I went back to one of my classic Broadway Drumming 101 conversations this week, and it reminded me why I started this series in the first place. Years ago I sat down with Rich Rosenzweig when he was holding the drum chair for the revival of ‘Company.’ Now he’s driving the bus for Ragtime at Lincoln Center, and revisiting this talk brought everything back. We got into the real work of subbing on Broadway, the pressure of matching the regular drummer’s feel, and the quiet connection with the conductor that determines whether you get asked back.
In the clip, Rich breaks down the truth every serious drummer needs to hear. Subbing isn’t about chops or showing what you can do. It’s about matching the show so well that the conductor can close their eyes and feel the same pulse, the same sound, the same flow they get from the regular drummer. They’re not looking for surprises. They want stability. If you’re not giving accuracy, presence, and attention to detail, they feel it immediately.
Rich also talks about how conductors watch the monitor even when they say they don’t. They’re looking for someone who is locked in and communicating clearly. Plenty of great drummers have fallen short because they didn’t prepare the book with real precision or didn’t read the conductor the way the regular drummer does. Most people never hear that part of the job. Subbing is consistency, connection, and trust.
This conversation is one of my favorites, and I’m bringing it back. Subscribe to Broadway Drumming 101 so you’re notified when the re-release goes live. If you’re trying to get into Broadway or looking to sharpen your subbing skills, this episode will show you what the job really demands.
Rich Rosenzweig has played more than a dozen Broadway shows and appeared on multiple cast recordings. He’s been the drummer for the Kennedy Center Honors orchestra for more than a decade, toured nationally and internationally, and has been the regular drummer for City Center’s Encores! series. He performs in progressive jazz ensembles, including his own East Down Septet, teaches privately, and has written several feature screenplays.
More episodes like this are coming. Stay tuned.










