Anyone Know What's Making This Click Sound in Early Elvis/Sun Recordings?
Guys, the band I play with is putting together a Sun Studios set, Elvis and Carl Perkins, etc. The drums often have a "clickety" sound that I am trying to reproduce.
There's a video of DJ Fontana in '68 where he's making this sound on the back of a guitar case! Hard to believe that's what they used in the recording session though.
You can hear it pretty plainly on this clip of Carl Perkins:
Re: Anyone Know What's Making This Click Sound in Early Elvis/Sun Recordings?
Welcome to the forum eheller! You are correct sir! Rim clicks (not cross sticking) as seen on this Carl Perkins video when he made an appearance on the Perry Como Show. Watch the drummers left hand (highlighted with circle) go back and forth from the rim to the batter.
Re: Anyone Know What's Making This Click Sound in Early Elvis/Sun Recordings?
I've been to Sun Studios twice.............an awesome experience............(along with a stop at the Memphis Drum Shop, Graceland, Beale Street blues clubs and the baby-back ribs) highly recommended if you find yourself in Memphis.
Re: Anyone Know What's Making This Click Sound in Early Elvis/Sun Recordings?
I used to have a Russ Miller Groove wedge that made a similar sound if I just tapped it with the tip of the stick instead of like a rim click. Maybe look into something like that? I may even still have it.
Ludwig Classic Maple 22x16,10x8,12x9,16x16 7" Moon Gel Practice Pad Sabian HHX Legacy
Decide whether this is love for the craft or simply an ego thing
Re: Anyone Know What's Making This Click Sound in Early Elvis/Sun Recordings?
A lot of times, on old Rock-A-billy and juke-joint swing, that click sound is the stand-up Bass player using a type of string slap technique. Many times those groups didn’t even have a drummer at all.
Last Fall, my band opened up for Wayne Hancock at a local tour stop. It was just him pounding out chords on an acoustic, a standup bass player, a Gal playing pedal steel and a guy on a Telecaster. No drummer, but that constant click sound is what makes everything work!
Last edited by N2Bluz; 02-22-2018 at 07:13 PM.
-Brian
"Too many crappy used drum stuff to list"
Play the SONG......not the DRUMS!!!
"I think that feeling is a lot more important than technique. It's all very well doing a triple paradiddle - but who's going to know you've done it? If you play technically you sound like everybody else. It's being original that counts." ~ John Bonham
Re: Anyone Know What's Making This Click Sound in Early Elvis/Sun Recordings?
Originally Posted by N2Bluz
Last Fall, my band opened up for Wayne Hancock at a local tour stop. It was just him pounding out chords on an acoustic, a standup bass player, a Gal playing pedal steel and a guy on a Telecaster. No drummer, but that constant click sound is what makes everything work!
Re: Anyone Know What's Making This Click Sound in Early Elvis/Sun Recordings?
Originally Posted by JoePasko
I bet that was Rose Sinclair on the steel guitar.
Honestly, I don’t remember her name. She was awesome, and easy on the eyes too. DD56F288-5180-4529-A7E0-0C186D11DB7A.jpg
I consumed my fair share of refreshments after we finished. I hung out and talked with her and the Bass and Lead player for quite a while during their break. They were all really nice. Wayne was nice too, but the song “Lost in the Ozone” comes to mind.
-Brian
"Too many crappy used drum stuff to list"
Play the SONG......not the DRUMS!!!
"I think that feeling is a lot more important than technique. It's all very well doing a triple paradiddle - but who's going to know you've done it? If you play technically you sound like everybody else. It's being original that counts." ~ John Bonham
Re: Anyone Know What's Making This Click Sound in Early Elvis/Sun Recordings?
Originally Posted by N2Bluz
Honestly, I don’t remember her name. She was awesome, and easy on the eyes too.
I consumed my fair share of refreshments after we finished. I hung out and talked with her and the Bass and Lead player for quite a while during their break. They were all really nice. Wayne was nice too, but the song “Lost in the Ozone” comes to mind.
Yeah, that's Rose. First time I met her, she was playing rhythm guitar in the OK Bayou Cajun Band. Several years later, I saw her onstage playing button accordion & clawhammer banjo with 'The Heartbeats' (w/ Tara Nevins, from Donna the Buffalo). Now she has re-invented herself once again, as a western-swing steel guitarist.
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