“Like someone from another planet”: Ronnie James Dio on the drummer others owe credit to

The genre term ‘heavy metal’ blossomed with the emergence of three key acts in the late 1960s and early ‘70s. All hailing from the United Kingdom, Black Sabbath, Deep Purple, and Led Zeppelin are credited with having kick-started a style of music characterised by distorted riffs, virtuosic solos, and, perhaps most importantly, bombastic drumming.

Sure, the guitar sound of heavy metal was crucial to its development and is ultimately what drew many listeners towards its abrasive sound, but without the earth-shattering backbeats holding things together, the genre would have lacked a large amount of its impact. Tony Iommi’s riffs for Black Sabbath would still have sounded somewhat apocalyptic played in isolation, but with the addition of Bill Ward’s drumming, there’s far more menace to it. Similarly, Ritchie Blackmore’s playing would have been rendered somewhat impotent if it hadn’t had Ian Paice holding down a pounding rhythm behind it.

However, one might argue that the finest example of a heavy metal drummer, and the person almost single-handedly responsible for popularising the style, was Led Zeppelin’s John Bonham. None of Led Zep’s heaviest moments would sound complete without Bonzo’s measured yet aggressive drumming style, and in many ways, he was the founding father of the heavy metal drum sound that has continued to be a driving force within the genre.

From frantic early tracks such as ‘Communication Breakdown’ to the slower yet incredibly precise groove of a track like ‘When The Levee Breaks’, Bonham’s drumming was versatile but instantly recognisable and easily able to elevate a song to a higher level. Without Bonham’s influence, the drum sound of heavy metal could easily have steered itself entirely in another direction and might never have been steered in this direction.

Bonham accumulated many fans throughout his sadly short-lived career, and among them was the American heavy metal vocalist Ronnie James Dio. Despite having had a stint as the frontman of Led Zeppelin’s contemporaries, Black Sabbath, he was still able to recognise that Bonham was a crucial factor in helping to solidify the genre’s sound. In a 1994 profile interview with Joan Quinn, he explained what elements are essential to creating a good heavy metal performance cited Bonham as being a figure that not only all drummers in the genre should look up to, but all musicians.

“It’s all attitude,” Dio explained to Quinn. “You have to want to play that kind of music. You have to want to go out… unconsciously think that you’re going out and smashing people over the head with a hammer. That’s the way drummers think.” He would then go on to explain the importance of Bonham to the genre, saying, “I think we’d all have to give a guy named John Bonham credit for drummers being influenced the way this man played.”

But why him over his peers? Having played alongside Ward in Sabbath, you might think that he’d have some level of bias towards his former colleague, but he insisted to Quinn that Bonham was leagues above everyone else. “It was like someone from another planet,” he continued, praising Bonham’s brilliance. “He gave all the impetus to those that came after him, and heavy metal started more with John Bonham as a drummer than anyone else.”

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