"Making It"
page 2
  From the Top 
with
Ernie Adams

Knowledge, Wisdom, and Guidance



Ernie Adams

Being a responsible artist will always adequate positive credibility, which you will learn with Ernie can be everything in life to an artist, model, musician, singer, dancer..... whatever you are perusing in life, you will certainly go the extra mile if people consider you to be loyal, trustworthy, of greatness, solid work ethic, can do attitude, fun person, positive..... and ultimately .... credible to get the job done no matter what it takes......... 

Artist Credibility 
_______________

Artist Credibility really means, being chosen: not only being a great actor, singer, musician, painter, writer, filmer, etc.... but following through with the right attitude, passion, compassion for your art, and growing with your art to make yourself a better artist. Regardless of what it is that you want to accomplish, being a credible artist should be one of your top your goals to achieve throughout your career, and here is one of the best musicians in the world to explain why ...........

Meet Ernie Adams:

Ernie Adams happens to be one of the best percussionists in the world, as in, in the realms of Dave Weckle, Niel Pert, Lars Ulrich, Tommy Lee, and on and on............ You may recognize his style and playing if you listen to Ramsey Lewis, Al D'imeola, Stanley Turrentine, and Ramsey Lewis, which are just a few of the world's leading artists that are credited to Ernie Adams archives of artists he has toured and recorded with. Ernie is also one of the top studio percussionists in the WORLD, doing studio work and sessions for some of the top producers, engineers, and writers. Some of Ernie's students include musicians that play with R-Kelly, George Benson, and even myself ! Ernie Adams helped sculpt me into the person I am today...... He helped me become one of the better musicians in my school during High School, and taught me the fundamentals of working with artists of all walks. I never would have had the ability to work with these musicians if it wasn't for the teachings of Ernie Adams.

Ernie tours the world with artists from all walks, but what is most important about Ernie Adams, is that he is taking 20 minutes from his world of music to help you gain some knowledge on being a credible artist, a better artist, and for you drummers out there..... a better percussionist as well.

Can you explain your success and how you have come to being one of the top percussionists world wide ?

Ernie: My motto is, everything I do is an audition. I started playing when I was really young in the up-stairs of a house on 11th Locust, in the inner city of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. I went from the attic playing for 1 person, to world wide tours with some of the most famous artists in the world, and I owe it all to having a dream, believing in myself, and going after the dream with hunger. When I was in High School and going into College, I would practice 8-10 hours a day. I lived with my drum sticks glued to me wherever I went. When I was practicing, my friends would yell through the window to play ball or hang out on the street. Although it seemed I was spending the majority of my time practicing verses hanging with the boys, the payoff was achieving the goals I had in my life.... Those kids from the neighborhood are the same kids I see today that say " Wow man !!!  I have your new DVD with Al D'imeola live in Germany," or they would be like, " hey, I saw your picture in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and I was reading about your shows, I will be at your show man." These were the same kids that would come up to me at a Milwaukee Bucks Basketball game after playing in a half time session and ask for my autograph. My success is the living out of the dream I have been living for the past 10 years. To answer your question more directly, part of being successful is really never measuring where you are currently in the true definition of success. You should always find something about yourself as an artist to work on, that way you are always experiencing your inner success in what you do.

Lastly, becoming a percussionist and surviving the ups and downs of the music business has been out performing myself more than anything. This goes for any form of entertainment, great writers do it, great performers do it, anyone of great status is always trying to out perform expectations. To out perform yourself means to constantly be your worst critic. For me it might be to play a simple beat and make it brighter, or attack a song with better emotion. It also means to mentally attack your art form. I owe my success to studying other cats in the business as well. Being well informed of your surrounding is key. If you are always up on who is doing what in your community, chances are you will also get to take part in the hidden opportunities that are out there. Today it is much easier to keep up with information and study the who the players are  because you have the internet to type in a name, get a bio, listen to clips of the music, and learn. You also have incredible writers and coverage of local arts news. For instance, when I was in school, I would read this weekly paper called The Shepherd Express. I was always informed as to everything that was happening in my community. This is another aspect of my growing as an artist that has helped me reach my heights as a percussionist. If you are an up and coming artist as I was, loyalty to your art and learning how to improve yourself go hand in hand.

Can you explain artist credibility, what it is, why it is important, and how it has helped you become one of the best percussionists in the world ?

Ernie: Artist credibility is one of the most important aspects of an artist's life, which plays a huge part in your success in the entertainment business. For instance, there were times I have been touring in countries like Japan or over in Europe and I would be on stage with some of the best players in the world, come to find out they were over looked for jobs from the best producers / engineers, just based on there ability to follow through with simple responsibility issues. I would look to find these artists I played with, and find out that the incredible guitarist didn't make the cut for a tour because his attitude wasn't right, or they were late for a few rehearsals. I have seen cats that play 10x better then others and still  get passed up for touring, gigs, and playing studio sessions because they weren't on time, their attitude was questionable, or they made the decision makers feel uncomfortable with their ability to be a wholesome person. Let me say, being a wholesome musician is being on time, researching your expectations, understanding what the players / producers / engineers / managers want / and making him or her, or the one's in charge comfortable with your ability to follow through and deliver as a musician. Credibility means to be chosen, whether it is on stage or in the studio, when a producer or engineer knows your ability and knows you can deliver the art form music they want, you get calls to play and record.

Credibility also means respect from artists, friends, and people that work with and for you. The more respectable you become as an artist, the better respected you become over all. It is all a healthy cycle that starts right now. Let's say your a middle school student playing in band rehearsal and your teacher wants you to play a Bass drum part in an up and coming play, and your only part to play in happens to be 12 notes.... As you show up for rehearsals and play your part better each time, you are building up credibility with your teacher. He knows in the future that he can count on you to be there to perform for him. You never know what the future holds, that same teacher may just be the Performing Arts Director of The New York City Orchestra, and call on you as an adult to take part in a Broadway Performance, just based on his or her recollection of the credibility that was built as a growing musician. 

Credibility building starts with the attitude you have towards your art form, the people around you, and the way you handle situations. There were times on our tour in S. Africa, Korea, and S. America, when we would be stuck at an airport with no transportation, or we would get to our hotel room and be stuck there for 4-5 hours with our reservations tied up, and situations with equipment that made it next to impossible to play. There were times the whether was so bad it seemed like we were running 3 hours late to play for a club with 5 people. It is in times like this that your over all attitude is the basis for your survival. How you handle situations professionally is what determines how you are perceived to act when you are representing someone else in any given situation.
Representing someone else is the key phrase within the compounds of credibility ! When I am touring with Ramsey Lewis, Al D'imeola etc.... I am an extension to who I am with. Everything I say or do is a representation of that person. When I am in stage playing an incredible solo, a fill break, a groove that is just outstanding, people look up on stage and think...... Al D'imeola is one tight cat and that drummer guy made that show sizzle, what was his name, " Ernie Adams, wow I need to get more material with him in the mix. That is the reality of playing and growing. 

If you are reading this information and you are in one of the many other fields of entertainment, one thing stands universal, and that is your attitude and how you handle situations. The better you handle them, the better you will be seen in the eyes of people that base some or a lot of their decisions on hear say. 

Can you give an example of how credibility has paid off for you ?

Early in my career I was asked to do a recording in Asia while I was scheduled to tour with Stanley Turrentine. I was called 10-12 times from one particular manager / producer and he was not giving up on having me fly to Asia to record a few tracks. I eventually got a break on my tour, and hopped on a plane to Asia to record with these artists in Japan. When I got there, I came to find I had to record the Bass parts, the Orchestral, and then my percussion and the Aux percussion as well. As a matter of fact, I had to write them from scratch. Then I was asked to help orchestrate the whole score. This is just an example of a producer that knew what he wanted on his album and knew I was able to deliver and record his album with 100% assurance that the final product was nothing less than a masterpiece to his likes. This comes from building up solid credibility from the people that are around you as an artist. Another example of credibility is when you have a producer like Michael Vail Blum ( who is known for working with Madonna, Michael Jackson, The Who, The Goo Goo Dolls, and Martyrs and Poets ) call you up and say, " I need you to play on a track for me, "  that comes from the credibility you earn by being a round about musician. You don't get calls from producers like Blum unless your a credible artist, and I can say the same thing for actors and directors, or models and agents. Regardless of your talent, you won't get ( chosen ) if your credibility as an overall person / artist...  isn't precise.

True Story ! ! !   One night I was in Warsaw, Poland playing a small club at 12 midnight. I was tired, hadn't slept for 48 hours, I was hungry, had lousy equipment, and there were about 11 people total in the club. We got up on stage and acted like it was our last show on earth. We played our instruments as if we were on a world tour in front of 100,000 fans, and we struggled to pull the energy out to entertain the likes of 11 people and a drunk bartender. As I was playing this set, a gentleman by the name of John Mclaughlin ( Guitarist from the Maha Vishnu Orchestra ) walked through the door followed by none other than Al D'imeola. Al and his musicians were on a world tour playing across the street, and they just stepped in for a relaxed dinner with some live music. Right after the set I was approached by Al's manager with a smile saying " How would you like to join Al on our tour ?" Thus said, always playing at your best, always performing as if it were your last performance, and putting all of your energy and heart into your performance is another aspect of being a credible artist. I could have easily blew off this little club show, played half of my ability, and gotten bye, but Al and his friends never would have noticed who Ernie Adams really was. If your an actor, model, singer, writer, film maker, radio talent, TV host, etc.... and you are constantly putting 100% into everything you do, the people you have around you will take notice and the word of mouth will help promote your worthy of being a credible artist, or a chosen artist. This is the same word of mouth that has gotten me on stage with Ramsey Lewis, Stanley Turrentine etc..... Notice that credibility breeds word of mouth, which breeds promotion of you as an artist, which eventually lands you gigs that are honorable and career building. 





Next Page----------------------->



Responsibility continues..... meet some more incredible people and how they are successful --------->
                               


Back to the intro page