years ago with Nils Lofgren...another good choice......
Gotta add Matt Cameron of Soundgarden and Pearl Jam. Not only a great drummer, but also songwriter.
Steve Ferrone . I'm not sure if he's under-appreciated, but I only found out about him recently watching Tome Petty and the Heartbrakers. The guy is amazing.
Clive Bunker- Jethro Tull
Jim Gordon- excellent drummer played with most rockers. Especially fine with Derek and the Dominoes. (Sad, tragic needing).
Drummer for the Rascals.
Graham Lear and Mark Craney both played with Gino Vannelli (different albums). Both went on to play with a litany of great rock and jazz artists. Both wonderful fusion drummers. Check out Lear's work on "Storm at Sunup" and Craney on "Brother to Brother". I believe if Gino did not have the Italian sex symbol persona (and hairy chest), his music would be more appreciated. Great voice, songwriting/arrangements performed with incredible musicians.

Aynsley Dunbar was the drummer on some of my favorite Frank Zappa albums, went on to play with an impressive list of rock greats. Always thought his contribution to FZs music was fantastic.