The key to drummers like Gadd, Jim Keltner, Jeff Porcaro, Vinnie, and other greats is their phrasing and feel, not their technique. Vinnie has far more "chops" than Keltner, for example, in terms of rudiments and speed, but Keltner is no less of a drummer because of that. It's how they use what they have.
This is where phrasing comes in. Plenty of drummers can play faster than Gadd, or have more "licks" than Gadd, but they can't cop Gadd's feel. Feel is related to phrasing. The more interesting the phrasing is, the better the feel, generally speaking. Some drummers can play 1000 licks, but they can only play each lick one way. Gadd may only have a handful of "licks", but he can play each of those licks 1000 (or more) different ways.
This is connected to music in this way: Depending on the musical context, having a ton of different ways to play the same beat or rudiment allows one to keep his/her options open, and apply what they know to that situation accordingly. The difference between a player and a musician is that a player thinks in terms like this:
Player: 'How can I fit my licks into this musical context?"
Whereas a musician thinks in terms like this
Musician: "What does this music call for? What DOESN'T it call for?"
That's another thing-music is dependent on contrasts, on tension and release, on PACING, on building up and coming down, and sometimes on the occasional "bomb" that is dropped (Vinnie is excellent at those!

Ok, that's enough of my yammering. Where's the Weekend Chatty thread, Steve?
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