Skip to main content
Music Radar MusicRadar The No.1 website for musicians
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
  • Artist news
  • Guitar Amps
  • Guitar Pedals
  • Synths
  • Guitars
  • Drums
  • Keyboards & Pianos
  • Controllers
  • Software & Apps
  • More
    • Recording
    • DJ Gear
    • Acoustic Guitars
    • Bass Guitars
    • Tech
    • Tutorials
    • Reviews
    • Buying Guides
    • About Us
More
  • "Worst rap album in history"
  • Superbooth 2025
  • Eilish vs Radiohead
  • 95k+ free music samples

Recommended reading

Joe Bonamassa wears sunglasses and a blue plaid suit while playing a 1959 Gibson Les Paul Standard onstage in 2023
Artists “Not a single person paid. No one came in. I think I got a Diet Coke out of it”: Joe Bonamassa dishes the dirt on his worst gig ever
Elliot Easton on stage with The Cars
Artists “It was the most disgusting thing I could ever imagine. It makes me sick just thinking of it!” The Cars’ guitarist Elliot Easton recalls the worst thing that ever happened to him on stage
Vai on stage with Whitesnake in 1990
Artists “I saw something coming at me and was about to catch it, then it blew up about six feet in front of me. I went up in the air. I was totally out, unconscious on my back”: Steve Vai recalls his on-stage calamities with David Lee Roth and Whitesnake
Hal Blaine
Drummers The man Neil Peart called his "six favourite drummers": Wrecking Crew legend Hal Blaine
Billy Cobham performs at Blue Note on February 23, 2024 in Milan, Italy
Drummers “Miles runs into the studio with his horn and shouts ‘hit the record button,’ and we were recording. We wrapped that album up by midday”: Billy Cobham on Miles Davis’s agile approach to recording
Lzzy Hale and Arejay Hale on stage in 2009
Artists “You don’t stop the show for any reason - not even when you don’t have a drummer onstage because he's locked outside the building!”: Halestorm star Lzzy Hale tells her funniest gig story
Frank Ferrer on stage in 2012
Artists “There’s nights where I think, ‘If we don’t get to Paradise City soon I’m going to pass out!’”: How drummer Frank Ferrer powered Guns N’ Roses for 19 years
  1. Artists
  2. Drummers

Kenny Aronoff: my best and worst gigs ever

News
By Joe Bosso published 2 July 2014

"I've been lucky – so many amazing shows. And one that was very strange."

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

Kenny Aronoff: my best and worst gigs ever

Kenny Aronoff: my best and worst gigs ever

Continuing our series My Best And Worst Gigs Ever, session and touring legend Kenny Aronoff talks about one show that stands out in his mind as being particularly memorable – and one that he'd like to forget.

“There are way too many great gigs to narrow them down to just one, but I can think of one that is certainly unique and personally very special to me. But let me start by setting the stage: I was 10 years old when I saw The Beatles on Ed Sullivan, and after that I saw A Hard Day’s Night in a movie theatre. Those two events made me say, ‘I wanna be in The Beatles!’

"So how does a 10-year-old kid in New England, in a town of 3,000 people, get in The Beatles? I didn’t know how to do it; I didn’t have any mentors. And The Beatles had a drummer anyway, so that was that. [Laughs]

Make believe

“What did I do? I started a band, and I made believe I was in The Beatles. Fifty years later, after recording hundreds of records and doing hundreds of tours, I’m in the rhythm section honoring The Beatles and celebrating the night they played the Ed Sullivan Show.

"This is the TV special, The Beatles’ 50 Anniversary. I’m playing with Ringo, I’m playing along with Paul McCartney, and I’m performing with all of these other artists honoring The Beatles. For me, what could be a heavier, more significant experience?

10 weeks of work

“I always study hard and prepare for every gig I do. The Beatles show came at the end of 10 weeks of non-stop work, starting with the Kennedy Center Honors and ending with the Grammys. For all of the shows of various kinds during that 10-week period, I had to learn over 200 songs.

"The Beatles show came at the end of everything. At that point, I looked at myself as if I were an NFL player. By the time you get to the Super Bowl, you belong there. I didn’t have time to get blown away by what I was doing; I focused on the show – song by song. And when you do that, you win the Super Bowl.

“During the show itself, I thought back to being that 10-year-old kid, but only for a minute or so – I had to keep focused on the gig. Between performances with all of the artists I played with, I checked each song for the tempo. I put a click in my ear and ran over the songs and all the difficult areas, and I made sure that I was playing everything perfectly, in the exact tempo that we’d discussed in rehearsal.

Pressure

“There was a lot of pressure on me – I’m playing drum parts that Ringo Starr had recorded, parts that people knew. Some of the things were from the records, and some were new arrangements that were a little more modern. But I couldn’t let the pressure get to me. I was dedicated to playing everything just right.”

“When it was all done, I had an incredible conversation with Ringo, right in the middle of the entire arena. I told him what an honor it was for me to play the show, and I basically starting telling him my story. But as I did, I caught myself and said, ‘Hey, you’ve heard this all before. It’s cliché.’ And he said, ‘No, no, tell me.’ So I told him: ‘You’re the reason why I play drums. You’re the reason why I play music. You’re the reason why I got in a band. You’re the reason why I’m here today.’ He went, ‘I love hearing that!’ And he told me I did an incredible job, which you know… What do you say to that?

“There’s a shot in the show where Ringo looks at me after I did a particular roll on Something. The only reason why I knew to do it was because the producer, Don Was, got me the isolated drum tracks. Ringo did this buzz roll on a rack tom and another one on a floor tom, on beats three and four. You can’t hear it on the record, but it’s there. So when I did it live, Ringo mimicked me and smiled. That was amazing.

“In addition to the conversation I had with Ringo, I had a long talk with both him and Paul after the show. What surprised me was, they had no idea what was going to happen after they played Ed Sullivan. They didn’t knew the show was so big back then. To them, it was just one more thing their manager had booked them for. And, of course, everything changed after that night.”

Page 1 of 2
Page 1 of 2
Kenny Aronoff: my best and worst gigs ever

Kenny Aronoff: my best and worst gigs ever

“OK, so this show’s a lot different.

"I was playing with John Mellencamp on the Uh-Huh tour back in the ‘80s. All of a sudden during The Authority Song, my stick broke. It broke at the end, so the part I’m holding is sharp, and the other part went… How do I say this? It went right into my dick. [Laughs]

“I’d never felt anything like this in my life. It was like somebody had bullwhipped my dick. I didn’t know what was going on at first – I thought somebody stuck a knife in me or something. I started feeling a sensation of blood. There was no blood, but that’s what it felt like. My head got all light, and I started to faint. The whole band turned around and looked at me, ‘cause I was playing all weird. I’m almost passing out back there.

It's not my cymbals

“My drum tech rushed over to see what was going on. He said, ‘What’s wrong, man? Is something wrong with your cymbals?’ – that’s what he thought. And I go, ‘No, no, it’s not my cymbals. It’s my dick! My stick broke and hit me right in the dick.’ He slapped me on the head and said, ‘Sorry, dude, you’re on your own.’ [Laughs]

“I finally got it together and shook it off. I’ve played sports my whole life, so I’m used to physical injuries, but this was a new one. It was a freak-out at first. Man, what a feeling."

Page 2 of 2
Page 2 of 2
Categories
Drums
Joe Bosso
Joe Bosso

Joe is a freelance journalist who has, over the past few decades, interviewed hundreds of guitarists for Guitar World, Guitar Player, MusicRadar and Classic Rock. He is also a former editor of Guitar World, contributing writer for Guitar Aficionado and VP of A&R for Island Records. He’s an enthusiastic guitarist, but he’s nowhere near the likes of the people he interviews. Surprisingly, his skills are more suited to the drums. If you need a drummer for your Beatles tribute band, look him up.

Read more
Joe Bonamassa wears sunglasses and a blue plaid suit while playing a 1959 Gibson Les Paul Standard onstage in 2023
“Not a single person paid. No one came in. I think I got a Diet Coke out of it”: Joe Bonamassa dishes the dirt on his worst gig ever
Elliot Easton on stage with The Cars
“It was the most disgusting thing I could ever imagine. It makes me sick just thinking of it!” The Cars’ guitarist Elliot Easton recalls the worst thing that ever happened to him on stage
Vai on stage with Whitesnake in 1990
“I saw something coming at me and was about to catch it, then it blew up about six feet in front of me. I went up in the air. I was totally out, unconscious on my back”: Steve Vai recalls his on-stage calamities with David Lee Roth and Whitesnake
Hal Blaine
The man Neil Peart called his "six favourite drummers": Wrecking Crew legend Hal Blaine
Billy Cobham performs at Blue Note on February 23, 2024 in Milan, Italy
“Miles runs into the studio with his horn and shouts ‘hit the record button,’ and we were recording. We wrapped that album up by midday”: Billy Cobham on Miles Davis’s agile approach to recording
Frank Ferrer on stage in 2012
“There’s nights where I think, ‘If we don’t get to Paradise City soon I’m going to pass out!’”: How drummer Frank Ferrer powered Guns N’ Roses for 19 years
Latest in Drummers
Barry Keoghan
“I met him at his house and he played the drums for me”: As he prepares to play him in the Beatles biopics, Barry Keoghan has been studying Ringo Starr’s technique up close
Billy Cobham performs at Blue Note on February 23, 2024 in Milan, Italy
“Miles runs into the studio with his horn and shouts ‘hit the record button,’ and we were recording. We wrapped that album up by midday”: Billy Cobham on Miles Davis’s agile approach to recording
Zak Starkey
Zak Starkey is back in The Who. “I take responsibility for some of the confusion… Zak made a few mistakes and he has apologised”, says Pete Townshend
Mike Portnoy of Dream Theater
“I oversaw every element - not just the music and the lyrics and the melodies and the production, but also the merch and the fan clubs and everything”: Mike Portnoy talks about his years away from Dream Theater
Zak Starkey
“I’m surprised and saddened anyone would have an issue with my performance that night”: Zak Starkey explains why he got fired from The Who
The Who featuring Zak Starkey
“FORMAL CHARGES OF OVERPLAYING": Zak Starkey has been sacked from The Who
Latest in News
Misha Mansoor poses with his new Jackson Juggernaut in Red Crystal. On the right, his heavy relic shell pink Jackson offset
“It’s a really wild, weird tuning, and something that low would just not work if you didn’t have a 30-inch scale”: Periphery’s Misha Mansoor on how the Fender Bass VI inspired his Jackson baritone offset – and the “absurd” super-low tuning he uses on it
Jack Antonoff and Sabrina Carpenter
“You can hear how loose it is - you can hear how not gridded it is”: Producer Jack Antonoff on how he channelled the Beatles and Jeff Lynne for the drums and bass on Sabrina Carpenter’s Please Please Please
Shawn Levy, Julia Garner and Madonna
“I want to convey the incredible journey that life has taken me on as an artist": Madonna has teamed up with Netflix and the producer/director Shawn Levy for a series based on her life
Gene Simmons
"I have a whole crowd in front of me, and all I want to do is hug him”: Someone just paid $12,495 to be Kiss icon Gene Simmons' roadie for a day
Thomann Shure Montreux 2025
Want a gig at the Montreux Jazz Festival? Thomann and Shure want to gift you your big break at the famous global gathering
Chad Smith
Chad Smith just destroyed the Wu-Tang Clan in his latest drum tuition video

MusicRadar is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury, Bath BA1 1UA. All rights reserved. England and Wales company registration number 2008885.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...