I remember many moons ago hearing the story that Ringo was primarily chosen over Pete Best because of his good-natured sense of humour, which fit in better with the rest of the band. I took that to mean that merely keeping time was good enough to stay in the band, and by all accounts he did just that. But it stands to reason he would only improve over time, so it really doesn't surprise me his drums were so prominently featured in "Sgt. Pepper (reprise)", as well as his only drum solo on a Beatles record in "The End".![]()
I've read the same thing many times as well. He was already a solid drummer with Rory Storm with a reputation. That along with the fact that his character just seemed to fit well with the rest of Beatles cemented the "thing with four heads".
Among my many favorite Ringo drumming is Drive My Car - the short drum fill at the beginning. Rain. She Said, She Said. Come Together. Strawberry Fields.
Ringo is also the first rock drummer to prominently play the ride cymbal as more of a continuous "wash" of sound, employed quite a bit on the early Beatle hits. Instead of using just the stick tip on the ride cymbal to keep time, playing heavier with the edge of the stick parallel with the cymbal creates a washy, sonic continuous swish crash (I don't know how else to explain it
) that propels the song and also fills it out and makes it bigger. It went on to be used by many rock drummers. John Bonham and Alex Van Halen and Keith Moon among many excellent examples.


