Jack DeJohnette - August 9, 1942 – October 26, 2025 - Rest In Peace
Before I ever heard rock I heard jazz. My father only had classical and jazz records in the house and Miles Davis was royalty. His name was spoken with the same reverence as Beethoven or Mahler. When I first dropped the needle on Bitches Brew everything changed, I didn’t fully understand it but I knew I was hearing something extraordinary, dangerous, beautiful and completely alive.
At the centre of that universe was Jack DeJohnette.
He didn’t just play the drums, he sculpted time. His feel wasn’t about precision, it was about pulse, the way a heartbeat naturally shifts when it’s excited, curious or lost in thought. Listening to Jack on those Miles records Bitches Brew, Live-Evil and On the Corner was like hearing gravity being toyed with. He could push and pull, stretch and snap and somehow make it all swing.
Those albums were my early education. Long before I ever thought about producing or mixing I learned from Jack that rhythm could breathe. He showed me that groove isn’t mechanical, it’s human.
That feels more profound than ever today. We live in an age of gridded drums, quantised perfection and even AI trying to simulate the “feel” of great players. Yet what Jack had can’t be coded. His playing had imperfections that gave it life, every tiny fluctuation carried emotion, he understood that what makes music timeless isn’t its flawlessness, it’s its humanity.
When I finally got to see him play it all made sense. He lived the music, swaying with every beat, every groove, completely inside the sound. There was no separation between him and the instrument. You could see that same cosmic flow he spoke about, the higher self he plugged into when he played. It was as if he was a medium for rhythm itself, channelling something ancient and deeply human.
He was fearless too. The way he bridged jazz, rock, funk and the avant-garde all felt natural. Jack had the courage to chase sound wherever it wanted to go. When I later discovered his work with Keith Jarrett’s trio it showed another side of that bravery. The same man who powered Bitches Brew with volcanic intensity could sit behind a kit and make silence groove. That trio taught me how restraint could be just as powerful as fire.
Jack DeJohnette was more than a drummer. He was a complete musician, a composer, a pianist, a seeker. He didn’t care about showing off, he cared about finding truth.
When I think of him now I think of what he represented: instinct over formula, feeling over perfection, honesty over ego.
Miles might have been the king but Jack was the engine that kept the kingdom moving quietly, powerfully, relentlessly.
Thank you Jack for reminding us that music is more than notes and time. It’s heart, breath and courage.
The beat goes on but it will never sound quite the same.
Produce Like A Pro
Jack DeJohnette - August 9, 1942 – October 26, 2025 - Rest In Peace
Before I ever heard rock I heard jazz. My father only had classical and jazz records in the house and Miles Davis was royalty. His name was spoken with the same reverence as Beethoven or Mahler. When I first dropped the needle on Bitches Brew everything changed, I didn’t fully understand it but I knew I was hearing something extraordinary, dangerous, beautiful and completely alive.
At the centre of that universe was Jack DeJohnette.
He didn’t just play the drums, he sculpted time. His feel wasn’t about precision, it was about pulse, the way a heartbeat naturally shifts when it’s excited, curious or lost in thought. Listening to Jack on those Miles records Bitches Brew, Live-Evil and On the Corner was like hearing gravity being toyed with. He could push and pull, stretch and snap and somehow make it all swing.
Those albums were my early education. Long before I ever thought about producing or mixing I learned from Jack that rhythm could breathe. He showed me that groove isn’t mechanical, it’s human.
That feels more profound than ever today. We live in an age of gridded drums, quantised perfection and even AI trying to simulate the “feel” of great players. Yet what Jack had can’t be coded. His playing had imperfections that gave it life, every tiny fluctuation carried emotion, he understood that what makes music timeless isn’t its flawlessness, it’s its humanity.
When I finally got to see him play it all made sense. He lived the music, swaying with every beat, every groove, completely inside the sound. There was no separation between him and the instrument. You could see that same cosmic flow he spoke about, the higher self he plugged into when he played. It was as if he was a medium for rhythm itself, channelling something ancient and deeply human.
He was fearless too. The way he bridged jazz, rock, funk and the avant-garde all felt natural. Jack had the courage to chase sound wherever it wanted to go. When I later discovered his work with Keith Jarrett’s trio it showed another side of that bravery. The same man who powered Bitches Brew with volcanic intensity could sit behind a kit and make silence groove. That trio taught me how restraint could be just as powerful as fire.
Jack DeJohnette was more than a drummer. He was a complete musician, a composer, a pianist, a seeker. He didn’t care about showing off, he cared about finding truth.
When I think of him now I think of what he represented: instinct over formula, feeling over perfection, honesty over ego.
Miles might have been the king but Jack was the engine that kept the kingdom moving quietly, powerfully, relentlessly.
Thank you Jack for reminding us that music is more than notes and time. It’s heart, breath and courage.
The beat goes on but it will never sound quite the same.
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