GEORGE L. STONE & RAY REILLY Fred Johnson asked me recently why I ever decided to commute from Toronto to Boston to study with the late George L. Stone. We agreed that it would make for an interesting and informative article for the CADRE web site. So… In my youth,
my talent and playing ability were hampered by not enough exposure
to music in-general and there
were no serious drum teachers
in Toronto at that time. Following the Second World War, there was
a ton of
Trumpet Bands (Drum Corps) and too many mediocre dance bands. That
was all there was to hear and experience. At that time, dance band
leaders
never asked whether you could read music, but if you could play rudiments.
Leaders didn't know one rudiment from the next; but at that time,
any entertainment or public gathering had to (by law) conclude with
the
playing of God Save
The King - for which the intro was a long roll (as was the whole
piece)! So your professional reputation and your next gig depended
on your
roll quality. My roll was as bad as most older drummers - it was
a kind of
an “open
and buzzed” combination. So, in 1953, I decided to get on a train and go to Boston to study under Stone at his studio on Hanover Street. I commuted back and forth to Toronto for a while and then took up temporary residence in Boston with two other musicians who were prepared to share accommodations and food costs. Stone (like his father) had played in the Sousa Band and vaudeville. He was a rudimental drum instructor, a drum maker, and a super stick-turner. He played what he called "Connecticut Style". Based on his "lifts & levels", every hand motion was isolated and then practiced very slowly. He believed that the 26 Standard Rudiments - as adopted by the National Association of Rudimental Drummers (USA) - were based on "ancient sticking" that evolved in Europe and the U.K. as early as 1750. Stone was one of the original founders, and served as President of the NARD. He never acknowledged the existence of any Swiss drumming tradition - and pipe band drummers in the USA didn't "really" play. Stone would adjust his student schedule to accommodate me. I would go for a three hour lesson, get loaded up with information and go back to the hotel and practice. The next day, three more hours - during which Stone would check me out regarding the previous day's lesson - and back to the hotel. I was introduced to the Dodge Drum Chart which became the basis of learning how to site read. Stone always
demonstrated the Flam & Drag alternately and sideways
using 18" and 2" heights. As an example: four right
handed, 1/16 note Flams, followed by four lefts, followed by
hand-to-hand. The Paradiddles
- single and double - were worked using 9" and 18" heights.
When teaching the Ratamacue he would use all three heights.
He never confused
you with too much information...he just felt he was passing
knowledge along. He did not invent the system but believed
that it was the most refined
and musically-proper thing around up to that point in time.
I personally believe that "the system" was the reason
so many of his students became great jazz and orchestra players. Stone was a friend of another drum teacher: Emile F. Cote. Cote was also a member of the NARD. I remember going with Stone to Cote's farm where a stage had been built in the barn. Cote's students would "sling up" on rope drums and demonstrate to their peers their best stuff. Stone would judge the demonstration. To be brief, Stone had the insight to be able to get to the heart of any technical problem anybody brought to him. He always kept written exercises on the "file pile" or in his head and sent you on your merry way to resolve your playing hang-up. I suppose I remained a Stone student because I became a bit obsessed with technique as opposed to playing music. Stone always said there was more than one way to play any written passage and he could play it from the rudimental, band, jazz or orchestral interpretation! His system encouraged you to expand your playing.....every student was an individual not a potential drumming-robot. For a number of years after the lessons, I stayed in touch with George. George L. Stone was in his own way a genius. Ray Reilly |
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