Thirteen Reasons to Give Ringo Some Respect
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DRUM & DRUMMER Comments:
This is an excellent list of thirteen reasons given by John Bryant (a session drummer who has played with artists such as Ray Charles) why Ringo Starr was much more than “an average drummer,” as he is often labelled by music critics.
Always serving the song without showing off, Ringo was an integral and indipensible part of The Beatles. Ringo’s intuitive feel and creative big beat style continues to be hugely influential to contemporary musicians of diverse musical genres, whether they realize it or not. His feel was so consistent and solid that even the drum parts he played for songs in odd time signatures seem simpler than they truly are. Many technically great drummers could never hope to reproduce Ringo’s distinctive style.
Ringo Starr is one of the most consistent, song-oriented drummers of all time. He is the perfect example of a drummer playing economically (without ever overplaying) to make each song as powerful as possible. He has a relaxed, dynamic, and solid feel that even more technically advanced drummers should strive for. His drumming was consistently in-the-pocket, emotive, creative, and musical.
Beyond that, he was always the egoless grounding force of The Beatles, even during the band’s most tumultuous times. John Lennon referred to Ringo as the heart of The Beatles. I honestly do not believe The Beatles would have developed into as musically innovative a band if they had played with any other drummer.
THIRTEEN REASONS TO GIVE RINGO SOME RESPECT
by John Bryant (drummer for Ray Charles, producer, session drummer)

Source URL: http://web2.airmail.net/gshultz
Ringo Starr, the luckiest no-talent on earth. All he had to do was smile and bob his head. Oh yes, and keep a beat for three of the most talented musicians/songwriters of this century. What other impression could one have when judging the role that Ringo played in the success of the Beatles?
Did Ringo really make a difference? Upon listening to the latest release by The Beatles, Anthology 1, you get a chance to listen to Pete Best and two other drummers play on over twenty songs. Was Ringo simply in the right place at the right time? The following items may help in going beyond the image:
(1) Ringo was the first true rock drummer to be seen on TV. All the Rock & Roll drummers featured with Elvis, Bill Haley, Little Richard, Fats Domino and Jerry Lee Lewis were mostly R&B drummers that were making the transition from a swing drumming style of the 40’s and 50’s toward the louder and more “rocking” sound that is associated with “I Want To Hold Your Hand”. They were dressed in tuxedos and suits and held the drumsticks in the “traditional” manner of military, orchestra, and jazz drummers. Ringo showed the world that power was needed to put the emphasis on the “rock” in Rock & Roll music, so he gripped both sticks like hammers and proceeded to build a foundation for rock music.
(2) Ringo changed the way drummers hold their sticks by making popular the “matched” grip of holding drumsticks. Nearly all drummers in the Western World prior to Ringo held their sticks in what is termed the “traditional” grip, with the left hand stick held like a chopstick. This grip was originally developed by military drummers to accomodate the angle of the drum when strapped over the shoulder. Ringo’s grip changes the odd left hand to match the right hand, so that both sticks are held like a flyswatter. Rock drummers along with marching band and orchestral percussionists now mostly play with a “matched” grip, and drum companies have developed straps and accessories to accomodate them.

(3) Ringo started a trend of placing drummers on high risers so that they would be as visible as the other musicians. When Ringo appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1964, he immediately caught the attention of thousands of “drummers to be” by towering over the other three Beatles. Elvis’s drummer was looking at a collection of backs.
(4) These same “wannabe” drummers also noticed that Ringo was playing Ludwig drums and they immediately went out and bought thousands of these drumsets, thus establishing Ludwig as the definitive name in Rock & Roll drums at that time.
(5) Ringo changed the sound of recorded drums. About the time of Rubber Soul (released Dec. 6,1965), the sound of the drumset started to become more distinct. Along with help from the engineers at Abbey Road studios, Ringo popularized a new sound for the drums by tuning them lower, deadening the tonal ring with muffling materials, and making them sound “closer” by putting a microphone on each drum.
(6) Ringo has nearly perfect tempo. This allowed the Beatles to record a song 50 or 60 times, and then be able to edit together different parts of numerous takes of the same song for the best possible version. Today an electronic metronome is used for the same purpose, but the Beatles had to depend on Ringo to keep the tempo consistant throughout the dozens of takes of the songs that you know and love so well. Had he not had this ability, the Beatles recordings would sound completely different today.
(7) Ringo’s “feel” for the beat serves as a standard for pop-rock record producers and drummers alike. It is relaxed, but never dragging. Solid, yet always breathing. And yes, there is a great amount of musical taste in his decisions of what to play and when to play it. In most recording sessions, the drummer’s performance acts as a barometer for the rest of the musicians. The stylistic direction, dynamics, and emotions are filtered through the drummer. He is the catcher to whom the pitcher/songwriter is throwing. If the drumming doesn’t feel good, the performance of any additional musicians is doomed from the start. The Beatles rarely if ever had this problem with Ringo.
(8 ) Ringo hated drum solos, which should win points with quite a few people. He only took one solo while with the Beatles. His eight measure solo appears during “The End” on the “B” side of Abbey Road. Some might say that it is not a great display of technical virtuosity, but they would be at least partially mistaken. You can set an electronic metronome to a perfect 126 beats per minute, then play it along with Ringo’s solo and the two will stay exactly together.
(9) Ringo’s ability to play odd time signatures helped to push popular songwriting into uncharted areas. Two examples are “All you Need is Love” in 7/4 time, and “Here Comes the Sun” with repeating 11/8, 4/4, and 7/8 passages in the chorus.
(10) Ringo’s proficiency in many differen styles such as two beat swing (”When I’m Sixty-Four”), ballads (”Something”), R&B (”Leave My Kitten Alone” and “Taxman”) and country (the Rubber Soul album) helped the Beatles to explore many musical directions with ease. His pre-Beatle experience as a versatile and hard working nightclub musician served him well.
(11) The idea that Ringo was a lucky Johnny-on-the-spot-with-a-showbiz-stage-name is wrong. In fact, when Beatle producer George Martin expressed his unhappiness after the first session with original drummer Pete Best, the decision was made by Paul, George, and John to hire who they considered to be the best drummer in Liverpool – Ringo Starr. His personality was a bonus.
(12) The rumors that Ringo did not play on many of the Beatle songs because he was not good enough are also false. In fact, he played on every released Beatles recording (not including Anthology 1) that include drums except for the following: “Back In The USSR” and “Dear Prudence”, on which Paul played drums due to Ringo temporarily quitting the band, “The Ballad of John and Yoko”, again featuring Paul on drums because Ringo was off making a movie, and a 1962 release of “Love Me Do” featuring session drummer Andy White.
(13) When the Beatles broke up and they were all trying to get away from each other, John Lennon chose Ringo to play drums on his first solo record. As John once said, “If I get a thing going Ringo knows where to go, just like that…” A great songwriter could ask no more of a drummer. Except maybe to smile and bob his head.
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John Bryant is a 43-year-old session drummer and producer in Dallas, Texas. He has recorded and toured with Ray Charles, the Paul Winter Consort, and currently is a member of the percussion ensemble, D’Drum. In 1976, Mr. Bryant played a rehearsal with Paul McCartney and Wings when regular drummer Joe English became ill and could not make it. Mr. Bryant started playing drums after seeing Ringo Starr on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1964.
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JOHN BRYANT NOTES: This story was written in reply to a previous story for The Dallas Morning News which described Ringo as an average drummer who got lucky. It is written within the context of modern Pop music, not to compare Ringo with jazz drummers of the 30’s, 40’s, and 50’s. Certainly Ringo was not the first drummer on a riser, but his visibilty did proclaim him to be an equal member of the band. This is significant because the earlier drummers were sidemen. Ringo was not the “first” drummer to play matched grip or to muffle his drums, but his exposure as a Beatle made him the leader to the masses.
url source: http://web2.airmail.net/gshultz/
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- Quotes from Ringo’s bandmates in The Beatles:
“Ringo is Ringo, that’s all there is to it. And he’s every bloody bit as warm, unassuming, funny, and kind as he seems. He was quite simply the heart of the Beatles.” – John Lennon
“Ringo’s just a lad. Everybody always loved him. And now that he’s all dried out, he’s just a lovable, interesting, intelligent bloke.” – Paul McCartney
“I didn’t like the look of Rory’s drummer myself. He looked the nasty one, with his little grey streak of hair. But the nastier one turned out to be Ringo, the nicest of them all. Playing without Ringo is like driving a car on three wheels.” - George Harrison


March 27, 2008 at 4:37 pm
I really enjoy the WALRUSGUMBOOT Newsletter and I would enjoy it so much more if there were more articles about Ringo and his invaluable role in making the Beatles the greatest band of all time, and less, or no, articles about Heather Mills who has done so much to try and tarnish the greatness of one of the Greatest.
April 1, 2008 at 2:36 pm
[...] D & D: Ringo Starr’s understated, economical drumming technique continues to set the standard for drummers seeking to play for the song. He was a left-handed drummer that played like a right-handed drummer, which helped make his fill intros even more unique. Never a fan of extended flashy drum fills, Ringo instead concentrated on supporting the other musicians in The Beatles with his intuitively brilliant and consistent drumming. To discover why Ringo’s work with the Beatles is often unjustly underrated, click here for the article 13 Reasons to Give Ringo Some Respect. [...]
April 5, 2008 at 1:23 am
Reason #6: Most Beatles songs were not recorded in 50 or 60 takes.
Read Mark Lewisohn’s book “The Beatles Recording Sessions”…
April 8, 2008 at 8:45 pm
in 1964 i was in my 5th year as a drummer in the school band….after seeing and listening to Ringo, my parents bought my Ludwig drum set (which i still own and play today in 2008)….ringo set the standard for rock drummers…….no need to be fancy, just keep the beat , stay solid, and feel the music….thank you Ringo …..
Sammy Pepper, drummer since 8 years old in 1959.
May 19, 2008 at 4:24 am
Yes I agree Ringo is a great drummer and comes accross as a down to earth decent bloke, I saw him in liverpool this year! I’ve enjoyed reading your blog! Cheers, Andy
May 26, 2008 at 3:30 pm
This is a great article. Another reason is that the Beatles themselves picked him over any other drummer in Liverpool. When they kicked out Pete Best “because he wasn’t good enough” (according to John), they had their pick of drummers and went with the drummer from one of the best bands in Liverpool at the time – Rory Storm and the Hurricanes.
June 16, 2008 at 5:19 pm
I became a drummer after seeing The Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1964 as an 8 year old! Although I also admired other drummers, Ringo was my first and foremost influence!~
June 18, 2008 at 3:13 pm
As said in the begining, this is an excellent list of reasons! Really enjoyed reading it and it will probably help me in future discussion with Ringo-critics! Thank you for sharing!
June 23, 2008 at 7:18 am
I culdn’t disagree with you more. True, George Martin was not happy with Pete Best’s drumming but he also wasn’t happy with Ringo’s drumming either. That is why he had a professional drummer named Andy White play on the original Love Me Do and P.S. I Love You recordings. Ringo was not a better drummer then Pete Best either. John Lennon once said, and I quote,”Pete Best was a better drummer but Ringo was a better Beatle”. This was due to Pete’s quiet manner and Ringo’s more Beatle like personality. Ringo was the ” luckiest ” man that ever lived.
July 12, 2008 at 2:27 am
If The Beatles had ANY other drummer other than Ringo, they would not have had the room for experimentaion on their many classic tracks that Ringo has defined. I couldn’t imagine Charlie Watt’s incessant pounding on “Strawberry Fields Forever” or “A Day in the Life”, or someone like John Bonham on “Here, There and Everywhere”.
Also, Pete Best truly S-U-C-K-E-D as any drummer knows…This was being told to them for almost a year by Tony Sheridan, and then reinforced by Martin himself. The only reason why they used Andy White on Love Me Do/P.S. I Love You is that no one told him that Ringo would be coming that day, as he had already booked Andy White already knowing how bad Best was at playing drums….
October 9, 2008 at 9:55 am
dude, hes the bomb diggty yo.. i’m better tho! ha!
October 15, 2008 at 12:02 pm
I have played drums since I was 15, I am now 57yrs old. I loved the Beatles music but I must say that there are a lot of untruths on this site.
Ringo did not set the trend as to how sticks were held. Ringo did not influence me as there were far better drummers on the scene in the 60’s. As far as his contrubution to the Beatles style of music, watching him play I haven’t seen anything that any average drummer couldn’t do. The next time you watch a Beatles video, take notice of how Ringo plays his Hi Hat- For those not technically minded his side to side action is amateurish. Not sure if it was Andy White but I read an interesting article by a drummer in the states. He claimed that he was asked to lay down some drum tracks during the night-he was given the music by who he later found out was George Martin- not told who the artist was/were. After the recording he stated that he was paid his session fee plus a very large ‘bonus’ which was in the form of ‘hush money’. He claimed that he soon realized that he had played the drum tracks on the following Beatles album and this was all done under cloak and dagger as Mr Martin was not happy with Ringo’s drumming……….SAY NO MORE !
May 12, 2009 at 8:02 pm
people that think ringo couldn’t play and they used session musicians, are simply ignorants and idiots.
the previous comment is bullshit, ringo plays both on the records and live,
(exept for the andy white love me do and the white album tracks where paul plays).
that kind of rumours are just that, rumours, invented perhaps by people with envy or that don’t like the beatles and try to throw some shit at them.
they are the band that’s as real as it gets, they composed the songs, they performed the instruments both on the records and live, and they sung both on the records and live, there’s nothing fake or sessions musicians or whatever about them, and when they used session musicians like billy preston for keyboards, andy white for drums, or whatever, they said it, they didn’t hide that kind of things, and, since they kicked out pete best for sucking, (I dare to say, he literally doesn’t know how to play drums. he’s not a dummer, period), I bet they wouldn’t have had any problem kicking out ringo if he sucked.
the fact is he doesn’t, he’s a great drummer, and as I said before, people that think he isn’t good, are just ignorants.