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Blake Fleming
Blake Fleming
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Key Information

Blake Fleming is an American drummer known for his involvement with several influential experimental bands.

Early life

[edit]

Born in Alton, Illinois, in 1972, Fleming started drumming at age 8, spending several years in fife and drumming corps, bagpipe bands, jazz bands, marching bands and orchestras.[1] While in the Alton Colonial Fife and Drum Corps, Blake studied under Jerry Whitaker, the East Coast Rudimental Snare Drum Champion from West Point.[2]

Band history

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In 1990, Fleming co-founded his first band, Dazzling Killmen. The Killmen toured the US extensively, recording four 7" singles in addition to two full-length studio albums and one live album (Skin Graft/Touch and Go Records). They worked closely with Jeff Tweedy (Wilco, Uncle Tupelo) and Steve Albini (Nirvana, Pixies, PJ Harvey) and shared the stage with Fugazi, The Jesus Lizard, Neurosis, Helmet, Uncle Tupelo, Sleep, Shellac, Agent Orange, The Bad Livers and Jim O'Rourke.[2]

Dazzling Killmen's 1994 sophomore studio album, Face of Collapse, was named the "number one heavy record of the decade" by Alternative Press Magazine, the criteria for which included the dexterity of the rhythm section.[3]

Fleming traversed the US with the Japanese progressive punk band Zeni Geva on their 1996 Freedom Bondage tour. Later that year, he moved from St. Louis to New York City and formed the influential instrumental quartet Laddio Bolocko. Laddio Bolocko independently recorded and produced three studio albums, and toured the US and Europe numerous times between 1998 and 2000, earning Fleming the reputation of being a master drummer both in the US and Europe.[2]

After Laddio disbanded the previous fall, Fleming moved to Long Beach, CA in March 2001 to co-found The Mars Volta, and recorded their very first demo recordings (("Roulette Dares (The Haunt Of)" and "Cicatriz ESP")) for Grand Royal (the Beastie Boys' record label).[4] He also drummed on guitarist Omar Rodriguez-Lopez's first solo album A Manual Dexterity: Soundtrack Volume 1. Fleming then returned to New York City and, in 2002, formed Electric Turn To Me,[5] who toured the US and Europe extensively before splitting up in 2005.[2]

Fleming briefly rejoined The Mars Volta after drummer Jon Theodore's departure in June 2006, playing a sold-out arena tour opening for the Red Hot Chili Peppers throughout the US and Canada. He also appeared with the band on the Henry Rollins Show on the Independent Film Channel.[6]

Upon Fleming's return to The Mars Volta in 2006, vocalist Cedric Bixler-Zavala stated:[7]

I feel as if [former drummer] Jon Theodore's drumming was based on the simplicity of, like, John Bonham. As some kids were saying, it's like Jon was more groove-oriented. Blake can be, too, but Blake likes to flip beats on you, and he likes to throw you off and have fun with it. He leans more toward [the style of] Zach Hill, Hella's drummer. I find myself tapping my toes while I'm singing to stay on top of the beat — figuring out how to [perform] and ignore the drums sometimes, and flow over it. Blake is the father of most of The Mars Volta songs. He's the one that came up with a lot of beats for us. Even on Frances the Mute, "L'Via L'Viaquez" and certain parts [of the songs on the album], Blake Fleming beats [were taught to] Jon Theodore. Sometimes [we'd have] to not let Jon know that they were Blake's beats, because he'd have a bit of a problem with that, since Blake was our first drummer and tracks like "Cicatriz ESP" and "Roulette Dares (The Haunt Of)" were Blake Fleming beats.

Studio work and collaborations

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After the Chili Peppers tour, Fleming returned to New York City, devoting his time to teaching and session work, with artists including Evan Dando (Lemonheads) and Gibby Haynes (Butthole Surfers), The Ropes (Fleming drummed on their 2008 L.P. What They Do For Fun, which was #15 in the ABC News Top 50 Albums of 2008), Kim Taylor (NPR Artist of the Month), Israel Nash Gripka, Chris Riffle, The Rollo Treadway, Father Divine, Martin Walker, Jimi Zhivago, Underground River, and Vajra.[8][9][10][11][12][13][14]

Fleming drummed on Kim Taylor's 2006 album I Feel Like A Fading Light, which was an NPR World Cafe "Album of The Week," featured on the CW's Smallville, and was one of Performing Songwriter's "Top Records of 2007".

In 2009, Fleming worked with singer/songwriter Israel Nash Gripka, drumming on New York Town and The Gold Mine is Flooding.[15][16] Together, they toured the Netherlands and England (where the record New York Town was in the top 10 Americana charts for both countries), playing prestigious Americana festivals (including the Take Root and Roepaen festivals in the Netherlands), and recording TV and radio shows in Amsterdam and London. Their BBC Radio 2 taping was with the legendary Bob Harris,[17] who started The Old Grey Whistle Test (a famous British music TV show from the 70's) and who has hosted everyone from John Lennon to Bob Marley. Also with Israel, Fleming appeared on Uncut Magazine's CD compilation (April 2010 issue) and on the Best of the Songwriter's Hall of Fame New Writers CD (2010).

Fleming played on New York City singer/songwriter Chris Riffle's 2010 debut album, Introducing..., which placed Chris on the 2011 Grammy nominee ballot for Best Contemporary Folk Album.[18] Fleming has since drummed on Chris' two subsequent EPs, I Am Not From Here and Another Dream.

In April 2011, Fleming gave a solo drum concert alongside live painters and vj Lady Firefly in a multi-media performance at St. Peter's Church in New York City.[19]

Since 2006, Fleming has worked extensively with video artist Janet Biggs, composing soundtracks and performing live at art festivals and other installations. Their collaborations have been featured at the Art Basel Festival in Miami (where he performed solo drumset poolside with Olympic synchronized swimmers); The Gibbes Museum of Art (Charleston, SC); Solomon Projects (Atlanta, GA); Smack Mellon (Brooklyn, NY); The Johnson Museum (at Cornell University, Ithaca, NY); The Mint Museum of Art Permanent Collection (Charlotte, NC); International Video Art Fair (Barcelona, Spain); The European Media Art Festival (Osnabrueck, Germany); North Sea Film Festival for Underwater Movies (the Hague, Netherlands); and the Claire Oliver Gallery (New York, NY).[2] Blake composed the soundtrack to Biggs' In The Cold Edge, which appeared at the 2010 Pulse Contemporary Art Festival, and, in September 2011 performed in Biggs' multi-media installation, Wet Exit, on the banks of New York City's East River, along with the New York Kayak Polo team, as part of the DUMBO Arts Festival in Brooklyn, NY.[20]

Current work

[edit]

Fleming has been an adjunct professor at the State University of New York at Oneonta since 2008, teaching private lessons and running a number of rock-based ensembles.[2]

Fleming recorded drums for the debut album by the India-influenced band, Vajra, which was mixed by engineer/producer Sylvia Massy (Tool, System of a Down, Prince, Johnny Cash), and is slated to be released in June 2012.[14]

In addition to freelance work and teaching, Fleming is one half of the experimental group Future By Now,[21] along with engineer/musician Andris Balins (Sean Lennon, Nels Cline).[22][23]

Discography

[edit]

With Dazzling Killmen

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  • Numb/Bottom Feeder 7" (Sawtooth, 1990)
  • Torture/Ghost Limb 7" (Crime Life, 1990)
  • Mother's Day Split 7" (Skin Graft/Sluggo, 1991)
  • Dig Out the Switch (Intellectual Convulsion, 1992)
  • Medicine Me/Poptones 7" (Skin Graft, 1993)
  • Face of Collapse (Skin Graft, 1994)
  • Recuerda (Skin Graft, 1996)
  • V/A – Guide to Fast Living (Alien Feedings, 1996)
  • V/A – Camp Skin Graft Vol. 1-3 (Skin Graft, 1997)

With Zeni Geva

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  • V/A – Professional Test Record (Black Hole Recordings, 1996)
  • V/A – Live from the Devil's Triangle (KFJC 89.7 FM Recordings, 1998)

With Laddio Bolocko

[edit]
  • Strange Warmings of Laddio Bolocko (Hungarian, 1997)
  • In Real Time (Hungarian, 1998)
  • V/A – Live from the Devil's Triangle (KFJC 89.7 FM Recordings, 1998)
  • As If By Remote (Hungarian, 1999)
  • As If In Real Time (Hungarian, 2000)
  • The Life and Times of Laddio Bolocko (No Quarter, 2003)
  • David Cross – Let America Laugh (DVD, Sub Pop, 2003)

With The Mars Volta

[edit]
  • Roulette Dares (The Haunt Of)/Cicatriz ESP (2001)

With Electric Turn To Me

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  • Electric Turn To Me (No Quarter, 2003)
  • Clouds Move So Fast (No Quarter, 2004)
  • We Ain't Housewife Material, an International Collection of All Girl Punk, Rock, and Garage (Dionysus, 2004)
  • Caution: Live From the Devil's Triangle Vol.7 (KFJC 89.7 FM Recordings, 2004)
  • Scrape the Sky (Internet Release, 2005)

With Omar Rodríguez-López

[edit]

With The Rollo Treadway

[edit]
  • The Rollo Treadway (Rollosound, 2008)

Solo

[edit]
  • V/A – Drums Love You (Blake Fleming – Chimera, Makrame Records, 2008)
  • Time's Up (2012)
  • Drum Killah (2020)

With Future By Now

[edit]
  • Live at the Hamblin Theater 11.18.10 (DVD, 2011)

With other artists

[edit]
  • Kim TaylorI Feel Like A Fading Light (2006)
  • The RopesCry To The Beat (2007)
  • The RopesKill Her Off/After Today, Before Tomorrow 7" (2007)
  • The States – The Path of Least Resistance (2007)
  • Martin Walker – Nylon (2007)
  • The RopesWhat They Do For Fun (2008)
  • Father Divine – Father Divine (2008)
  • Father Divine – Requiem For Intellect (2009)
  • The LemonheadsVarshons (2009)
  • Israel Nash Gripka – New York Town (2009)
  • Israel Nash Gripka – The Gold Mine is Flooding (2009)
  • Chris Riffle – Introducing...Chris Riffle (2010)
  • Anesthesia Lounge – Under the Influence (2011)
  • Chris Riffle – I am not from here (2011)
  • Chris Riffle – Another Dream (2012)
  • A Modern Armada – Gravitation (2011)
  • A Modern Armada – ...to the breakers (2016)
  • Underground River – Endless Air; the Other Side of Happenings (2012)
  • Vajra – Pleroma (2012)
  • V/A – Rip This Joint, 2010 Uncut Magazine Compilation (w/Israel Nash Gripka – Pray For Rain)
  • V/A – Best of the Songwriters Hall of Fame New Writers Showcase Vol. 8, 2010 Songwriters Hall of Fame (w/Israel Nash Gripka – Pray For Rain)
  • Seven That Spells – The Death and Resurrection of Krautrock: Omega (2018)

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Blake Fleming is an American percussionist, author, and educator renowned for his contributions to and music. Born in , he began drumming at a young age and rose to prominence as the co-founder and of influential bands including Dazzling Killmen in the early 1990s, Laddio Bolocko, and (2003–2006), a band that later won a Grammy Award. Fleming's career extends beyond band performance to significant solo and collaborative work, including recordings with artists such as , , and of Butthole Surfers. He has been recognized in Spin magazine's list of the 100 Greatest Drummers of Alternative Music for his innovative and technically demanding style. In 2019, Fleming published The Book of Rhythm, a comprehensive documenting over 5,000 rhythms from various global traditions, which achieved top rankings in the Modern Drummer Readers' Poll and has been distributed in more than 20 countries. As an educator based in , Fleming offers online drum lessons, clinics, and workshops worldwide, while continuing his recording career with solo percussion projects such as the 2024 album The Beat Fantastic, which explores funky, kinetic rhythms through independent production. His work has been featured in outlets including , , , and , underscoring his enduring impact on percussion and .

Early life

Upbringing and family background

Blake Fleming was born in 1972 in , a river city in the American Midwest with a rich tradition of community parades and musical ensembles. Although limited details are publicly available about his immediate family, Fleming grew up in this Midwestern environment, which emphasized local traditions like marching bands and percussion groups. His early years were shaped by Alton's vibrant community life, including school activities and public events such as holiday celebrations, where performances were common. These experiences introduced him to rhythmic percussion elements before any formal musical instruction, fostering an initial fascination with drumming amid the region's brass and snare traditions. This foundational exposure in a working-class town like Alton laid the groundwork for his later pursuits in .

Introduction to music and initial training

Blake Fleming began his musical journey with percussion at the age of eight in 1980, inspired initially by a neighbor who was a . He soon joined the Alton Colonial in , where he performed at public events including Fourth of July celebrations and for dignitaries such as President . The corps had previously performed for Prince Charles during his 1977 visit to . This early involvement immersed him in traditional drumming styles, and he later participated in Scottish bagpipe bands alongside World War II veterans, exploring ensemble playing and Scottish musical traditions until around age 16. Fleming's foundational training advanced when he studied under Jerry Whitaker, the East Coast Rudimental Snare Drum Champion from West Point with a military background, while participating in the fife and drum corps. Whitaker's rigorous instruction in St. Louis emphasized snare drum rudiments, technical precision, and ensemble coordination, providing Fleming with essential skills in reading music and maintaining rhythmic discipline. These lessons, conducted in a structured group setting, helped develop his versatility across percussion instruments and prepared him for more complex musical applications. By the late 1980s, Fleming's interests shifted toward the burgeoning and hardcore scenes, which profoundly shaped his approach to drumming. He drew inspiration from the raw energy and integrity of bands such as Black Flag and the , whose concise, intense performances and DIY ethos resonated with the St. Louis underground music environment of the time. This exposure encouraged Fleming to blend punk's aggression with his technical background, setting the stage for his entry into more experimental and professional scenes.

Career beginnings

Formation of Dazzling Killmen

Blake Fleming co-founded the band Dazzling Killmen in in the , area, alongside guitarist and vocalist Nick Sakes and bassist Darin Gray. The initial trio drew from and hardcore influences, with Fleming providing intricate, propulsive drumming that anchored the band's emerging angular style. Shortly after recording their debut album, the group expanded to a quartet by adding guitarist Tim Garrigan, a fellow student, which allowed for more layered and dissonant compositions. The band's early output included several 7-inch singles on independent labels, such as "Numb / Bottom Feeder" in 1990 on Sawtooth Records and "The Torture / Ghost Limb" in 1991 on Crime Life Records. Their debut full-length album, Dig Out the Switch, was released in 1992 on Intellectual Convulsion, capturing the raw intensity of their live performances with tracks emphasizing chaotic rhythms and abrupt shifts. In 1994, Dazzling Killmen signed with Skin Graft Records and issued their second album, Face of Collapse, produced by , which further refined their sound through explosive dynamics and Fleming's precise yet unpredictable percussion. Following extensive U.S. tours that solidified their reputation in the underground scene, Dazzling Killmen disbanded in the fall of 1995, just before a scheduled tour. Fleming's drumming played a pivotal role in defining the band's signature chaotic and angular aesthetic, blending complexity with aggression to create a volatile, high-energy framework.

Early tours and Japanese collaborations

Following the disbandment of Dazzling Killmen in the fall of 1995, Blake Fleming began touring extensively as a session and touring drummer with various underground acts across the United States. This transitional period marked a shift from the band's structured intensity to more fluid, improvisational collaborations in the noise and experimental rock scenes. In 1996, Fleming joined the Japanese noise rock band Zeni Geva as their temporary drummer for their U.S. tour, replacing departing member Eiki Noro and supporting the group's high-energy performances alongside acts like Today Is The Day and Stinking Lizaveta. His contributions included live shows and radio sessions at stations such as WFMU and KFJC, where the band captured their raw, dissonant sound in broadcast recordings. Although primarily focused on the American leg, this stint extended Fleming's reach into international noise circuits, building on Dazzling Killmen's legacy as a foundation for his evolving role in experimental percussion. Fleming's time with immersed him in the band's aggressive, aesthetics, characterized by blistering tempos and unconventional structures led by guitarist K.K. Null and bassist Mitsuru Tabata. This exposure highlighted the global dimensions of the genre, shaping his appreciation for boundary-pushing rhythms and sonic experimentation that informed his later projects.

Mid-career developments

Laddio Bolocko and relocation to New York

Following his participation in the 1996 U.S. tour with the Japanese band , drummer Blake Fleming relocated from to , New York, in the mid-1990s, drawn by the city's vibrant scene and low-rent rehearsal spaces. This move, influenced by his prior experiences with Japanese noise acts during earlier tours, positioned him at the heart of New York City's underground noise and communities. In 1996, Fleming co-founded the instrumental noise rock band Laddio Bolocko alongside bassist Ben Armstrong, guitarist Drew St. Ivany, and saxophonist Marcus DeGrazia, all Midwest transplants who shared a cramped $450-per-month practice and living space in Brooklyn's neighborhood. The band's name, a playful phrase coined by Fleming, reflected their irreverent approach to music-making, emphasizing communal over conventional structures. Initially experimenting in this shared environment, they quickly developed a reputation for intense, high-volume sessions that blended repetition and exploration. Laddio Bolocko's sound centered on free-form jazz-rock , fusing rock's aggression with free jazz's spontaneity, often comparisons to and while maintaining a distinct, trance-inducing through extended jams and textural drones. Over their active years, they released three key recordings on the Hungarian Records label: the debut Strange Warmings of Laddio Bolocko in 1997, the full-length In Real Time in 1998, and the EP As If By Remote in 1999, each showcasing their evolving emphasis on live energy and minimalist repetition that built into chaotic crescendos. To escape New York City's pressures, the band temporarily relocated to an abandoned upstate ski lodge in 1999, where they recorded much of their later material in a more isolated, surreal setting. The group disbanded in late 2000 amid mounting internal strains from their demanding communal lifestyle, relentless touring, and the emotional toll of constant collaboration, which Fleming later described as "a lot to demand of any human relationship." Despite their short tenure, Laddio Bolocko's innovative blend of and left a lasting impact on New York's underground, with archival releases like Live and Unreleased: 1997-2000 (2015) later highlighting their raw, unpolished vitality.

Involvement with The Mars Volta

Following the dissolution of At the Drive-In, Blake Fleming co-founded in March 2001 in alongside vocalist and guitarist , after relocating from New York. As the band's founding drummer, Fleming provided the rhythmic foundation for their initial creative explorations, drawing on his experimental background to shape the group's sound. He recorded drums on the band's earliest demos, notably contributing to the 2001 single "The Haunt of Roulette Dares/Cicatriz ESP," which captured the raw energy of their roots evolving into intricate, psychedelic compositions. Fleming's early tenure was marked by intensive rehearsals and live performances that helped solidify The Mars Volta's reputation for improvisational intensity, though he departed before the band entered the studio for their full-length debut. His exit occurred prior to the 2003 release of , allowing the group to refine their lineup for the album's production. Despite his absence from the core recording sessions, Fleming's foundational beats influenced several tracks, establishing a polyrhythmic complexity that became a hallmark of the band's style. In mid-2006, after Jon left amid the promotional cycle for , Fleming The to handle live duties, stepping in for the North American tour that included opening slots for the ' trek. During this period in 2006, he delivered powerful performances on extended setlists featuring songs like "Viscera Eyes," where his dynamic drumming—characterized by rapid fills and shifting meters—added visceral drive to the band's theatrical live energy. Fleming also supported related projects, such as contributions to Omar Rodríguez-López's soundtrack for A Manual Dexterity: Soundtrack to a Fictitious Film. His second stint ended later that year, before was announced as the new permanent in January 2007, marking Fleming's final involvement with the group at that time.

Later projects and collaborations

Electric Turn To Me and other bands

After the breakup of Laddio Bolocko, Blake Fleming formed Electric Turn To Me in the summer of alongside Marcus DeGrazia (both ex-Laddio Bolocko) and guitarist James Wilk (ex-Imaginary Icons). The band drew inspiration from 1960s psychedelic pop acts such as and The Pretty Things, blending structures with swirling, improvisational elements and German-influenced vocals from singer Silke. Electric Turn To Me released their self-titled debut album in on No Quarter Records, featuring tracks like "First Crimes" and "Watch Out for the Witch" that showcased Fleming's dynamic, propulsive drumming amid hazy organ textures and reverb-drenched guitars. The group toured extensively across the and , building a in underground scenes before mutually disbanding in October 2005. During this transitional mid-2000s period, Fleming remained active in New York's noise and improvisation communities, often collaborating in fluid, short-lived projects that emphasized free-form percussion and sonic experimentation. One such outlet was his ongoing drum-and-saxophone duo with DeGrazia, which performed live sets highlighting spontaneous interplay rooted in their Laddio Bolocko foundations. Fleming also played drums in The Rollo Treadway, a Brooklyn-based ensemble formed in 2006 by David Sandholm. The band released a self-titled debut album in 2008 on Rollosound Records, where Fleming's versatile rhythms supported Sandholm's melodic, retro-infused songcraft on tracks like "Kidnapped." This short-lived group represented Fleming's exploration of more structured yet eccentric pop forms amid his broader experimental pursuits.

Studio sessions with notable artists

Fleming contributed drums to several tracks on ' covers album (2009), led by , including performances that blended the band's acoustic rock style with Fleming's precise and dynamic percussion approach. His work on this project marked an early freelance effort in New York, showcasing his adaptability to indie and contexts outside his band commitments. In 2004, Fleming collaborated with on Omar Rodríguez-López's instrumental album A Manual Dexterity: Soundtrack Volume One, providing drums on multiple tracks alongside Frusciante's guitar contributions, which highlighted Fleming's ability to navigate experimental and soundscapes. This session underscored his growing reputation as a versatile session drummer in the progressive and scenes. He further expanded this role in 2006 by drumming on Kim Taylor's folk-infused album I Feel Like a Fading Light, where his subtle, supportive rhythms complemented Taylor's introspective songwriting and earned the record recognition as an NPR World Cafe "Album of the Week." From the mid-2000s into the , Fleming engaged in diverse studio work, including sessions with Butthole Surfers frontman , where his energetic drumming aligned with Haynes' eccentric punk and noise influences. He also drummed on Gripka's debut New York Town (2009), contributing to its Americana roots sound with layered percussion that enhanced the album's atmospheric depth. Additionally, Fleming composed percussion soundtracks and performed live for multimedia artist Janet Biggs' video installations, such as Wet Exit (2011) and Hit Me With Your Rhythm Stick (2006), integrating drums with visual elements in projects exploring themes of rhythm and movement. These endeavors reflected Fleming's broadening scope as a studio collaborator in interdisciplinary art forms.

Solo career and recent work

Solo releases and experimental percussion

Blake Fleming began his solo career in the early 2010s with a focus on percussion-driven works that showcased his improvisational skills and experimental approach to drumming. His debut solo album, Time's Up (2013), consists entirely of percussion compositions designed as concise, song-length pieces (typically 3-4 minutes) built solely from drums and percussion elements, blending influences from hip-hop rhythms and . This was followed by Alive and Alone in (2014), a live recording captured during a performance on April 29, 2011, at St. Peter's Church in Chelsea, New York, as part of the "Echo the Elements" production by Our Silent Canvas; the album features Fleming solo on drums, gongs, and cymbals, emphasizing raw, unaccompanied percussion in an acoustic setting. In the late and early , Fleming explored hybrids of electronic and acoustic percussion in his independent releases. Suicide Italian Style (digital release 2019; vinyl 2020), a collaborative project led by multi-instrumentalist Joe Ferrara under the moniker The Andretti, integrates Fleming's drumming with punk-jazz-exotica elements, creating a wild, reverb-drenched soundscape that fuses acoustic percussion with experimental electronic textures and cinematic . Similarly, his Drum Killah EP () pushes acoustic percussion into electronic territory through techniques that impart a digital feel to traditional drumming, as heard in tracks like "The Girl with the Electric Pants," drawing on influences from to rock while maintaining a core of intense, varied percussion interplay. Fleming's most recent solo effort, The Beat Fantastic (released August 13, 2024), expands on these ideas with a full percussion album that remixes tracks from Drum Killah alongside new material, resulting in twelve aggressive yet varied pieces that highlight combined with kit drums for an intense, hybrid sonic palette. The album's creation process, which involved independent production and a commitment to vinyl release, was detailed in a feature aired on November 11, 2025, where Fleming discussed his approach to forging experimental percussion works that bridge acoustic roots with modern electronic sensibilities.

Reunion efforts and 2020s activities

In April 2025, Blake Fleming announced the reunion of Dazzling Killmen, the experimental math rock band he co-founded in 1991, marking the group's return after a nearly three-decade hiatus from live performances. Founding members Fleming on drums and vocalist/guitarist Nick Sakes were joined by bassist Evan Jagels and guitarist Darryl Thomas for a series of shows, including an appearance at the Dark Days Bright Nights Fest in Richmond, Virginia, from September 26 to 28, and a performance on November 21 in Chicago. The reunion also coincided with the reissue of the band's 1993 debut album Dig Out the Switch, remastered and made available with a full stream, as discussed in an interview with Fleming highlighting the original recording's challenges under producers Steve Albini and Jeff Tweedy. Fleming's 2020s activities extended to collaborative live ensembles, emphasizing improvisational and jazz-inflected explorations. In early 2025, he performed with the Jazz Trio alongside guitarist Wyatt Ambrose and bassist Evan Jagels, offering reimagined takes on Hendrix's catalog in trio settings at venues like the Yager Museum in . The group continued with performances such as one on October 24 at Bushel in , where they presented fresh arrangements of classics like "." On May 3, 2025, Fleming took part in Soloists in the Round presented by the Roxbury Arts Group at the Headwaters Arts Center in Stamford, New York, featuring individual showcases and group improvisations with on guitar and Jagels on bass, including a gamelan-inspired solo drum piece by Fleming. These outings underscored Fleming's ongoing commitment to experimental percussion in intimate, multidisciplinary formats throughout the decade.

Teaching and authorship

Academic role at SUNY Oneonta

In 2008, Blake Fleming joined the at Oneonta (SUNY Oneonta) as an of percussion, where he has since taught courses focused on drum set, rudiments, and experimental techniques. His instruction emphasizes practical skills drawn from his professional background, including the adaptation of and tribal percussion styles to modern drum set playing. Beyond his campus responsibilities, Fleming offers global online drum lessons through his personal website, blakethedrummer.com, conducted via and accessible to students worldwide using their own equipment. He is an endorsed artist with , utilizing and promoting their sticks, mallets, beaters, and brushes in both teaching and performance contexts. Fleming's teaching has had a profound impact on students, who credit him with fostering improvisation and cross-genre applications informed by his experiences in bands. For instance, former students describe how his lessons connected foundational rudiments—such as the 26 to 40 essential snare patterns—with versatile applications across , prog, and styles, building confidence and enabling career advancements. In 2023, SUNY Oneonta students rallied with a garnering nearly 700 signatures to support his retention, highlighting his role as an "invaluable asset" who "changes students' lives" through compassionate and expert guidance.

Publication of The Book of Rhythm

Blake Fleming published The Book of Rhythm in via his independent imprint Skin & Stick Publishing, following a successful campaign launched in late 2018. The 240-page volume functions as a comprehensive , cataloging 5,096 distinct rhythmic permutations based on 3-, 4-, 5-, 6-, 7-, 8-, 9-, and 12-beat structures using quarter notes, eighth notes, and dotted quarter notes, adaptable for all instruments but with a focus on percussion. It features organized exercises and study suggestions tailored for drummers, enabling practitioners to build technical proficiency and apply these patterns across diverse musical genres, from rock and to experimental forms. Upon release, the garnered notable acclaim in professional circles, securing a top 5 position among instructional publications in the 2020 Modern Drummer Reader’s Poll, highlighting its influence on contemporary percussion education. Distribution has extended globally, with copies sold in more than 20 countries, underscoring its value as a practical resource for expanding rhythmic complexity without relying on traditional notation limitations. Fleming supports the book's concepts through companion materials, including online video demonstrations and instructional workshops that illustrate rhythmic applications in contexts. These resources, often integrated into his global clinics, offer hands-on extensions of the text's exercises, fostering deeper engagement for students at various skill levels.

Musical style

Drumming techniques and influences

Blake Fleming's signature drumming style is marked by polyrhythmic complexity and precision, often blending intricate, syncopated patterns with and fury. His approach features ultra-precise rhythms and intense delivery, as exemplified in Dazzling Killmen's 1994 album Face of Collapse, where he contributes herky-jerky grooves and weird time signatures. This fusion creates a that shifts from controlled mathematical structures to explosive , drawing on progressive techniques for a fiendishly syncopated pummel. Fleming's influences span punk and hardcore, evident in his early punk-rock-oriented playing with Dazzling Killmen, which echoed the raw energy of bands like Black Flag. He incorporated Japanese noise elements after touring with in 1996, adopting their aggressive, experimental intensity into his work with groups like Laddio Bolocko. His jazz background, developed through classical training and studies in a jazz program, further shaped his percussive versatility, allowing seamless integration of improvisational freedom. In solo projects, such as Time's Up, he extends these influences through overdubbed solo-percussion arrangements that emphasize rhythmic experimentation without additional instrumentation. Fleming's contributions earned him recognition as #29 on SPIN's 2013 list of the 100 Greatest Drummers of Alternative Music, highlighting his role in defining experimental percussion. His and precision have been praised in for their innovative fury and in reviews for powering live performances with unrelenting intensity.

Contributions to experimental rock

Fleming's drumming with Dazzling Killmen in the early played a pivotal role in pioneering in the Midwest scene, particularly through the band's fusion of complex polyrhythms, aggression, and jazz-inflected , which set a template for the genre's rhythmic intensity in and surrounding areas. As the band's founding drummer, his precise yet chaotic percussive approach helped distinguish Dazzling Killmen as one of the region's hardest-hitting acts, influencing the evolution of progressive from roots. His involvement in international tours further bridged U.S. and Japanese communities, notably through his role as for Zeni Geva's 1996 North American Freedom Bondage tour, where he adapted to the band's extreme, dissonant structures, fostering exchanges in experimental percussion. This period highlighted Fleming's versatility in navigating high-stakes, rhythmically demanding collaborations that expanded the global reach of noise-infused rock drumming. In progressive acts like , Fleming elevated percussion's prominence by contributing foundational rhythmic frameworks during the band's early formation, laying groundwork for their intricate, genre-blending soundscapes that integrated with Latin and psychedelic elements. His work there underscored the drummer's role as a compositional architect, pushing boundaries in progressive rock's rhythmic complexity. Fleming's techniques have inspired subsequent generations of experimentalists in and , with drummers citing his polyrhythmic precision and dynamic control as benchmarks for blending structured chaos with free-form expression in acts drawing from and noise traditions. His legacy endures through features in retrospective articles, such as the 2024 PostBurnout.com discussion of his career-spanning impact on , and continues via teaching methodologies that disseminate his approaches to new percussionists, alongside band reunions that revive his foundational contributions.

References

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