Dawn Richardson

Dawn Richardson (born April 19, 1964) is an American rock drummer, teacher, and writer of instructional books on percussion. She is best known as drummer for the San Francisco-based band 4 Non Blondes from 1991 to 1994.[1]

Dawn Richardson
Dawn Richardson at drums
Background information
Born (1964-04-19) April 19, 1964
Los Angeles, California
GenresIndie rock, power pop
Occupation(s)Drummer
InstrumentsDrums, percussion
Years active1989–present
Associated acts
Websitewww.dawnrichardson.com

Musical career

Early life and education

Dawn Richardson was born in Pasadena, California. At the age of 13, after a friend's idea to learn a new instrument intrigued her, she broke away from playing the trombone and picked up a set of drumsticks instead. Richardson began taking lessons from Jim Volpe, a drum teacher and "local rock guy" in Southern California.[2]

Richardson earned her undergraduate degree in music, concentrating in percussion, at California State University, Los Angeles.[3] She has studied with the principal percussionist of the Los Angeles Philharmonic,[3] and with studio musicians such as Steve Houghton and Greg Goodall.[2]

4 Non Blondes

Richardson joined the band 4 Non Blondes in 1991, after the band had achieved local popularity in the San Francisco area. At the time, 4 Non Blondes had just been signed to Interscope Records. Richardson met the band through mutual friends and was asked to audition for them after the departure of their original drummer, Wanda Day. Richardson was hired directly after her audition, and relocated from Hollywood to San Francisco.[4]

The group's 1992 debut album Bigger, Better, Faster, More! received Gold and Platinum status in the US, was the No. 1 album in eight countries, went Gold in 16 countries, and went Platinum in seven. In 1993, the band's single "What's Up?", a rock song written by lead singer Linda Perry, topped the charts, reaching No. 1 in twelve countries.[5] However, after touring North America and Europe, the group disbanded in 1994 while in the middle of recording their second album.[6]

On May 11, 2014, Richardson and 4 Non Blondes reunited to perform at the Beverly Hilton in Los Angeles, in a fundraiser to benefit the Los Angeles Gay & Lesbian Center.[7][8]

Later career

In addition to 4 Non Blondes, Richardson has been a member of bands such as The Loud Family, The Martinis (featuring Joey Santiago of the Pixies), Bad Radio, Dolorata, and Kindness. With Joe Gore, she formed the instrumental duo Mental 99.[9] She has performed, recorded, or toured with Tracy Chapman,[10] Shana Morrison, Penelope Houston, Gus, Angel Corpus Christi, and The Paul & John.

She is the author of six books, including most recently an instructional book with an accompanying video, Chart Topping Drum Fills (2014).[11]

Richardson plays music and teaches drum lessons in San Francisco.[9]

Bibliography

Richardson has six book publications, all focused on teaching, mastering, and appreciating the art of drumming.[12]

  • Building Blocks of Rock: Fundamental Patterns and Exercises for the Rock Drummer (1998)[13]
  • Dawn Richardson's Fill Workbook: Short Fills and the Tools to Create Your Own (2005)[14]
  • Block Rockin' Beats: Funky Rock, Hip-hop, Jungle, Drum 'n' Bass Grooves (2006)[15]
  • Beginning Rock Drum Chart (2010)[16]
  • Kid's Rock Drum Method (2011)[17]
  • Chart-Topping Drum Fills: The 60s Through Today (2014)[11]

Richardson has also written articles and conducted interviews for magazines such as Drum! and Edge (Drum Workshop), the online magazine Percussion Sessions, and for the Pacific Drums web site.

Discography

With 4 Non Blondes

With Kindness

  • Kindness (1999)
  • Welcome to Planet Excellent (2000)
  • Monkey Not Included (2002)

Additional releases

  • The Loud Family (Alias Records) – Interbabe Concern (August 1996)
  • Penelope Houston (Normal Records) – Loners, Stoners and Prison Brides – two tracks (2000)
  • Go Go Market (Innerstate Records) – Hotel San Jose – two tracks (2002)
  • Lillix (Maverick Records) – Falling Uphill – three tracks (2003)
  • Blame Sally – Blame Sally (2004)
  • CJ (Suite A Records) – FUNdamentals (2005)
  • Erika Luckett (Birdfish Records) – Unexpected (2005)
  • Penelope Houston (Devoted Ruins/Glitterhouse Records) – On Market Street (2012)
  • Alphabet Rockers – Alphabet Rockers (2007)
  • Toby Beard – Sleeptalk (2010)
  • Dolorata – Dolorata (2010)
  • Mental 99 – Mental 99 (2011)
  • Marca Cassidy – Songs from the Well (2014)
  • Katharine Cole - There is No God (2013)
gollark: Well, you simply throw the data into a pit of incomprehensible linear algebra, and then attain results.
gollark: It would magically™ determine what my screenshots are of, and what text they contain, for search.
gollark: @⁡everyone Does there exist some kind of automated screenshot OCRer/classifier?
gollark: They're just timestamped, no other useful metadata.
gollark: Perhaps what I need is some sort of "machine learning" and "OCR" system which classifies screenshots for me.

References

  1. Jorgensen, Eddie (April 9, 2015). "Shana Morrison brings veteran band to Folsom". The Sacramento Bee. Archived from the original on July 2, 2015. Retrieved July 11, 2015.
  2. Richardson, Dawn. "Bio". dawnrichardson.com. Archived from the original on February 3, 2015.
  3. Smith, Angela (2014). Women Drummers: A History from Rock and Jazz to Blues and Country. Scarecrow Press. pp. 127–129. ASIN B00JR06JWW. ISBN 9780810888357.
  4. Chun, Kimberly (August 2006). "Miss Understood". San Francisco Bay Guardian. Archived from the original on October 28, 2012.
  5. "4 Non Blondes - Chart history | Billboard". www.billboard.com.
  6. "Linda Perry Biography". www.musicianguide.com.
  7. Takeda, Allison (April 29, 2014). "Linda Perry Talks 4 Non Blondes Reunion, Milla Jovovich, Evan Rachel Wood Performances". Us Weekly. Archived from the original on October 6, 2014.
  8. Associated Press (April 17, 2014). "4 Non Blondes plan reunion show in Los Angeles". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on September 2, 2015.
  9. Lekach, Sasha (February 2013). "Hill Resident Dawn Richardson Keeps the Beat". The Potrero View. Archived from the original on February 16, 2013. Retrieved September 2, 2015.
  10. "Dawn Richardson: Keeping Busy". DRUM! Magazine. October 30, 2009. Archived from the original on September 15, 2010. Retrieved July 10, 2015.
  11. Richardson, Dawn (2014). Chart-Topping Drum Fills: The 60s Through Today. OnlineDrummer.com. ISBN 978-0989587006. (book/video drum course)
  12. Richardson, Dawn. "Books". dawnrichardson.com.
  13. Richardson, Dawn (1998). Building Blocks of Rock: Fundamental Patterns and Exercises for the Rock Drummer. Mel Bay Publications. ISBN 978-0786643615.
  14. Richardson, Dawn (2005). Dawn Richardson's Fill Workbook: Short Fills and the Tools to Create Your Own. Mel Bay. ISBN 978-0786663620.
  15. Richardson, Dawn (2006). Block Rockin' Beats: Funky Rock, Hip-hop, Jungle, Drum 'n' Bass Grooves. Mel Bay. ISBN 978-0786632282.
  16. Richardson, Dawn (2010). Beginning Rock Drum Chart. Mel Bay. ISBN 978-0786681624.
  17. Richardson, Dawn (2011). Kid's Rock Drum Method. Mel Bay. ISBN 978-0786682973.
  18. Wayne's World 2 on IMDb.
  19. Encomium at AllMusic.
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