I'm the greatest rock and roll drummer on the planet and you suck.
Joe's been my drummer for 14 years, and we've been buddies for six years.
Being a bass player in a band without a drummer for seven, eight years has been kind of weird.
I was a drummer, and I did a little singing too.
For me, it's always easier playing with a drummer.
I'm a good guy, and I'm a pretty good drummer, by the way.
I think you get to a point where you watch something just to enjoy it. I don't think it's really done so that you're supposed to feel, Oh, he's the most wonderful drummer. I think the whole lot is what's more enjoyable.
I can't get anything out of an orchestra if I have the 10 best guitarists, but I don't have a pianist or a drummer.
I was a drummer and I played the guitar.
Being a drummer definitely influences how I play guitar. And then piano influences drumming and vice versa.
I always saw myself as a sideman. I figured I'd end up a drummer.
That's the nice thing about being in Mr. Big, is I'm not only the guitar player. I'm the background singer, and so I get to do both of those things. Sometimes we even switch instruments and I get to be the drummer.
I played in a punk rock band in high school called the High Heel Flip Flops. I was the drummer. I played drums for, like, four years.
We had an incident back in 2001 where our drummer threw out a drumstick into the crowd and it hit someone in the eye and they were going to sue us. You just always have to be really careful with that kind of stuff.
I'm a rock drummer. I couldn't sit down and pretend to be a jazz drummer.
I don't view myself as marching to any right-wing drummer.
Because I write the music, I write the lyrics, I write the vocal melody lines - I write everything. Just because I let somebody sing something doesn't mean they're more important than the bass player or the keyboard player or the drummer.
As a drummer, you're always fighting for a level that you never quite attain.
I was a groupie for a year and followed a band. I dated the drummer of the band.
My first rock band was called Mike and the Majestics. I was about twelve, and my older sister Kathy was the manager. There were three of us: me and a friend on guitars and a drummer. We were young, but we played for a lot of fraternity parties, plugging both guitars and a microphone into one little amplifier.