• Latest
  • Trending
Mike Lawson (c) Sterling Ortiz

Perspective: Of Sticks, Stones, and Glass Houses

November 12, 2015
Guitar Education: Beyond Hum and Strum

Guitar Education: Beyond Hum and Strum

May 12, 2026
Destiny is a Weird Thing

Destiny is a Weird Thing

May 11, 2026
ADVERTISEMENT
American Bandmasters Association Announces New Recognition

American Bandmasters Association Announces New Recognition

May 8, 2026
Headlines

Headlines

May 7, 2026
The Future Looks Bright

The Future Looks Bright

May 7, 2026
50+ Music Teachers Who Make a Difference

50+ Music Teachers Who Make a Difference

May 5, 2026
New Products

New Products

April 30, 2026
Fly Fishing and… A metaphor??

Fly Fishing and… A metaphor??

April 29, 2026
Beginning Band

Beginning Band

April 27, 2026
New Products

New Products

April 25, 2026
Fly Fishing and… A metaphor??

Fly Fishing and… A metaphor??

April 24, 2026
Lead with Swing! Fostering Leadership, Collaboration, and Confidence Through Jazz Education

Lead with Swing! Fostering Leadership, Collaboration, and Confidence Through Jazz Education

April 24, 2026
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
  • Contact
SBO+
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe Free!
    • Manage Subscription
  • Departments
    • Choral
    • String Section
      • String Section
    • Concert Band
    • Modern Band
      • Mariachi
    • Orchestra
    • Instruments
      • Woodwinds
        • Wind Talkers
      • Percussion
        • GoodVibes
      • Repertoire
      • Playing Tips
    • Marching Band
    • Resources
      • Fundraising
    • Jazz
    • Brass
    • General Music
    • Advocacy
      • NAfME Neighborhood
      • MAC Corner
      • MusicEd: Mentor Minute
    • Commentary
      • Bubbett’s Bookshelf
      • Leadership Tips
      • Perspective
      • InService
        • America’s Bandmasters
        • America’s Musicians
      • Tone Deaf Comics
    • Features
    • News
      • Headlines
  • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
  • Support
  • Awards/Entries
    • 50 Music Teachers who Make a Difference
    • Teachers’ Choice Awards Nominations
No Result
View All Result
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe Free!
    • Manage Subscription
  • Departments
    • Choral
    • String Section
      • String Section
    • Concert Band
    • Modern Band
      • Mariachi
    • Orchestra
    • Instruments
      • Woodwinds
        • Wind Talkers
      • Percussion
        • GoodVibes
      • Repertoire
      • Playing Tips
    • Marching Band
    • Resources
      • Fundraising
    • Jazz
    • Brass
    • General Music
    • Advocacy
      • NAfME Neighborhood
      • MAC Corner
      • MusicEd: Mentor Minute
    • Commentary
      • Bubbett’s Bookshelf
      • Leadership Tips
      • Perspective
      • InService
        • America’s Bandmasters
        • America’s Musicians
      • Tone Deaf Comics
    • Features
    • News
      • Headlines
  • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
  • Support
  • Awards/Entries
    • 50 Music Teachers who Make a Difference
    • Teachers’ Choice Awards Nominations
No Result
View All Result
SBO+
No Result
View All Result

Perspective: Of Sticks, Stones, and Glass Houses

November 12, 2015
byMike Lawson
in Commentary, Marching Band
Mike Lawson (c) Sterling Ortiz
Share on Facebook
Sweetwater
ADVERTISEMENT
By SBO+ Staff

Mike Lawson (c) Sterling OrtizThis issue of SBO combines our College Search and Career Guide, along with our annual focus on percussion. I interviewed a lot of great musicians who went pro in a major way, including Narada Michael Walden (a former star drum major) and marching band madman Chad Smith, both featured herein.

I had to cut two others for space this issue, but they will appear very soon in coming issues. One was with one of the piano players from The Wrecking Crew named Don Randi, whose exemplary support in public education music programs along with extensive private lessons led him to a career where he would become one of the most recorded piano players in Los Angeles, playing on amazing albums such as Pet Sounds by the Beach Boys, and whose discography I can’t even begin to list in this opening editorial. 

Additionally, I interviewed Liberty Devitto. I really look forward to sharing with you in a coming issue this feature story about a man who had a thirty-plus year run as the drummer for Billy Joel, who recorded with Paul McCartney, whose band The Beatles would inspire a young Liberty to pickup the drums again after a comment made by a band director about his future as a drummer hit him in a way that he carries it with him to this day.  “I couldn’t do the buzz roll for the ‘Star-Spangled Banner’ in the sixth grade. The teacher said, Put the sticks down, DeVitto. You’ll never do anything with your drums.’” said Liberty, in that interview. “It seemed like he based all drumming on that buzz roll.”

He was taken off the snare and moved to the bass drum, which for him, as a twelve-year-old kid at the time, was something he felt demoralized by, as though he’d been sent out into left field, where the ball is rarely hit. For two more years, he made his way through school band, but he didn’t really decide he would try his hand at being a “drummer” again until that pivotal moment so many his age had in February, 1964 when The Beatles appeared on the Ed Sullivan program. Said Devitto, “I saw what Ringo was doing, and I said, “You know what? I think I’m gonna forget the buzz roll. I want to do what that guy is doing.”

As we got further into this interview with one of the most amazing drummers the U.S. has ever produced, a man who has been called “America’s Ringo” by his professional peers, a common theme rang true. The crushing words of his band director suggesting he put down the sticks because he’ll never do anything with the drums have stayed with him now for over fifty years. When he hears other drummers like Dave Weckl, for instance, he listens to them in awe and doesn’t think of himself as a drummer. In the back of his mind for half a century, this man who has toured the world a zillion times over and played on hit record after hit record, always carried with him in the back of his mind that he was “less than” because of the scar he has from that band director’s comment. Half a century. Think about it. 

While I found his whole story, his successes, his support of music education programs today and the work he does for them to be genuinely inspiring, I couldn’t help but remember how those words stung a little boy who wanted one thing in the world, and that was to be a real “drummer.” 

Your students have aspirations. Sure those change over time, and at five they may want to drive a fire truck, be a police officer, or ride the back of a garbage truck because it looks fun, but some will come to you with a fire burning inside of them to make music. I am pre-sharing this bit about Liberty Devitto’s story because this College and Career Guide special is designed to pass along to your students who want to be involved in music as a vocation, perhaps even as a passionate calling. You, as their teacher, have more sway over them and their future than you can possibly imagine, and encouragement (or discouragement) makes an indelible mark. 

When you’re having a bad day, or your student is struggling, think about whether you want your student to have a Liberty experience memory of you fifty years from now. Your words are powerful. As hard as it might be to tell with a teenager, they are listening, closer than you may think sometimes. Of that old incorrect saying “sticks and stones”… words can absolutely hurt.

 Mike Lawson

mlawson@timelesscom.com

You may also like:

Liberty DeVitto: A Rock Drumming Legend that Almost Wasn’t 2013 ’50 Directors Who Make a Difference’ Report The 22nd Annual 50 Directors Who Make a Difference SBO Presents The 19th Annual 50 Directors Who Make A Difference SBO Presents the 21st Annual 50 Directors Who Make a Difference
Bob Rogers Travel
ADVERTISEMENT
Godlyke Inc.
ADVERTISEMENT

POPULAR STORY

  • New Products December 2025

    New Products December 2025

    1789 shares
    Share 716 Tweet 447
  • Holiday Gift Guide for Music Businesses: Tools to Boost Engagement and Growth

    1713 shares
    Share 685 Tweet 428
  • 50 Music Teachers Who Make a Difference

    1416 shares
    Share 566 Tweet 354
  • When Selecting New Choral Music, Choose Success

    1299 shares
    Share 520 Tweet 325
  • 2025 Teachers’ Choice Award Winners

    1186 shares
    Share 474 Tweet 297
Rovner
ADVERTISEMENT

SchoolMusic.Travel

No articles found.
Next Post
Buffet Crampon E12F Semi-professional Clarinet

Buffet Crampon E12F Semi-professional Clarinet

  • May 2026

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • April 2026

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • March 2026

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • February 2026

    Articles | Digital Issue
  • January 2026

    Articles | Digital Issue
© 2005 - 2026 artistpro, LLC
7012 City Center Way, Suite 207
Fairview, Tennessee 37062
(800) 682-8114

No Result
View All Result
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe Free!
    • Manage Subscription
  • Departments
    • Choral
    • String Section
      • String Section
    • Concert Band
    • Modern Band
      • Mariachi
    • Orchestra
    • Instruments
      • Woodwinds
      • Percussion
      • Repertoire
      • Playing Tips
    • Marching Band
    • Resources
      • Fundraising
    • Jazz
    • Brass
    • General Music
    • Advocacy
      • NAfME Neighborhood
      • MAC Corner
      • MusicEd: Mentor Minute
    • Commentary
      • Bubbett’s Bookshelf
      • Leadership Tips
      • Perspective
      • InService
      • Tone Deaf Comics
    • Features
    • News
      • Headlines
  • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
  • Support
  • Awards/Entries
    • 50 Music Teachers who Make a Difference
    • Teachers’ Choice Awards Nominations

© 2005 - 2024 artistpro, LLC 7012 City Center Way, Suite 207 Fairview, Tennessee 37062 (800) 682-8114

Wenger Transcend Ad
Wenger Transcend Ad