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Dreaming Dead (On Tour w/Nile)



Last Updated: 12/18/2009

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Status: Single
City: Los Angeles
Country: US
Signup Date: 7/1/2005

Who Gives Kudos:


Tuesday, March 17, 2009 



Mike Caffell

Mike Caffell

Monday February 16th 2009

Music has been the most important thing in my life since I was 12 years old. 
There was a talent show at my school when I was in 6th grade, and some
of the 8th graders formed a band for the show.  They played “Sweet
Child O’Mine” and I thought it was the coolest thing ever.  

Since then I’ve played in a variety of contexts and a handful of bands.  I’ve
toured, recorded, written, and engineered, and I wish I could do more. 
I went to the L.A. Music Academy for a year and although it cost way
too much money and I’ll die in debt, the experience was priceless and
having a year to hone my chops did my playing a lot of good.  

The main musical projects I am currently involved in are Exhausted Prayer
and Dreaming Dead.  We both have albums available worldwide, and I hope
you’ll check us out.  

I think that a drummer can make or break a band.  Overplaying and poor time (which often go hand in hand) are two pitfalls that metal drummers frequently fall into.  Always play to support the music, and lead the other musicians through the tunes with predictable fills and good time.



Mike Caffell Interview:



SD.com: How old were you when you started playing?

Mike: 
I started playing drums when I was 18, and I’m now 28.  I started
playing music proper (the flutophone, a plastic piece of shit clarinet
thing) when I was around 10 years old.  I started playing guitar
seriously at the age of 12.  I just fell into the drums really.  A
buddy of mine asked if he could keep his drumset at my house (hell
yes!) and the rest is history. 

SD.com: Did you play in a school band or any drum corps?

Mike: I played in the high school jazz band as the secondary drummer my
senior year of high school.  I didn’t read drum music or follow charts
very well at that point so I just learned the songs by ear.  I also got
stoned before most of the classes.  It was really fun, but looking back
I wish I had made more of it.  

SD.com: Who are your top 5 metal influences?

Mike: 
Hard to say, but let’s go with Dave Lombardo, Adrian Erlandson, Nick
Barker, Nick Menza, and Danny Walker.  The fast thrash beat that Dave
and Adrian did on the classic Slayer and At the Gates albums is my
bread and butter, baby.  I also like the blast beats that Nick Barker
does on the second Lock-Up album.  Danny Walker is a buddy of mine, and
I really look up to his drumming.  His work in Intronaut is fantastic. 
I’m always impressed by how complicated his parts are and how well he
remembers them, but also by his musicality and power.

Mike Caffell  

SD.com: Who are some other of your favorites?

Mike: 
I love all types of music, and metal drummers make up a small portion
of my influences.  I like Max Roach, Elvin Jones, Bill Bruford, Vinnie
Colaiuta, Ralph Humphrey, Matt Cameron, and David King to name a few. 
I also write music, so I have a long list of non-drummer influences as
well. 

SD.com: Let us know 5 CD's that are in your current rotation

Mike: 
TV on the Radio: Dear Science, Fleet Foxes: Fleet Foxes, Guns n Roses:
Chinese Democracy, Intronaut: Prehistoricisms, Kate Bush: The Dreaming 

SD.com: What do you do to warm up before a show?

Mike: 
A lot.  I need to get my hands ready to play 16th note single stroke
rolls at 240 bpm the second I get on stage.  I have an “e-soft”
practice pad I warm up on that is pretty soft and really makes you work
for the notes.  I also carry around a kick drum practice pad and an
additional kick pedal to warm up with.  I also do deep breathing, a ton
of stretches, and I jump up and down a bunch and try to keep active
before the set.  I also drink a little booze and smoke if I can. 
Sometimes I don’t have time for all of the above, but no matter what, I
need to get movin before I get onstage, otherwise it ain’t gonna happen.

  Mike Caffell  

SD.com: Do you read music? Regardless of answering yes or no, please tell us how it might have effected your playing?

Mike: 
I do read music and have since I was 10 years old.  I think that
reading music and/or are crucial to developing good time.  As a
drummer, if you can cultivate an inner tempo by feeling the subdivision
of the beat (8th notes, 16th notes, 8th note triplets, etc.) then
you’ll have good timing.  For instance you might just be keeping time
on the ride by playing half-notes, but to place those notes in the
right spot, you should be thinking of 8th notes in your head. 
Constantly feeling a smaller subdivision of the beat than the
subdivision you are actually playing gives you a grid over which to
keep time.  I think that reading music has improved my time more than
anything else.  

SD.com: Can you tell us about the gear you use?

Mike: 
I’ve been playing a Yamaha Maple Custom Absolute Nouveau kit for about
4 years now and I absolutely love it.  That’s the kit they put out with
the lugs that disengage from the drum.  It’s a great design and it
saves time changing heads.  The toms are 10, 12, and 14 inches and the
kicks are 20s (yes, I have a double kick kit and its awesome).  I like
the 20-inch kicks because they are a little bit tighter sounding than
22s, and that’s great for playing fast metal.  The bass frequencies
from the kicks are tighter.  I use DW 9000 kick pedals and they’ve been
great for me.  For my cymbals I use a variety of brands, but mostly the
drier, jazzy Zildjian cymbals.  However, my primary crash is a Paiste
Fast Crash and it is superb.  I would be interested in an all-Paiste
cymbal set up that’s similar to that crash (ahem, endorsement?). 

SD.com: If you could give one piece of advice to young drummers, it would be...

Mike: 
Learn to read music, learn to keep time, and keep everything you play
live or with other musicians within your means.  It is much better to
play simple and keep good time than to play four million notes in one
minute that are all over the place.  Sorry, I think there is more than
one piece of advice in there. 

 Mike Caffell 

SD.com: Who gave the best live performance you've ever seen?

Mike: 
Drummers?  I don’t know, nothing comes to mind.  Maybe Phil Rudd from
AC/DC back in the 90’s.  Oh, I know.  Jeff Hamilton.  He’s a jazz
drummer.  Totally amazing.  Definitely him.  I was also blown away by
Fleet Foxes when I saw them recently in Los Angeles.  Also, seeing
Opeth on their Ghost Reveries tour at the House of Blues in L.A. was
great.  Oh, and seeing Neurosis on the second stage at the second
Ozzfest back in the 90’s was awesome.  I thought their heads were gonna
explode.

SD.com: Aside from drumming, what else do you like to do?

Mike: 
I like to write music.  I’ve been a guitarist much longer than I’ve
been a drummer, and my main focus in the musical world is writing my
own music and pursuing my artistic vision.  I also like to hang out and
get stupid with my good friends, smoke lots of grass, read classic
novels, find good vegan food, and exercise in general.  I also love my
day job, performing behavioral interventions for children with autism.

Keep up with Mike here: www.dreamingdead.com



profile=dead

 
This is awesome. Mike is an amazing drummer! Being drummer myself, I pay a lot of attention to the drums when I see a band live. Mike blew my mind when I saw you guys.
Can't wait to see you live again!
 
Posted by profile=dead on Tuesday, March 17, 2009 - 6:25 PM
[Reply to this
Sammy Jam Jam (R.I.P Eric)
Samantha Perez

 
Yay mike!
 
Posted by Sammy Jam Jam (R.I.P Eric) on Tuesday, March 17, 2009 - 6:38 PM
[Reply to this
TotalDisaster

 
Bout' time a motherfucker got a little recognition!!
 
Posted by TotalDisaster on Monday, April 06, 2009 - 11:29 PM
[Reply to this
Maria
Marie Schall

 
YAY!!
Mike is amazing :)
 
 
Posted by Maria on Wednesday, April 29, 2009 - 11:48 PM
[Reply to this