90s drummer

Tim Alexander (No votes)
Matt Cameron
Total votes: 2 (6%)
Danny Carey
Total votes: 1 (3%)
Jimmy Chamberlin
Total votes: 3 (9%)
Damon Che
Total votes: 5 (15%)
Dale Crover
Total votes: 1 (3%)
Dave Grohl
Total votes: 4 (12%)
Mac McNelly
Total votes: 3 (9%)
Steve Perkins (No votes)
Chad Smith (No votes)
John Stanier
Total votes: 3 (9%)
Todd Trainer
Total votes: 10 (29%)
Britt Walford
Total votes: 2 (6%)
Total votes: 34

Re: Drum-o-dome - the 90s

25
From this list? Britt Walford is the most interesting and musical, even though I like Trainer and McNeilly a lot, and, to some extent, Che, Stanier, and Grohl.

James Lo mops the floor w/all of the above, and perhaps Rey Washam, John McEntire, and Orestes Delatorre do, too. But their best work was back in the '80s. (Chavez and Ministry not scratching my itches.)

My contrarian '90s picks might be Chris Farmer from Breadwinner, Tatsuya Yoshida from Ruins, Danny Arnold Lommen from Caspar Brötzmann Massaker, Juha Ahtiainen from Circle, or Bill Rieflin on that one Swans record.

Re: Drum-o-dome - the 90s

29
From the list, Todd Trainer. Mac McNeilly and the Lizard were great. Dale Crover and Damon Che were also great, but I never really liked the bands they were in (Bellini excluded). Helmet were ho-hum and I never got the hype for Stanier's glossy, uptight precision. Mike Greenlees with Tar were a better realized project and could scratch that band-as-precisely-pummeling-machinery itch more for me than Helmet ever did. Although I liked Slint, I don't think I ever thought about the drumming on its own terms. Might have to go back and do that sometime. The rest of the list I could not care less about- Lollapalooza filler.

I will second the above-mentioned Katherina Bornefeld, Charles Goucher, and Michael Dahlquist who were very big for me in the 90s and still remain evergreen. I'll also add in Andrew Loomis and Don Pyle for the same reason.

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