….So you’ve all heard “Jerk” by now — it has a driving four-on-the-floor rhythm, which lends itself to an implied drum part. I was on the way to the studio a few weeks ago and was listening to Elvis Costello’s “Get Happy,” and thinking about how much I love “King Horse,” a song that I don’t think was very popular but which features one of Pete Thomas’ best drum lines:
Start with four kicks on the beat. (1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4)
Add, in alternating occurance, a snare, a high hat, and a floor tom, on the ‘and’ between 4 and 1. (1 2 3 4 snare 1 2 3 4 hat 1 2 3 4 tom 1 2 3 4 snare….)
The chorus explodes into a more straight beat, dropping the polyrythm before it can resolve. It’s so rad. I decided I wanted to steal it pay homage to it with “Jerk.”
Mark was on board, but while he was checking his level, he started doing a pattern that went (kick kick kick tom kick-snare hat kick kick….) and it was so cool I dropped the straight lift in favor of that.
For the bridge, he started out with a four-snare approach, and I said, “It feels like it’s too long a bridge for that snare to have any impact. Why don’t you try four-on-the-floor and throw in scattered discourse from the toms? The kick will totally drive the bridge.”
IT WORKED! It sounds so good, you guys. Drums all over the place. I can’t wait for you to hear it.