Billy Cobham is putting his iconic 1986 TAMA Drum Set for sale. He wrote on Facebook, “Hi Everybody, I have decided to put this drum set up for sale and I am looking for bids. It’s my customized 1986 TAMA set that I used on “Picture This” with Grover Washington, Victor Bailey and Gerry Etkins, “Mirror’s Image” with Sheila E, larry Coryell, Ernie Watts, Dean Brown and Joe Chindamo and here in Europe on various performance occasions.”

The drum sizes are as follows:

2 x 22″ bass drums

1 x 18″ floor Tom

1 x 16″ Floor Tom

1 x 15″ Rack tom

1 x 14″ Rack tom

1 x 13″ Rack Tom

1 x 12″ Rack Tom

1 x 14″ x 7″ snare drum

Generally acclaimed as fusion’s greatest drummer, Billy Cobham’s explosive technique powered some of the genre’s most important early recordings — including groundbreaking efforts by Miles Davis and the Mahavishnu Orchestra — before he became an accomplished bandleader in his own right. At his best, Cobham harnessed his amazing dexterity into thundering, high-octane hybrids of jazz complexity and rock & roll aggression.

He was capable of subtler, funkier grooves on the one hand, and awe-inspiring solo improvisations on the other; in fact, his technical virtuosity was such that his flash could sometimes overwhelm his music. After debuting as a leader with the classic Spectrum in 1973, Cobham spent most of fusion’s glory days recording for Atlantic; briefer stints on CBS, Elektra, and GRP followed, and by the mid-’80s, Cobham was de-emphasizing his own bands in favor of session and sideman work. Even so, he continued to record for various small labels with some regularity.

In 1977, Cobham switched to the CBS label, which set him firmly on the path of commercial accessibility. In addition to his records as a leader, he’d remained highly active as a session drummer, and began to focus on that side of his career even more in the late ’70s. By 1980, he was done with CBS and began pursuing side opportunities, playing live with the Grateful Dead and Jack Bruce, as well as the Saturday Night Live band. He drummed for the Grateful Dead side project Bobby & the Midnites in 1982, and recorded three albums for Elektra in the early ’80s with his new quartet the Glass Menagerie.

During the mid-’80s, he cut three commercially oriented LPs for GRP, and spent the next few years stepping up his international touring and absorbing a healthy dose of world music. He played Peter Gabriel’s 1992 WOMAD Festival, and the following year recorded The Traveler, inspired by a sojourn in Brazil. In 1996, he formed a more acoustic-oriented quartet called Nordic with three Norwegian musicians; the following year, he also started a German-based fusion outfit called Paradox.

In 1998, Cobham began playing with a group called Jazz Is Dead, which devoted itself to jazz reinterpretations of Grateful Dead material; their album Blue Light Rain proved fairly popular among Deadheads. As Cobham maintained his touring, session, and bandleading activities, Rhino released the excellent two-CD retrospective Rudiments: The Billy Cobham Anthology in 2001.