Category Archives: Music Accessory
Rolling Stone Readers Pick the Top Ten Live Acts of All Time
Who do you consider the best live acts ever?
Check out the list collected last year by Rolling Stone Magazine below.
Springsteen is Number One, with the Rolling Stones and The Who following closely behind
1. Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band
Last weekend we asked our readers to vote for their favorite live acts of all time. The results have been tabulated and here they are. As always we merely counted the votes – so you have only yourselves to blame if you don’t like the results.
The winner, without a close second anywhere in sight, was Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band. When Springsteen began performing with the E Street Band in 1972 it was a four man-group, with Clarence Clemons on the saxophone, Danny Federici on the organ, Vini “Mad Dog” Lopez on drums and Garry Tallent on bass. When the group last toured in 2009 there were 11 people onstage with Springsteen, and although the sound has grown more elaborate the band hasn’t lost any of the passion or the power they originally had. They’ve been off the road for about a year and a half, but the rumor mill says that a 2012 tour may be in the works.
Top Quotes To Inspire Drummers
20 Quotes To Motivate Drummers
You only get better by playing. – Buddy Rich
I used to practice eight hours a day, every day! From about 1956 until about 1962. It was a whole thing, a whole period in my life where nothing else was happening. –Tony Williams
I used to practice anywhere from four to eight hours a day when I first started, from the age of thirteen to when I was about twenty-four. – Elvin Jones
Become the best musician that you can be because that is your product – your own personal musicianship. – Steve Smith
Get the product happening, diversify and think of it as a business. You want to be well known for what you’re doing so you need to be on top of your game. – Russ Miller
Nowadays you not only have to be the best drummer you can be but also the best programmer you can be, the best producer you can be and the best engineer you can be. You have to know about distribution, negotiations, law, contracts, publishing, royalties, etc. – there are so many components and so many levels. – Thomas Lang
I do not allow myself to take any negative comment in a personal way.- Johnny Rabb
You have to fight beyond it (self-doubt) and don’t let it stand in the way of you being what you want to be. – David Garibaldi
You’re confidence is what keeps people calling you to work. - Jimmy Cobb
Try to be very assertive without stepping on peoples toes - John ‘JR’ Robinson
Every drummer that had a name, had a name because of his individual playing. He didn’t sound like anybody else, So everybody that I ever listened to, in some form, influenced my taste. – Buddy Rich
Playing fast around the drums is one thing. But to play music, to play with people for others to listen to, that’s something else. That’s a whole other world. – Tony Williams
What’s this all about? It’s about music, it’s not about anything else, it’s not about having the coolest cover, or the coolest title, or about anything. It’s just about music. – Lars Ulrich
My audience was my life. What I did and how I did it was all for my audience. – Cab Calloway
Inspiration is not inside of us. Inspiration comes from outside. It comes from our spiritual guides and from different energies that are in the universe. If we keep in touch with god and our spiritual guides, just knowing that they exist and they are there for us, gives us the strength to say well this is a bad phase but it’s going to end and when it ends I’m going to do something good. – Airto
I generally sell my records online or at the show. You can undersell the distributor and the stores, and people know what they’re getting cause they’ve just seen you live. – Roy Ayers
I always told the musicians in my band to play with what they know, and then to play above that. Because anything can happen, and that’s where great art and music happens. – Miles Davis
The only cats worth anything are the cats that take chances, sometimes I play things I’ve never heard myself. – Thelonius Monk
I don’t know where I’m going from here, but I promise it won’t be boring. – David Bowie
Lose your dreams and you might lose your mind. – Mick Jagger
Super Bowl Halftime Show 2012: Despite Horrific Music, Show Was a Success
Rob Carr/Getty Images
The Super Bowl halftime show has been rather dull since Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake in 2004, but leave it to Madonna to bring some of the luster back into the one performance of the year where every football fan is watching.
The music stunk—that’s what happens when it’s painfully obvious that you’re lip-synching. But that’s OK though; it was all about the performance. She first appeared wearing a headdress with horns on her crown that made her look like some sort of Greek goddess. Cleopatra maybe?
Joe Robbins/Getty Images
She wore gold metal cut-outs, crystal-encrusted gloves and a gold headpiece. She tore off her a cape to unleash black minidress at one point and has sporting humongous black leather boots…all while a Richard Simmons-looking fellow was dancing around her.
I know, insert “obligatory 53-year-old woman parading around in scandalous clothing” joke, but it was quite the spectacle to watch. While her dance moves weren’t up to par of years past, she had plenty of help. On top of the scores of dancers on stage that all performed very well, the guest appearances blew away my expectations.
Ezra Shaw/Getty Images
Kudos to the NFL suits for realizing that Madonna needed younger more relevant acts like Nicki Minaj, LMFAO and Cee Lo Green. They all added their own unique touch to the performance and it had something for everybody.
Then MIA really capped everything off with her middle finger to America. It was the most scandalous event since Nipplegate and I found it hilarious. There were only so many ways to find a way around the FCC’s iron grip and somehow she did.
When you think about shows of recent Super Bowls like the Black Eyed Peas and Tom Petty, you realize the odds of a good show aren’t all that great. Considering the stage is on a football field that must be able to get built and torn down in a manner of minutes, some of the activities that a concert venue provides are out of the question.
My expectations for the show were low and I ended up enjoying it more than I figured to. And that’s how you have to look at the show. It’s not going to blow your mind away, but if you have enough wacky costumes, choreographed dancers and surprise guest appearances, you have yourself a good Super Bowl halftime show.
It’s that simple: low expectations equal enjoyable performance.
Stephen Perkins On The KickPort
Stephen Perkins of Janes Addiction,
“Big, clean and punchy low end. Great for articulation on the busy patterns. Just out right- a better kick sound!”
Stephen, who’s Hebrew name is Shlomo, celebrated his Bar Mitzva on Aug. 31st 1980. The next day, he got his first drum set – the date of the show marking the 31st anniversary of Steven playing the drums.
Win Kenny Aronoff’s KickPort!
Welcome Marc Anthony Ricardo “Tiki” Pasillas Drummer To The KickPort family
”It feels beefier with a great smacking quality from behind the kick drum and on the Cajon. I’m sure anybody would feel the difference! The KickPort and CajonPort both kick ass!”

KickPort Makes Your Dum Sound Obese!
IT’S OFFICIAL! Used and endorsed by the leading drummers from every contemporary musical genre and drumming style, the KickPort has quickly become an essential and important part of the modern drumset and over 50,000 are in drums worldwide.
The revolutionary innovation is versatile, affordable, portable and easy to install – instantly improving the sound of any bass drum and allowing optimum tone, tuning, head selection and mic placement in any playing situation.
“I love the KickPort’s great low end!”- Brendan Buckley- Shakira
KickPort 2 Review From Drum Magazine. Kickport 2 Improves On The Original
It’s safe to say that the drumming universe was turned on its collective head when the Kickport bass drum sound enhancer was introduced a few years ago. Since then drummers around the world (including your loyal author) have enjoyed the extra low-end punch this nifty little device delivers to your kick.
And yet, the inescapable question remained – where to go from here? Well, onto the Kickport 2, of course; although the accessory’s latest incarnation isn’t just a cosmetic facelift. The second-generation version features a newly developed Firm-Flex collar for easier installation, a better fit, and an even fatter bass drum sound. This is welcome news, since I personally found installation to be a bit tricky with the original design. But even better – despite all the improvements, the company hasn’t raised the price by a single penny.
So if you’re one of those drummers who waited to see if the Kickport would ripen like a fine wine over time, I’ve got news for you – it has.
- By Andy Doerschuk










