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Jim Chapin was born in New York City
in 1919. His father was James Ormsbee Chapin, an artist of
the American Scene style of painting and his mother was Abigail
Forbes Chapin, a teacher and writer.
He did not begin playing the drums
until he was 18 years old, after being inspired by legendary
drummer, Gene Krupa. Jim studied with Sanford Moeller, upon
the advise of Krupa, and within a short time he was playing
opposite Gene at the 1939 World's Fair in New York City.
In the early 1940's, Jim began working
on a drum instruction book that was eventually published in
1948 as Advanced Techniques for the Modern Drummer, Volume
I, Coordinated Independence as Applied to Jazz and Be-Bop.
Shortly thereafter, Jim had to have a pair of drumsticks in
his back pocket at all times in case he was called upon to
demonstrate a particularly difficult passage and to prove
that he truly could play every pattern in the book! Advanced
Techniques, which is now known simply as "The Chapin Book",
became the most important drum set text ever written and is
still in print today. It was recognized in 1993 by Modern
Drummer magazine as one of the top 25 drum books of all time.
All of the great drummers in the past nearly 50 years have
paid their dues with this book that is the much-imitated,
standard work on the subject. In 1971, Jim published Advanced
Techniques for the Modern Drummer, Volume II, Independence-The
Open End, a monumental undertaking that utilizes overlays
to illustrate its complex points.
In the preface of this work, Jim admits
that even he cannot play every pattern that is presented,
thus getting him off the hook of having to pull out his sticks
on demand to prove that everything printed can actually be
played! Volume II was ahead of its time 30 years ago and is
modern today.
From the 1940s through the 1960s,
Jim performed and toured with a variety of bands, including
the Glen Gray and the Casa Loma Orchestra and groups led by
the likes of Mike Riley, Woody Herman, Tommy Dorsey and Tony
Pastor. He also performed on occasion with his sons, Tom,
Steve, and the late Harry Chapin who was one of the top singer-song-writers
of the 1970s and a founding member of the World Hunger Year.
And he has led his own groups for the past 20 years.
In the past 10 years, Jim has found
a second career, as he has been "discovered" by a new generation
of musicians that hunger for the depth of knowledge he possesses
on drummers and drumming. He spends the majority of his time
traveling around the world teaching and presenting seminars
and he is a fixture at music trade shows and percussion conventions.
In 1994, he received two honors for his contributions to music
and education. One was the American Eagle Award, presented
by the National Music Council and the other was bestowed by
the Berklee College of Music.
Because of his staying power, Jim
is taken for granted. Through times of "here today - gone
tomorrow" artists, he has always been there. During the past
55 years, he has observed, studied and analyzed every great
(and not so great) drummer. He was there almost from the beginning
of modern drum set playing and that will never happen again.
He is a master student in addition to being a master teacher
and, at 80 years of age, Jim epitomizes the most quality necessary
for longevity in the music business: he will not grow old!
hattilizes
overlays to illustrate its complex points.
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