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Rating: Summary: Great book about Great Drums Review: Rob Cook, a world-recognized authority on drum history, has a winner here. Replete with more details than you would ever need, Rob has left no stone unturned in this look at those wonderful Rogers Drums.Kudos to Rob for providing another missing link to the small, yet growing, library of Drum History.
Rating: Summary: Great book about Great Drums Review: Rob Cook, a world-recognized authority on drum history, has a winner here. Replete with more details than you would ever need, Rob has left no stone unturned in this look at those wonderful Rogers Drums. Kudos to Rob for providing another missing link to the small, yet growing, library of Drum History.
Rating: Summary: Rogers Drum Co. The "Best" American Drum Company Review: Rogers Drums are quite simply, the best! For at least a brief, but illustrious period of time. There were several great American Drum Companies - Ludwig, Slingerland, Gretsch, Camco and Leedy - all notable and interesting - but none of them ever achieved the status of The Rogers Drum Company of Cleveland, Ohio. Rob Cook has accomplished the unattainable with his unique interviews, rare photo's and the riveting insight on this mysterious, intensely private drum company. Quite frankly, only Rob as an experienced investigator and the author of numerous other vintage drum books could bring this book together, although many have tried and ultimately abandoned the quest. The Rogers Book accurately portray's Rogers rise to prominence during the early 60's due to the greatest triumvirate of percussion and businesss talent ever assembled under one roof. Businessman Henry Grossman who bought the company from "Cleveland Rogers" (yes, that really was his name) hired inventor/engineer Joe Thompson and marketing genius Ben Strauss to collaborate with the World's Greatest jazz drummer Buddy Rich and completely revamped the drum line to a level never before seen in the industry. They started by introducing the World Famous "DYNA-SONIC" snare drum and Swivo-matic hardware in 1961 and things would never be the same. At least until 1966 when CBS bought the company, disbanded the team of craftsman, slashed the quality and moved the operations out to Fullerton, California. Rob takes a hard look at the chronology and doesn't pull any punches. Mistakes were made, deals were struck and insiders double-crossed each other, the industry and numerous musicians in a profit making scheme that left the company in shambles.
Rating: Summary: Great Drums, Average Book Review: Yes, Roger's drums were some of the greatest drums ever made. The book does contain informative information, but sometimes mires itself in irrelevancy. Go down to your local drum shop and look for the guy that looks like he's stil stuck in the 60s; a much better source for information on vintage drums than a corporate publishing machine.
Rating: Summary: Great Drums, Average Book Review: Yes, Roger's drums were some of the greatest drums ever made. The book does contain informative information, but sometimes mires itself in irrelevancy. Go down to your local drum shop and look for the guy that looks like he's stil stuck in the 60s; a much better source for information on vintage drums than a corporate publishing machine.
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