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Buddy Harman

Buddy Harman was one of the inventors of the Nashville sound. He also crossed genres to early Rock with Roy Orbison and Elvis Presley.

When charting Elvis's "Little Sister" I had a hard time hearing the kick drum. I imagine that it's either on 1 or 1+3 because the bassist is playing straight quarters. Saying that, thier seems to be more emphasis on 1. If you are trying to play like the original you should spend some time playing along to Buddy to copy his groove. Don't be fooled by the seemingly easy pattern.

Click here for Buddy Harman drum chart



Nashville-born session drummer Buddy Harman has been around country music so long that he actually pre-dates the time when drums were even used on country records. In fact, it was Harman who formed the foundation from which subsequent Nashville drummers built upon. The longtime studio ace is recognized by the Country Music Hall of Fame as being among the small handful of musicians who pioneered the "Nashville Sound."

Following in his mother's foot steps, Harman took up the drums before his teens and, after a stint in the military, studied percussion in Chicago under Roy Knapp. Upon his return to Nashville Harman learned that, contrary to what was protocol before his departure, artists were now asking for drums on their records. Splitting his time between session work and drumming in a strip joint, Harman played on early recordings by Patsy Cline (including "Crazy" and "Walking After Midnight") and Marty Robbins. Whereas Harman had first taken to using only a snare drum and brushes, by the early '60s he was utilizing a full kit for artists such as the Everly Brothers and Elvis.

Because he was there from the beginning, and in many aspects actually pioneered country drumming within a studio context, Buddy Harman has played on several legendary sessions, Roger Miller's "King of the Road," Johnny Cash's "Ring of Fire," Tammy Wynette's "Stand By Your Man" and Roy Orbison's "Pretty Woman" being just a small list. In 1991 Harman returned to the stool of house drummer at the Grand Ole Opry, a position he originated in 1959. A walking history book of the evolution of Nashville and country music, Harman has played on over 18,000 sessions making him arguably the most recorded drummer ever. ~ Steve Kurutz, All Music Guide



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