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Ronald Bruner Jr.
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Key Information
Ronald Ray Bruner Jr. (born October 5, 1982) is an American drummer, composer and producer. He has played with hardcore punk/crossover thrash band Suicidal Tendencies.[1] Bruner was part of the band that received a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Jazz Album in 2010 for The Stanley Clarke Band.[2]
He is the older brother of musicians Stephen Bruner (better known as Thundercat) and Jameel Bruner (also known as Kintaro). He frequently performs alongside Thundercat, Kamasi Washington, and cousin Terrace Martin as a member of the Los Angeles jazz collective West Coast Get Down.[3] In 2015, he appeared with the collective on Washington's major-label debut album, The Epic.[4]
Discography
[edit]Studio albums
[edit]| Title | Album details |
|---|---|
| Triumph |
|
Other appearances
[edit]| Year | Artist | Release | Additional information |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2004 | Young Jazz Giants | Young Jazz Giants | Drums on full album |
| 2007 | Kamasi Washington | The Proclamation | |
| 2008 | SMV | Thunder | Drums on "Maestros de Las Frecuencias Bajas", "Lil' Victa" and "Grits" |
| 2009 | Suicidal Tendencies | Year of the Cycos | Drums on "It's Automatic" |
| 2010 | The Stanley Clarke Band | The Stanley Clarke Band | Drums on full album |
| George Duke | Déjà Vu | ||
| Suicidal Tendencies | No Mercy Fool!/The Suicidal Family | ||
| 2012 | Kenny Garrett | Seeds from the Underground | |
| 2013 | Suicidal Tendencies | 13 | Drums on "God Only Knows Who I Am", "Till My Last Breath" and "Life... (Can't Live with It, Can't Live Without It)" |
| George Duke | Brazilian Fusion | Drums on full album | |
| 2014 | Flying Lotus | You're Dead! | Drums on "Cold Dead" |
| 2015 | Kendrick Lamar | To Pimp a Butterfly | Drums on "The Blacker the Berry" |
| Kamasi Washington | The Epic | Drums on "Isabelle", "Final Thought", "The Rhythm Changes", "Miss Understanding", "Seven Prayers", "Henrietta Our Hero", "The Magnificent 7", "Re Run Home", "Malcolm's Theme" and "The Message" | |
| 2016 | Terrace Martin | Velvet Portraits | Drums on "Curly Martin" |
| Kenny Garrett | Do Your Dance! | Drums on full album | |
| 2017 | Cameron Graves | Planetary Prince | |
| Kamasi Washington | Harmony of Difference | ||
| 2018 | Heaven and Earth | ||
| 2019 | Flying Lotus | Flamagra | Drums on "Takashi" and "Thank U Malcolm"; backing vocals on "Find Your Own Way Home" |
| 2020 | Thundercat | It Is What It Is | Drums on "Innerstellar Love" |
| 2021 | Kenny Garrett | Sounds From the Ancestors | Drums on full album |
| 2024 | Kamasi Washington | Fearless Movement | Drums on "Lesanu", "Asha the First", "The Visionary", "Together", "The Garden Path", "Interstellar Peace (The Last Stance)", "Road to Self (KO)", "Lines in the Sand" and "Prologue"; composition on "Get Lit" |
| 2025 | Mac Miller | Balloonerism | Drums and co-production on "5 Dollar Pony Rides" |
References
[edit]- ^ "Suicidal Tendencies: Footage from We the People Festival posted online". Blabbermouth. September 29, 2008. Archived from the original on June 6, 2011. Retrieved June 12, 2010.
- ^ "Grammy Award Results for Ronald Bruner Jr". grammy.com. Archived from the original on August 23, 2019. Retrieved February 27, 2020.
- ^ Hobbs, Thomas (June 26, 2020). "The history of the West Coast Get Down, LA's jazz giants". Dazed. Retrieved January 9, 2023.
- ^ "BIO". Kamasiwashington.com. Retrieved January 30, 2020.
Ronald Bruner Jr.
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Early life
Family background
Ronald Ray Bruner Jr. was born on October 5, 1982, in Los Angeles, California.[10][11] As the eldest son in a deeply musical family, he grew up immersed in an environment where music was a central pillar of daily life.[5][12] His father, Ronald Bruner Sr., is a renowned session drummer who performed and recorded with major artists including Diana Ross, the Temptations, and Gladys Knight.[4][11][13] Bruner Sr.'s career as a professional musician and bandleader in the Los Angeles scene provided an early and profound inspiration for his son, shaping the household's rhythmic foundation.[4][5] Bruner Jr. shares the family legacy with his younger brothers: Stephen "Thundercat" Bruner, a celebrated bassist known for his work in jazz, funk, and hip-hop, and Jameel Bruner, a keyboardist and producer prominent in similar genres through projects like the band the Internet.[10][12][13] The Bruners' parents, both active in a church band—his mother, Pamela Bruner, playing flute and percussion, and his father on drums—fostered a home where music was the norm, featuring regular exposure to diverse styles such as jazz, funk, R&B, and church gospel through family play and weekend listening sessions.[5][11][14] This upbringing emphasized musical proficiency from a young age, with instruments like his father's drum set readily available for practice and experimentation.[5][4]Musical beginnings
Ronald Bruner Jr. began playing drums at the age of two, captivated by his father's red drumset and the rhythms he heard in his parents' church music environment. Growing up in a musical household, he quickly displayed a natural aptitude, often mimicking beats from an early age, even while in the womb according to family accounts. His initial experiences involved exploring his father's professional kit, which served as his first formal introduction to the instrument before he developed his own setup.[5] Under the guidance of his father, Ronald Bruner Sr., a renowned session drummer who had performed with artists like Diana Ross and The Temptations, young Bruner received intensive early training. Starting around age two, Bruner Sr. took him weekly to the Professional Drum Shop in Hollywood, where he spent weekends practicing on various drum kits and absorbing diverse musical styles, from jazz fusion to pop. This hands-on mentorship emphasized versatility and musical conviction, laying the groundwork for his technical proficiency without rigid daily routines documented in early years, though consistent exposure fostered rapid development. By age eight, he was delving into complex jazz fusion techniques inspired by drummers like Billy Cobham.[11][4][15] Bruner made his first public performances as a toddler, appearing at the NAMM music merchant show at ages two and three, where he played in front of large crowds, showcasing his precocious talent. These early gigs, often in family-oriented or church settings influenced by his parents' involvement, marked the beginning of his stage presence. During his school years in Los Angeles, he attended Locke High School in Watts, participating in the renowned music program directed by composer Reggie Andrews, which provided structured ensemble training in jazz and percussion fundamentals. This educational involvement honed his collaborative skills and solidified his foundation in ensemble playing before transitioning to professional opportunities.[5]Career
Early collaborations
Bruner entered the professional music scene in his late teens, initially through the hardcore punk and crossover thrash genre. At age 18 in 2000, he joined the band Suicidal Tendencies as their drummer, contributing to their aggressive sound characterized by rapid tempos and mosh-pit energy during extensive tours and studio recordings.[5] Parallel to his punk commitments, Bruner began performing in jazz settings with local Los Angeles ensembles in the early 2000s, drawing on the solid drumming foundations he developed in youth through family and school influences. These gigs included session work with emerging neo-soul and jazz artists.[16] He also participated in the Young Jazz Giants collective around 2004, collaborating with fellow LA musicians like Kamasi Washington and his brother Stephen Bruner on exploratory jazz performances that highlighted his technical versatility. In the mid-2000s, Bruner expanded his opportunities by frequently traveling to New York City, immersing himself in its vibrant jazz ecosystem and securing higher-profile sideman roles. This period marked the beginning of his touring work with acclaimed saxophonist Kenny Garrett, blending post-bop with funk grooves and establishing him as a go-to drummer for established jazz figures.[17] Through these diverse engagements in underground punk circuits and intimate jazz venues, Bruner cultivated a reputation as a session drummer capable of merging the raw intensity of punk with the nuanced improvisation of jazz, often performing in informal LA and NYC scenes that bridged genres and fostered his adaptive style.[5][3]West Coast Get Down involvement
Ronald Bruner Jr. is a founding member of the West Coast Get Down, a loose collective of Los Angeles-based jazz musicians that coalesced in the late 2000s from earlier high school collaborations known as the Young Jazz Giants.[6][7] The group includes Bruner Jr.'s brothers Stephen "Thundercat" Bruner on bass and Jameel Bruner on keyboards, alongside saxophonist Kamasi Washington, bassist Miles Mosley, pianist Cameron Graves, trombonist Ryan Porter, and others such as drummer Tony Austin and vocalist Patrice Quinn.[18][19] This tight-knit ensemble, often described as a musical family, emphasized mutual support and shared creative spaces to develop their sound.[7] Bruner Jr. made key contributions to the collective's experimental fusion of jazz, hip-hop, and funk, drawing on diverse influences like George Duke and DJ Quik to create a vibrant, improvisational style that revitalized the Los Angeles jazz scene.[6][18] Rehearsals frequently took place at Bruner Jr.'s home studio, where members like Washington would continue jamming after school band practices, honing extended compositions and rhythmic interplay over marathon sessions that sometimes lasted 30 days.[20][6] His propulsive, versatile drumming provided the rhythmic backbone, blending spiritual jazz elements with modern beats to bridge traditional and contemporary genres.[18] A pivotal moment came with Bruner Jr.'s participation in Kamasi Washington's landmark 2015 album The Epic, where his dynamic drumming anchored the three-hour, three-disc project, featuring a 10-piece band augmented by orchestra and choir to explore epic, boundary-pushing narratives.[7][6] This recording, drawn from years of collective material, exemplified the group's innovative approach and helped propel their influence into mainstream awareness.[20] Bruner Jr.'s involvement with the West Coast Get Down has remained ongoing through collective events and side projects, including high-energy live performances at major festivals such as Coachella in 2016 and 2018, where he delivered standout drum solos and supported Washington's sets with the full ensemble's improvisational flair.[18][21] These appearances underscored the collective's commitment to communal creativity and their role in attracting younger audiences to jazz fusion.[19]Major projects and productions
Ronald Bruner Jr. made significant contributions as a drummer to Kendrick Lamar's landmark album To Pimp a Butterfly (2015), providing dynamic percussion that infused hip-hop with jazz sensibilities. His work on tracks such as "The Blacker the Berry" helped establish the album's rhythmic complexity and edge, drawing from his expertise in live performance to support Lamar's intricate lyrical delivery.[22][6] On Flying Lotus's conceptual album You're Dead! (2014), Bruner Jr. handled drums on key tracks like "Cold Dead," blending live percussion with electronic production to create a seamless fusion of genres. This collaboration highlighted his ability to adapt jazz drumming techniques to experimental soundscapes, enhancing the album's exploration of mortality through rhythmic intensity and texture.[23][24] Bruner Jr. has frequently collaborated with his younger brother, bassist Thundercat (Stephen Bruner), on multiple projects, bringing a familial cohesion to their work evident in its playful yet profound grooves.[25][9] In a more recent high-profile effort, Bruner Jr. contributed production and drumming to Mac Miller's posthumous album Balloonerism (2025), alongside Thundercat and Jameel Bruner. His jazz-infused beats elevated several hip-hop tracks, such as "5 Dollar Pony Rides," adding layered percussion and improvisational flair to Miller's introspective flows during sessions recorded in 2014–2016.[26][27]Musical style
Influences and technique
Ronald Bruner Jr.'s drumming style is profoundly shaped by his father, Ronald Bruner Sr., a renowned fusion drummer who exposed him to a wide array of genres from an early age, including jazz, R&B, funk, rock acts like The Beatles and Mötley Crüe, and hip-hop pioneers such as Run-D.M.C..[6][11] This foundational influence instilled a versatile approach, blending improvisational jazz elements with rock and hip-hop grooves, further refined by icons like Billy Cobham, Vinnie Colaiuta, and Dennis Chambers, whose fusion and speed-metal sensibilities informed his genre-spanning technique..[3] Mentors such as George Duke emphasized authenticity in expression, encouraging Bruner to prioritize musical honesty over technical display..[5] His technique is characterized by powerful execution that produces a resonant, big drum sound, coupled with clean articulation and exceptional speed, allowing seamless flow between hands and feet in complex settings..[3] Bruner favors acoustic kits, often customized through endorsements like his TAMA Starclassic setup, to achieve dynamic control that spans subtle phrasing to explosive bursts..[28] This mastery evolved from an initial punk-infused aggression, honed in high-energy rock contexts, to a more restrained, nuanced jazz delivery, as learned through collaborations that taught him to channel ideas effectively rather than overwhelming the music..[11] Bruner's approach maintains a deep pocket groove while embracing adventurous improvisation, adapting his sound and touch to suit diverse musical environments, from straight-ahead jazz to fusion explorations..[3] This evolution reflects a commitment to versatility, drawing on familial roots in fusion while incorporating broader influences to create a balanced, expressive style..[4]Signature sound
Ronald Bruner Jr.'s drumming is characterized by its genre-busting hybridity, seamlessly blending straight-ahead jazz swing with elements of funk, hip-hop, and even metal influences, resulting in deep, body-cutting grooves that maintain a steady intensity while allowing for layered complexity.[3][29] His powerful technique produces a big, muscular sound with clean articulation and remarkable speed, often shifting between propulsive funk vamps and trap-infused beats that evoke a sense of momentum and possibility.[3][25] This elastic adaptability creates a propulsive yet dynamic feel, as heard in his contributions to albums like Triumph, where programmed drums add electronic textures alongside acoustic percussion for a modern fusion edge.[7][30] In live settings, Bruner employs a high-energy approach marked by aggressive, vengeful strikes reminiscent of fusion legends like Dennis Chambers infused with death metal intensity, enabling endurance during extended improvisational segments.[18] His solos often feature writhing precision and compositional savvy, opening up space for bandmates while building tension through rapid fills and dynamic shifts, fostering audience engagement by driving danceable, good-vibe rhythms that encourage movement.[25][7] This use of texture—balancing restraint with explosive outbursts—highlights his deep pocket, allowing him to scale performances from intimate collectives to larger festival ensembles without losing improvisational flow.[5][3] Bruner's signature sound has significantly impacted contemporary music by bridging underground jazz scenes with mainstream hip-hop and fusion, as exemplified in his West Coast Get Down collaborations that integrate soulful grooves with electronic and trap elements to revitalize modern jazz's accessibility.[18][7] His work on projects like Kendrick Lamar's To Pimp a Butterfly demonstrates this cross-pollination, where jazz improvisation meets hip-hop beats to create unpredictable, genre-defying propulsion that influences emerging artists across scenes.[31] This bridging continues in recent collaborations, such as his drumming on Kamasi Washington's Fearless Movement (2024), further revitalizing jazz's accessibility.[32]Discography
Studio albums
Ronald Bruner Jr.'s debut and only studio album to date as a bandleader is Triumph, released on March 3, 2017, via World Galaxy Records.[33] The album comprises 11 tracks that fuse jazz fusion with electronic, soul, R&B, and progressive elements, reflecting Bruner's experimental approach to drumming and composition.[29] Recorded over an eight-year period during sessions that overlapped with Kamasi Washington's The Epic, it emphasizes live percussion performances rather than programmed loops, showcasing Bruner's virtuosic technique through intricate rhythms and dynamic interplay.[6] The project was self-produced by Bruner in Los Angeles studios, with him handling writing, lyrics, and arrangements across all tracks.[34] The album's thematic core revolves around personal triumph and creative exploration, evident in titles like "True Story" and "Open the Gate," which convey resilience and openness through extended improvisational structures.[35] Guest appearances enhance its collaborative spirit, including his brother Stephen "Thundercat" Bruner on bass for "Take the Time," the late George Duke on keyboards for "Geome Deome," and rappers Mac Miller and Danielle Withers on "Sensation."[36] Other contributors include Taylor "Dov" Graves on "Doesn’t Matter." The full tracklist is as follows:| Track | Title | Featured Artist(s) | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | True Story | - | 3:32 |
| 2 | Take the Time | Thundercat | 4:56 |
| 3 | She'll Never Change | - | 4:36 |
| 4 | Geome Deome | George Duke | 7:44 |
| 5 | Whenever | - | 4:02 |
| 6 | Doesn’t Matter | Taylor "Dov" Graves | 4:50 |
| 7 | Open the Gate | - | 10:04 |
| 8 | One Night | - | 4:30 |
| 9 | Sensation | Mac Miller, Danielle Withers | 4:02 |
| 10 | To You / For You | - | 6:54 |
| 11 | Chick's Tune | - | 8:58 |
