“Through the years I had always practiced from slow to fast, but then I found out that that’s the worst possible thing any drummer can do for his time. If you practice like that, you end up playing like that.
After that clinic [Stan Kenton, with Peter Erskine teaching drums], I started practicing everything in time and in meter. I started playing along with the metronome and records and being really conscious about it[.]”
“To improve my time, I geared myself to think in that way. I really set out in search of wanting to play with good feel and I think that was probably the most important thing I did. I know a lot of players who don’t play with good feel, but haphazardly think that you’re either born with it or you’re not.
You have to develop it, so I tried to do everything to do so. I talked to people about it and listened to a lot of records, like a lot of Aretha records with Bernard Purdie and a lot of old James Brown records, and studied in depth what notes were being played. I would try to write it down and then try to play it and get the same feeling they had gotten.
I guess I understood the importance. Most of the young people I know now, and those I have taught, don’t realize the importance of working on their time and their feeling. They think it’s more important to work on their flash and their chops, their technique and their reading. If they would only understand that it’s time and feeling that is going to get them the work, they would devote themselves to do that.”
– Steve Smith, 1981 Modern Drummer interview with Robyn Flans