My brother, the rhythmic conceptualist

Remembrance of beats passed.

Pete Zeldman playing drums, long ago and far away.

Today would have been my brother Pete Zeldman’s 68th birthday. 

Pete Zeldman was a virtuoso American drummer, composer, and rhythmic theorist renowned for his pioneering work in multiple pedal orchestration and extreme four-way limb independence. Often described as a “rhythmic conceptualist,” he was celebrated for his ability to play multiple simultaneous tempos and complex contrapuntal rhythms.

The Legend of Pete Zeldman

His Music

He played with Steve Vai, Sonny Stitt, Joe Satriani, and many others (including a long-running collaboration with Cindy Shapiro, Rob Shapiro, and Jeff Virgo in the arty pop band 2.5D, a legendary improv session with Jaco Pastorius, and a short stint with John Lurie and the Lounge Lizards), and was a longtime instructor at The Drummer’s Collective in NYC. His LPs include Other Not Elsewhere (1991), Twilight Walks Over (2009), and the posthumous release Enigma, (2024). 

His Spirit

Pete was a cut-up who once greeted me by dashing into the hallway of his apartment building stark naked, shouting “Old Pete Zeldman’s got a few tricks up his sleeve,” leaping up and clicking his heels in mid-air.

He was absurd, brilliant, obsessive, kind, compassionate, and generous.

He moved to England in the 1990s where he continued to teach and put on workshops in the EU.

He was my only brother. I loved him. For moments during  our difficult childhoods, he was my only friend.

In 1993, at the lowest point of my drinking, he handed me a meeting book and escorted me to the local AA meeting where I got sober and eventually became the person you know today.

His Passing

Pete’s dear wife Cheryl was beside him when he died of pancreatic cancer on February 28, 2023 in their home outside London. 

On the first anniversary of his passing, as my daughter and I were reminiscing about Pete, the ceiling light in our apartment went out for a moment, and then came back on. As a rational, agnostic modernist who believes in science, I’m pretty sure that was Pete tapping the veil between us.

His Legacy

Here are some places where you can experience his music, thoughts, and the way he inspired other artists. If you know links I missed, please share them in the Comments.

4 responses to “My brother, the rhythmic conceptualist”

  1. Monica McFarlin Avatar
    Monica McFarlin

    This is a lovely tribute to your brother Pete Jeff

    1. L. Jeffrey Zeldman Avatar

      Thank you, Monica.

      1. Christopher Cox Avatar
        Christopher Cox

        Gone but never forgotten. We were ahead of our time as high schoolers. Glad I got to spend a night with him in NYC. Glad he moved to England and settled down.

  2. Rob Shapiro Avatar
    Rob Shapiro

    Beautiful. Adding three more links:

    There’s this longer remembrance between a bunch of us former bandmates, admirers and students:

    https://youtu.be/zCj0rTYsxa8?si=YW8WPxwbgYvCID9G

    And the the 2.5D work:

    Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/1QPj3M9PQQae3j8XE54IzX?si=6ACkJ0XmRQKVbkJ711tPyQ

    Apple:
    https://music.apple.com/us/artist/2-5d/993861406

Got something to say?

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)

Discover more from Jeffrey Zeldman Presents

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading