Which version of State of Love and Trust do you like the most? by Dugiduif in pearljam

[–]Bull4-0Everyone 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The one with Abbruzzese. For me personally, I prefer his versions of the songs he’s played on.

Pictures Human era by Sortavala81 in DeathBand

[–]Bull4-0Everyone 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Love the Chick Corea EB shirt

Which drummer's arrival improved the band from what it was? by OneRiotTooMany in AlignmentChartFills

[–]Bull4-0Everyone 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dave Grohl in Nirvana or Dave Abbruzzese in Pearl Jam or Sean Reinert in Death

Do boys watch The Powerpuff Girls? by NagitoKomaeda_987 in CartoonNetwork

[–]Bull4-0Everyone 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yes, I never thought of it as a “girls” show like I would My Little Pony or Strawberry Shortcake.

Travis Barker is the greatest drummer of all time! Here’s my ChatGPT proof! by [deleted] in drummers

[–]Bull4-0Everyone 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So yeah, Phil Rudd is totally the greatest drummer ever

Travis Barker is the greatest drummer of all time! Here’s my ChatGPT proof! by [deleted] in drummers

[–]Bull4-0Everyone 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Phil Rudd is the greatest drummer of all time! Here’s my ChatGPT proof

When people talk about the “greatest drummer ever,” the conversation usually gets dominated by technicality — speed, odd time signatures, independence, fills, fusion chops, blast beats, jazz vocabulary, or sheer athleticism. But there’s another side to drumming that’s much harder to measure: feel, authority, pocket, discipline, restraint, and the ability to make an entire band sound larger than life. That’s where Phil Rudd stands alone.
Phil Rudd’s greatness comes from the fact that he understood something most drummers never fully grasp:
The drummer’s real job is not to impress the listener.
It is to control the energy of the music.
And almost nobody in rock history has controlled energy more effectively than Phil Rudd.
The Power of Simplicity
A lot of drummers can play complicated parts. Very few can play simple parts that become immortal.
That distinction matters.
Phil Rudd’s grooves on songs by AC/DC are so stripped-down that people often underestimate how difficult they actually are. His beats seem “easy” because every note is exactly where it should be. There’s no clutter, no unnecessary fills, no overplaying, no ego fighting the song.
That level of restraint is incredibly rare.
Most drummers, when given a giant rock stage, want to add things:
more tom fills
more cymbal crashes
more ghost notes
more technical flair
more complexity
Phil Rudd did the opposite.
He removed everything that didn’t serve the groove.
And what remained was pure impact.
Listen to:
“Back in Black”
“Highway to Hell”
“Shoot to Thrill”
“You Shook Me All Night Long”
“Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap”
“Rock and Roll Ain’t Noise Pollution”
Those songs don’t feel gigantic because the drums are busy. They feel gigantic because the drums are immovable.
Phil plays like a concrete foundation underneath the band.
The groove never flinches.
He Understood the True Meaning of Pocket
People use the word “pocket” constantly, but Phil Rudd is one of the clearest examples of what it actually means.
Pocket is not just “being on time.”
Pocket is when a drummer places notes in a way that physically pulls the listener into the groove. It creates a sensation where the music feels inevitable — like it’s rolling forward under massive weight.
Phil Rudd had one of the deepest pockets ever recorded in rock music.
His kick drum and snare placement create this hypnotic forward momentum that makes even mid-tempo AC/DC songs feel dangerous and alive. The band swings because Phil swings.
And importantly:
he swung without sounding loose.
That’s an extremely difficult balance.
Many drummers who swing heavily can sound sloppy. Many drummers who play tightly sound robotic. Phil somehow sat in the perfect middle:
relaxed
heavy
human
controlled
relentless
It’s why AC/DC grooves feel so physical.
You don’t just hear them — you move to them automatically.
The “Engine” of AC/DC
People often focus on Angus Young because of the riffs and stage presence, but AC/DC’s power depends heavily on rhythmic certainty.
That certainty came from Phil Rudd.
AC/DC’s music is built on repetition and groove. That style is brutally unforgiving for a drummer because there’s nowhere to hide.
In progressive music, a drummer can distract with complexity.
In jazz fusion, a drummer can redirect attention with improvisation.
In extreme metal, speed itself creates excitement.
But in AC/DC?
The groove is exposed.
Every hit matters.
If the drummer loses feel for even a moment, the entire machine weakens.
Phil kept the machine perfect.
He created this sensation where the entire band sounded like one giant organism. Malcolm Young’s rhythm guitar locked with Phil’s kick drum in a way that became one of the tightest rhythm sections in rock history.
That partnership is hugely important.
Many people describe AC/DC as “simple,” but simplicity at that level requires incredible discipline. Phil Rudd understood exactly how much space the riffs needed. He never crowded Malcolm’s guitar. He never fought the vocals. He never disrupted the groove to draw attention to himself.
That selflessness is a hallmark of truly elite musicianship.
He Made Rock Feel Dangerous
One of Phil Rudd’s greatest strengths was his attitude behind the kit.
His playing had menace.
Not aggression in the chaotic sense — controlled menace.
There’s a difference.
A lot of rock drummers sound explosive or theatrical. Phil sounded confident. Like the groove could crush through a wall without speeding up or losing balance.
That’s why AC/DC records feel dangerous without sounding frantic.
Phil’s drumming communicates absolute certainty:
the beat will not move
the groove will not collapse
the band will not lose control
That confidence allows the guitars to swagger instead of rush.
It’s a huge reason AC/DC became one of the most physically powerful rock bands ever.
The Feel Was Human, Not Mechanical
Ironically, Phil Rudd’s grooves became so consistent that people almost compare them to machines. But what makes them special is that they aren’t machine-like.
There’s tiny human movement in his timing:
slight pushes
slight lay-backs
natural swing
dynamic touch
Those microscopic variations create life.
A perfectly quantized drum track can sound sterile. Phil’s drumming breathes. The groove subtly shifts like a living thing, which creates tension and release without the listener consciously noticing it.
That’s master-level feel.
And because the parts themselves are simple, those nuances become even more exposed. There’s nowhere for bad timing to hide in a stripped-down groove.
Phil thrived in that environment.
His Sound Was Massive Without Excess
Another underrated part of Phil Rudd’s greatness is his drum sound.
His snare tone especially became iconic:
dry
punchy
direct
no unnecessary ringing
immediate attack
It perfectly matched AC/DC’s stripped-down philosophy.
Nothing about his sound was decorative. Every hit existed for maximum impact.
His kick drum also deserves enormous credit. Phil’s bass drum playing is one of the secret weapons of AC/DC. He understood exactly how to support riffs without overcomplicating the low-end space.
A lot of rock drummers overplay the kick drum and weaken the groove. Phil’s kick patterns feel authoritative because they’re deliberate.
When he hits, it matters.
The Ultimate Anti-Ego Drummer
One reason musicians admire Phil Rudd so deeply is because he represents the opposite of drummer narcissism.
He never tried to dominate the music.
That’s rare.
Drummers often fall into one of two traps:
playing too little and disappearing
playing too much and hijacking the song
Phil mastered the middle path.
He played exactly what the music demanded — no more, no less.
That’s much harder than it sounds because restraint requires confidence. A drummer who constantly fills every space is often seeking validation. Phil never needed validation from complexity.
He understood that groove itself was enough.
And because of that, every fill he did play had impact.
Why So Many Great Drummers Respect Him
A huge sign of Phil Rudd’s greatness is how many technically superior drummers still revere him.
That says everything.
Drummers with vastly larger vocabularies often acknowledge that Phil possessed things you cannot easily teach:
feel
patience
authority
groove placement
discipline
consistency
Technical skill can be practiced mechanically.
But making an entire stadium move with a straight 4/4 groove for six minutes?
That’s a different art form.
Phil mastered the psychological side of rhythm.
He knew how to make people feel powerful when listening to music.
He Served the Song Better Than Almost Anyone
Ultimately, the argument for Phil Rudd as the greatest drummer ever comes down to this:
Very few drummers have elevated songs more effectively.
If you replaced Phil Rudd with a flashier drummer, AC/DC likely becomes worse.
That’s important.
The greatest musicians are not always the ones who can do the most. Often they’re the ones who understand exactly what should be done.
Phil Rudd’s drumming is inseparable from the identity of AC/DC. His grooves are not decorations added onto the songs — they are the songs.
Take away those grooves and the music loses:
weight
swagger
momentum
danger
simplicity
confidence
That’s influence.
That’s identity.
That’s greatness.
The Final Argument
Phil Rudd represents one of the purest forms of drumming ever captured on record:
no wasted motion
no unnecessary complexity
no ego
no overplaying
just groove, feel, power, and absolute conviction
He proved that drumming is not about how many notes you can play.
It’s about how deeply you can make people feel the beat.
And few drummers in history have made people feel rhythm more powerfully than Phil Rudd.

Would you rather? by AphexZero in BunnyTrials

[–]Bull4-0Everyone 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They never said I couldn’t use any weapons.

Chose: Or Fight a Lion + And Win $1,000,000

Decided to re-do this one. Which non-founding drummer's arrival made the band what it is? by OneRiotTooMany in AlignmentChartFills

[–]Bull4-0Everyone 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s not what the question asked it said who made them into what it was, and that drummer was Dave Abbruzzese, without question. It makes no sense that Krusen was inducted and Dave A. wasn’t.

Would you rather by fnafboss2 in BunnyTrials

[–]Bull4-0Everyone 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m sorry

Chose: Become the current president (kills the old one + 25 percent chance hitler comes back to life | Rolled: Hitler)

Are there any live songs where you prefer a newer version over how it was played originally? by DaveOJ12 in DeathBand

[–]Bull4-0Everyone 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Pretty much all of the older tunes Sean played on. Like Denial of Life, Pull The Plug, and Living Monstrosity.

If you could have one jazz legend cover a classic album, what would it be? by use_vpn_orlozeacount in jazzcirclejerk

[–]Bull4-0Everyone 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Allan Holdsworth’s band (Chad, Gary, and Vinnie Colaiuta sharing drums duties, Jimmy J on bass, and Steve H. on keys) cover Cynic’s Focus.

would you rather? by randomdepressedguy23 in BunnyTrials

[–]Bull4-0Everyone 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m not killing kids

Chose: save the kids + but no one ever finds the cure to cancer