Seguramente cada uno tiene un ranking personal para distintas cosas, por lo mismo podemos decir que este tipo de clasificaciones cuentan con una cuota de subjetividad o no podrían ser una ciencia exacta dependiendo del tipo de selección, es así como se puede o no estar de acuerdo con inclusiones, exclusiones, posiciones, argumentos y demases, bajo esta mirada y con esa misma subjetividad sumado a tu destacada carrera, tus méritos y sencillez, te decimos: Mike Bordin para nosotros ¡has sido, eres y serás el número 1!
Mike Bordin Clip (FNM4EVER)
While he certainly hit like a metal drummer, Mike "Puffy" Bordin took Faith No More from the San Francisco underground to MTV because he sounded like one of Rick Rubin's drum machines vibrating the concrete. Though weaned on the big drums of John Bonham, Bordin had a uniquely minimal, hard-hitting, and primordially funky style that echoed hip-hop's 1983-1987 period (which, coincidentally, also was inspired by John Bonham), a perfect lead-up to the band's 1989 breakthrough (and appearance on Yo! MTV Raps). A lefty playing on a right-handed drummer's kit, you could hear his unique thundercracks as early as 1985's "We Care a Lot" or 1989's "Epic" — often keeping time with his left foot instead of his hand, leaving both arms free to whack flams on his toms and snare with sledgehammer abandon. His skeletal style was versatile, too: When FNM toned down the metal for a streamlined alterna-groove in 1995, they made the transition perfectly.
Most Booming Moment: The rapid-fire, aggro-funky single-foot kick work on 1992's "Jizzlobber" bridged the gap between Led Zepplin's "Good Times, Bad Times" and Nirvana's "Scentless Apprentice." CHRISTOPHER R. WEINGARTEN
Photo by: Jolie Ruben
Will siempre leer. Que tengas un buen día.
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