My #1 influence as drummer. I saw he and Lady Watts in Dublin one Sunday afternoon looking in the window of a shop on Nassau street called ' Knobs and Knockers', they literally sold only door nobs and knockers of the highest quality and as I passed by I thought to myself what a perfect setting to see my role model, with his wife admiring the beauty and utility of what most take for granted. I didn't think for a moment to stop and press the flesh but pedaled on privileged to have shared the moment. By the way he wore a beautiful camel hair Crombie. Thank you and God bless you Charlie.
The first record I ever bought with my own money was Start Me Up! I was five years old and bought it at Walmart! My dad had the old Stones records in his collection but this was their newest record back then and I always loved the sound of it.
Another Charlie signature was that most of his fills were based around the same two-measure pattern: Bum ba dum ba dum. Speaking “16th note” language (one e and uh), that would be “One uh two and uh.” He’d sometimes add the “and” in that first measure, but this was the core. Listen to a bunch of Stones albums and you can’t help but hear it.
Was influenced by him as a drummer. He wasn’t flashy or known for his drum fills but was solid, never missed a beat and gave the Stones a distinctive style and trademark sound. Thanks for decades of those legendary beats. 🥁🤘🏻
I appreciate the videos, but what really makes Watt's playing was that he was always BEHIND the beat; your rendition of his studio beat in the beginning doesn't sound right at all because you're ahead of the beat. You've got to think of it like a flam - if you want to play *behind* the beat-like both Watts and Ringo always did-you need to land all your hits as if they were the second half of a flam. You're still playing the same tempo but it FEELS slower and more laid back because all your hits are *technically* a little bit late. This is absolutely crucial if you're wanting to sound like Watts, because like you said, he's all about FEEL and not technical chops.
Man, you're a good, good drummer. I like the way you play, nice and sparse. Not one unnecessary note played..... Perfect.... Is Charlie Watts the best drummer ever or what? Thank you for the great video!
RIP Charlie. He was one of the greats. Just a small question about the Sympathy for the Devil. Is the difference between album and live not because Jimmy Miller played on the album instead of Charlie?
It is Charlie who play in the whole beggars banquet record. In the Movie ‘Sympathy for the devil’ by Jean Luc Godard (1968) is well documented all the process of the recording of this magnificent song. Jimmy Miller only play drums in ‘You can’t always get what you want’ from 1969’s Let it Bleed album.
I think Jimmy Miller is their producer who possibly helped arrange the music? Jagger credits Charlie for the track’s samba beat, which is his contribution on his own. There’s a Rolling Stone article about the track during an interview with Jagger.
Sounds like a bunch of mayo and unseasoned food......i cant believe yall are actually hyped off this rudimentary, simple lifeless basic ahhs beat sheesh
@@Coolbreeze_atl I agreed that his style can be taken as "basic", but for the importance of his group you need to evaluate him as a component of his band....from a musicology perspective, I recognize that after him a lot of R&R drummers do basically what he does to fill drum in commercial pop and rock styles, up to the tiredness...a good or bad thing? a good heritage for actual music? meeeh...but that works for his band, and due the relative importance of his group for the music of our days, really, THAT is a thing to note.
@@Coolbreeze_atl It's not the simplicity of the pattern but the character of the groove that counts & was unique to Watts. He led & propelled his beats with the kick but played the snare a fraction late creating groove. The best technical drummers can play anything but they can't truly recreate another man's groove & Watt's groove was million selling.
Dude you do such a great job at playing tribute to Charlie. Would love to see you play to a few more of Charlie’s song. Emotional Rescue is a great look at Charlie’s drum playing.
@@ThomannsDrumBash Same here. There are so many but a few that come to mind are Art Blakey, Philly Joe Jones, and Ulysses Owens, Jr in addition to many instructional videos. Great stuff!
Thanks for this detailed take on Charlie's drumming. I think part of why the drum part on Sympathy for the Devil is so different on the album than live is that Rocky Dzidzornu played congas on the record, so it's kind of a drum duet. So Charlie probably adjusted accordingly, but live he had to do the whole sound himself. You can see them play it together in the Rock and Roll Circus gig: ua-cam.com/video/Jwtyn-L-2gQ/v-deo.html
True dat. On the recordings though I hear him play the hi-hat and snare at the same time. He must have started that later on. Plus, I mentioned it later in the video! //Simon
Hope he is doing okay there will always be those fools sayin no stones without charlie which to a degree i agree with but theres still 3 guys out there who have been with band 40 plus years how quick people forget how long some of these bands been out there performing for us
Yep. About the no hi-hat on the backbeat. He didn’t do it on the recordings, I listend very closely. I guess he started doing that later on. But I did mention that in the video too 😅 //Simon
He only started doing the hi hat thing on later recordings. In his own words he didnt start doing it until after seeing Jim Keltner do it at concert for bangladesh in 71
Hi Erique. Because i wanted to be as close as possible to the record. As far as i can tell he did play the hi-hat and snare at the same time while recording. //Simon
You are playing it wrong😭😭😭 from 1977 onwards, Charlie always left off the hi-hat when he hit the snare! That's how he created his unmistakable drum beat... Why did you play it the way you did if you knew it was wrong??
Thanks for this video but you can't just briefly mention Charlie omitting the hi hat on every backbeat; you need to play it that way. Also, you are playing far ahead of the beat and creating an anxious, hurried feel. Perhaps you'd be better suited to show how Carl Palmer plays.
Another Great is gone ! just a few Weeks before Mr.Dusty Hill ,its sad ! & its a crime that fuckin old Politicans & other Banksters are still alive !! 🙁😬😠
Technically, yes I agree, he was far from being a beast !.. But the other fact is : no one else in the world, could have been a better drummer for the Stones than him. He was as "simple" as good, and he had the perfect touch. He has largely contributed to the power of the Stones, he was a part of their unique sound, so recognisable.. If you listen carefully to stones tracks, you will find Charlie's playing was full of micro details, nuances, each hit on the snare always had the perfect intensity and occured at the perfect moment (you can feel sometimes micro variations of his tempo, it was only nuances, it was his playing and it gave strengh to the Stones songs). For exemple, listen to a song as "Hey Negrita", you will understand what I mean ; Charlie was not showy at all, his creativity hidded in nuances.. I mean Charlie had a very subtil, sensitive playing. It was not about technicity at all.. It was all about feeling, and he had the Perfect feel. I will miss him. RIP Charlie
My #1 influence as drummer. I saw he and Lady Watts in Dublin one Sunday afternoon looking in the window of a shop on Nassau street called ' Knobs and Knockers', they literally sold only door nobs and knockers of the highest quality and as I passed by I thought to myself what a perfect setting to see my role model, with his wife admiring the beauty and utility of what most take for granted. I didn't think for a moment to stop and press the flesh but pedaled on privileged to have shared the moment. By the way he wore a beautiful camel hair Crombie. Thank you and God bless you Charlie.
Another one bites the dust. Sorry Charlie. You’ll be missed.🥁
Rest in peace Charlie Watts and thank you very much for all your amazing drumming.
From Sao Paulo BR
Charlie Watts was a true genius because with him "less" was always more. He played with his body and soul, that's why he's inimitable.
Fancy way of saying he played very very basic drums. The Sympathy for the devil one is pretty cool though to be fair.
Totally agree with you
Джинджер Бейкер и Бонем просто громко стучали,болваны.
RIP Charlie 😥 Du warst der beste Drummer und wirst es immer bleiben. Du lebst in der Musik weiter. Danke für alles! Gute Reise!
The first record I ever bought with my own money was Start Me Up! I was five years old and bought it at Walmart! My dad had the old Stones records in his collection but this was their newest record back then and I always loved the sound of it.
Another Charlie signature was that most of his fills were based around the same two-measure pattern: Bum ba dum ba dum. Speaking “16th note” language (one e and uh), that would be “One uh two and uh.” He’d sometimes add the “and” in that first measure, but this was the core. Listen to a bunch of Stones albums and you can’t help but hear it.
No wonder Mick was so good. Thank you for this insight into this understated drum genius
3:53 for those saying he never hits the snare and hi hat at the same time. Yes he mentioned it.
Was influenced by him as a drummer. He wasn’t flashy or known for his drum fills but was solid, never missed a beat and gave the Stones a distinctive style and trademark sound. Thanks for decades of those legendary beats. 🥁🤘🏻
I appreciate the videos, but what really makes Watt's playing was that he was always BEHIND the beat; your rendition of his studio beat in the beginning doesn't sound right at all because you're ahead of the beat.
You've got to think of it like a flam - if you want to play *behind* the beat-like both Watts and Ringo always did-you need to land all your hits as if they were the second half of a flam.
You're still playing the same tempo but it FEELS slower and more laid back because all your hits are *technically* a little bit late. This is absolutely crucial if you're wanting to sound like Watts, because like you said, he's all about FEEL and not technical chops.
Love the sound of your snare
If you see Charlie live you'll notice he doesn't hit the hi hat when he hits the snare🥁
I know. I mention that in the middle of this video thanks //Simon
I loved Charlie. Miss him dearly.
RIP Charlie Watts, the world of music will never be the same without you ever again
Man, you're a good, good drummer. I like the way you play, nice and sparse. Not one unnecessary note played..... Perfect.... Is Charlie Watts the best drummer ever or what? Thank you for the great video!
RIP Charlie. He was one of the greats. Just a small question about the Sympathy for the Devil. Is the difference between album and live not because Jimmy Miller played on the album instead of Charlie?
It is Charlie who play in the whole beggars banquet record. In the Movie ‘Sympathy for the devil’ by Jean Luc Godard (1968) is well documented all the process of the recording of this magnificent song. Jimmy Miller only play drums in ‘You can’t always get what you want’ from 1969’s Let it Bleed album.
I think Jimmy Miller is their producer who possibly helped arrange the music? Jagger credits Charlie for the track’s samba beat, which is his contribution on his own. There’s a Rolling Stone article about the track during an interview with Jagger.
Sounds like a bunch of mayo and unseasoned food......i cant believe yall are actually hyped off this rudimentary, simple lifeless basic ahhs beat sheesh
@@Coolbreeze_atl I agreed that his style can be taken as "basic", but for the importance of his group you need to evaluate him as a component of his band....from a musicology perspective, I recognize that after him a lot of R&R drummers do basically what he does to fill drum in commercial pop and rock styles, up to the tiredness...a good or bad thing? a good heritage for actual music? meeeh...but that works for his band, and due the relative importance of his group for the music of our days, really, THAT is a thing to note.
@@Coolbreeze_atl It's not the simplicity of the pattern but the character of the groove that counts & was unique to Watts. He led & propelled his beats with the kick but played the snare a fraction late creating groove. The best technical drummers can play anything but they can't truly recreate another man's groove & Watt's groove was million selling.
Great one....like always.
Charlie and Bill probably the best rhythm section in rock music
Led zep
Led Zeppelin or The Who
Great job on the Sympathy groove!
Thanks man! //Simon
Great 👏👏👏
Happy birthday Charlie 🤘🏽 🎂 classic cars and honky tonk bars
Your Snare sound is perfect :)
RIP Charlie...special greetings from Bremen / Germany
I recon you could fill in for Charlie on the rest of the tour, you have a nice groove, it would work! Give em a ring!!
RIP Charlie of course x
Dude you do such a great job at playing tribute to Charlie. Would love to see you play to a few more of Charlie’s song. Emotional Rescue is a great look at Charlie’s drum playing.
thank you for breaking it down so clearly!
No better example of Charlie’s prowess than what he plays on Monkey Man. It’s a master class on expert drumming.
Start Me Up should be played skipping the backbeat hihat too... thats the way it was recorded and the way Charlie played live too.
Nice to see these grooves explored a bit. Those Brookylns are sounding great.
Thanks Jonathan. They sound fantastic. Thanks for stopping by. What do you like to play at the moment? //Simon
@@ThomannsDrumBash I've been really immersing myself in jazz for the last few months. Very fun.
That’s great. I also love to play jazz. But actually didn’t play it for a long time 😅who are you currently listening to the most?
@@ThomannsDrumBash Same here. There are so many but a few that come to mind are Art Blakey, Philly Joe Jones, and Ulysses Owens, Jr in addition to many instructional videos. Great stuff!
He's doing a shuffle, almost a triplet, on a promo for She's so Cold. Amazing.
Another one of my favorites is Get Off of My Cloud
I like the overhead camera angle the best.
watching this just after finding out his death RIP
Another great percussionist at the lords throne. Bonzo on the left, Charlie on the right, the ultimate double bass set up.
you make it look so easy
RIP, Charlie!!!
Thanks for this detailed take on Charlie's drumming. I think part of why the drum part on Sympathy for the Devil is so different on the album than live is that Rocky Dzidzornu played congas on the record, so it's kind of a drum duet. So Charlie probably adjusted accordingly, but live he had to do the whole sound himself. You can see them play it together in the Rock and Roll Circus gig: ua-cam.com/video/Jwtyn-L-2gQ/v-deo.html
He was perfect for the band
I like that last groove....i must say
Rest In Peace Charlie. :(
RIP Charlie 📿🙏🏻📿
Thank you for explaining on today’s sad day
RIP Legend
Rip Charlie I Miss you :'(
Happy b day
Charlie the Best!
He never hits the high hat with a snare
Vim pra dizer isso
True dat. On the recordings though I hear him play the hi-hat and snare at the same time. He must have started that later on. Plus, I mentioned it later in the video! //Simon
Maybe he recorded the hi hat separate on recordings...
Yeah...maybe.
@@junglediscgolf probably not
RIP Charlie. Time is passing by too quickly.
Live version all the way, always on whatever.
Miss u Charlie💔
Hope he is doing okay there will always be those fools sayin no stones without charlie which to a degree i agree with but theres still 3 guys out there who have been with band 40 plus years how quick people forget how long some of these bands been out there performing for us
RIP Charlie 😢
Awww who knew that this would be so poignant. R.I.P. Charlie
GODSPEED CHARLIE
RIP Charlie Watts
Start me up live no question about it.
Did Charlie really play the original Sympathy part like that?
now i can tell why charlie was great
I really thought i was gonna see Charlie Watts teaching his drumming himself.
R.I.P. Charlie 💔😭
RIPCharlieWatts
Not bad... couple things!
-Ufip China
-Traditional Grip
-Never hit the hi-hat and snare at the same time
Yep. About the no hi-hat on the backbeat. He didn’t do it on the recordings, I listend very closely. I guess he started doing that later on. But I did mention that in the video too 😅 //Simon
@@Carlosant Hi, yes they are!
He only started doing the hi hat thing on later recordings. In his own words he didnt start doing it until after seeing Jim Keltner do it at concert for bangladesh in 71
RIP Charlie!
RIP.
Scusa ma sei italiano?
RIP
RIP Charlie
If you knew he didn’t play the snare and the high hat at the same time how come you did when imitating his style ?
Hi Erique. Because i wanted to be as close as possible to the record. As far as i can tell he did play the hi-hat and snare at the same time while recording. //Simon
Playing it wrong. Charlie had a grove like no other.. he missed a beat on the hi hat when he hit the snare.
Salut Charlie ! Tu vas manquer ;
Accurate
rip charlie :(
on the record....
Rip Charlie
Live.
for start me up he changes the kick pattern live to try and keep keith in time, its too easy for that one to become a mess
Ahhh only difference is, Charlie played with the 'traditional grip.'
you gotta lift off on 2 & 4
You are playing it wrong😭😭😭 from 1977 onwards, Charlie always left off the hi-hat when he hit the snare! That's how he created his unmistakable drum beat... Why did you play it the way you did if you knew it was wrong??
Thanks for this video but you can't just briefly mention Charlie omitting the hi hat on every backbeat; you need to play it that way. Also, you are playing far ahead of the beat and creating an anxious, hurried feel. Perhaps you'd be better suited to show how Carl Palmer plays.
But you hit the snare AND the hi-hat together, while Charlie did not!
Honky tonk woman best groove ever
James Brown disliked the backbeat. He was right.
You’re hitting the high hat with the snare.. he never did that, hence the watts sound
Watts skipped the hi hat on the back beat.
Playing on the beat makes the song sound rushed. I think he played a little more behind the beat.
Charlie never played snare and hi hat at the same time...
This is how all beginner drummers play...ha...ha
What about a real JAZZ DRUM SOLO by Charlie Watts???
Goodbye Charlie.
[*]
Another Great is gone ! just a few Weeks before Mr.Dusty Hill ,its sad ! & its a crime that fuckin old Politicans & other Banksters are still alive !! 🙁😬😠
All his time was in his left hand. Never understood his right hand technique
R.I.P.
But let’s stay realistic. He was far away being a good drummer.
Technically, yes I agree, he was far from being a beast !..
But the other fact is : no one else in the world, could have been a better drummer for the Stones than him.
He was as "simple" as good, and he had the perfect touch.
He has largely contributed to the power of the Stones, he was a part of their unique sound, so recognisable..
If you listen carefully to stones tracks, you will find Charlie's playing was full of micro details, nuances, each hit on the snare always had the perfect intensity and occured at the perfect moment (you can feel sometimes micro variations of his tempo, it was only nuances, it was his playing and it gave strengh to the Stones songs).
For exemple, listen to a song as "Hey Negrita", you will understand what I mean ; Charlie was not showy at all, his creativity hidded in nuances..
I mean Charlie had a very subtil, sensitive playing.
It was not about technicity at all..
It was all about feeling, and he had the Perfect feel.
I will miss him. RIP Charlie
Why don '' you use the ramrod like him?
very much teorical videos, but all liers
your hi hat work has a lot to be desired when attempting the Watts sound...................
too bad, lol
Charlie Watts almost never and I mean NEVER plays a straight 8 on the hat!!!!!!
blasphemous!
Класний барабанщик, дякую за Чарлі
JUST PUT MUSIC ON IT