Steve White (drummer)

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Steve White
Whiteydrums.jpg
White performing live
Background information
Birth nameSteven Douglas White
Born (1965-05-31) 31 May 1965 (age 58)
Southwark, London, England
Genres
Instrument(s)Drums
Years active1981–present
Website whiteydrums.com

Steven Douglas White [1] (born 31 May 1965) is an English drummer who has worked extensively with Paul Weller and The Style Council among others.

Contents

Musical career

White was given a small drum as a child by his uncle and upon joining his local Boys' Brigade he began to learn his craft. As with White's bandmate Paul Weller, he was given full support from his parents who went out of their way to help their son develop. White spent his youth having lessons from the late George Scott of Wanstead and learning from recordings of Buddy Rich and Louis Bellson. White later took lessons with drumming teacher Bob Armstrong at Bob's Masterclass studio, then in Hornchurch, Essex. White complemented his work gigging with local bands with part-time work, spending any spare cash on updating his collection of jazz records.[ citation needed ]

In 1983, White auditioned for an unnamed band which turned out to be Paul Weller's new group, The Style Council. Weller was impressed with the 17-year-old drummer's jazz background and asked White to come back the following day. White stayed with the band for some years but was never actually invited to join, even though he appeared in most of their videos and on all but a few recordings. He became the youngest drummer on stage at Live Aid at Wembley Stadium in 1985. He also performed at Live 8 with The Who at Hyde Park in 2005. The Who's regular drummer, Zak Starkey (Ringo Starr's son), had left to join Oasis on their tours and recording sessions.

White left The Style Council in 1989 to pursue other projects and went on to play with many well known acts, such as Ian Dury, The James Taylor Quartet, The Redskins and the Jazz Renegades. When The Style Council reformed for a one-off gig for Japanese TV in 1990, Paul Weller invited White to his studio to hear a few demo tracks. White was soon back full-time behind the kit for Weller's solo projects. His brother, Alan White, is also a drummer, who played for Oasis for 9 years (1995–2004).

Steve White SteveW3.jpg
Steve White

Steve White also became a member of the group named The Players with ex-Style Council keyboardist Mick Talbot and ex-Ocean Colour Scene bassist Damon Minchella.

White took a break from recording with Paul Weller. He played in Trio Valore with Damon Minchella and Seamus Beaghan. He has played with Jon Lord and also featured on the last La Roux album.[ citation needed ]

Alongside Damon Minchella and Matt Deighton, White plays in The Family Silver, which released their debut album on Privilege records in 2015.

White plays Yamaha drums, Zildjian cymbals, Vic Firth sticks, Remo drum heads, and endorses Porter and Davis monitoring products.[ citation needed ] and Keo percussion products.

White formerly managed artist Sam Gray and teaches for both Trinity Laban Conservatoire in Greenwich and Goldsmiths in New Cross.[ citation needed ] White played drums on two releases by the UK group The Family Silver featuring Matt Deighton and Damon Minchella, he is currently drumming for Sheffield-based band Hague and White and recording and teaching from his base in Hextable Kent. In 2018 White presented and consulted on Sky Arts' series 'The Art of Drumming,' [2] which won in the Documentary category at the 2019 Royal Television Society Awards. [3]

Personal life

White's first marriage was to Hayley Marsh, with whom he had two children, Kristabel and Curtis. In 2013, he married former Coronation Street actress Sally Lindsay. The couple have twin boys, Vic and Louie.

He is a supporter of Charlton Athletic F.C. [4] He is the older brother of the former Oasis drummer Alan White. [5]

Discography

With James Taylor Quartet

Albums

With Paul Weller

Albums

With The Style Council

Albums

With The Players

With Trio Valore

Liars and cheater EP

Sample CD

With The Family Silver

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References

  1. Reed, John (5 November 2009). Paul Weller: My Ever Changing Moods. Omnibus Press. ISBN   9780857120496 . Retrieved 2 September 2018 via Google Books.
  2. MusicRadar (17 September 2018). "The Art Of Drumming: "Drumming is a beautiful art. It's a passion, it's a religion, it's fun."". MusicRadar. Retrieved 2 December 2021.
  3. "Winners of the RTS Programme Awards 2019 announced". Royal Television Society. 19 March 2019. Retrieved 2 December 2021.
  4. News, Manchester Evening (18 April 2010). "Table talk: Steve White" . Retrieved 2 September 2018.{{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  5. Leonard, Michael (21 July 2008). "Steve White slams Oasis treatment of drummer". MusicRadar. Retrieved 2 December 2021.