Here’s a lot of ink for you, for eight measures. Mickey Roker playing a funk groove with a lot of detail to it, on Goin’ Down South, a Joe Sample tune from Bobby Hutcherson’s record San Francisco. The transcription starts at the beginning of the track:
The hihat, snare drum and bass drum are pretty layered here, there’s no master plan of simplified coordination underlying it, of the type I’m always pushing. Like he doesn’t avoid unisons between the SD and BD. I don’t know how much he worked out his funk stuff. I’ve been listening to Roker playing some absurdly fast tempos with Dizzy Gillespie— to me this sounds like independence inherited from his jazz drumming. Everything about him sounds like it evolved through constant playing, on the gig.
Point of notation: as I often do, I’m using a tenuto mark to indicate a half-open, sizzling hihat. I like it, it makes sense, and I think we should use standard articulations as much as possible.