Rock history is full of unforgettable moments, but nothing quite lands like a perfectly timed drum fill. Whether itâs a subtle skip across the toms or a thunderous crash into a chorus, these fills donât just move the music forwardâthey make the song. Here are 30 legendary drum fills that hit like thunder, listed alphabetically by song title and paired with the powerhouse behind the kit.
âAfricaâ â Jeff Porcaro (Toto)
Porcaroâs fill at 1:07 is subtle but unforgettable, weaving perfectly into his famous half-time shuffle. Itâs a smooth glide across the toms that makes everything feel warm, tight, and timeless.
âAjaâ â Steve Gadd (Steely Dan)
Gadd delivers surgical precision on this jazz-rock masterpiece. His solo section is a feast of phrasing, ghost notes, and fluid triplets, blending jazz technique with pop sensibility.
âBlack Hole Sunâ â Matt Cameron (Soundgarden)
The fill going into the final chorus evolves with each repetition, building drama without losing control. Itâs dynamic, fluid, and effortlessly coolâlike the song itself.
âBrother to Brotherâ â Mark Craney (Gino Vannelli)
Part solo, part conversation with the bass, Craney trades blistering two-bar fills like itâs a sport. A jazz-fusion highlight thatâs equal parts power and precision.
âEverlongâ â Taylor Hawkins (Foo Fighters)
This fill is like a controlled explosionâtight, fast, and full of urgency. Hawkins anchors the chaos with a snare-driven moment that feels like sprinting through a storm.
âFool in the Rainâ â John Bonham (Led Zeppelin)
Bonhamâs shuffle grooves hard, but the fill that breaks it wide open is pure release. Itâs like a deep breath that explodes into Technicolor thunder.
âGood Times Bad Timesâ â John Bonham (Led Zeppelin)
Right out of the gate, Bonham shows off his famous footwork. His rapid-fire bass triplets set the tone for an albumâand a careerâfull of jaw-dropping moments.
âGreen Earringsâ â Bernard Purdie (Steely Dan)
Purdieâs fills are slick, sneaky, and packed with personality. This one is a showcase of his signature offbeat swagger and subtle flash.
âHold On Tightâ â Bev Bevan (ELO)
Not just flashyâexpensive. With one of the priciest music videos of the era, the fills keep pace, bold and bombastic as the synth-soaked rock rushes forward.
âIn the Air Tonightâ â Phil Collins (Solo)
That fill. The one you always air drum. Four toms, a mountain of reverb, and a delayed explosion that made Collins a legend. Goosebumps every time.
âLittle Wingâ â Mitch Mitchell (Jimi Hendrix Experience)
Mitchell dances across the kit with a jazz-infused delicacy. His fill under Hendrixâs dreamy chords adds magic without overpowering the melody.
âLonely Olâ Nightâ â Kenny Aronoff (John Mellencamp)
Aronoff hits hard and with purpose, and his fill into the chorus is a classic bar-band call to arms. No-nonsense power drumming at its finest.
âNo One Knowsâ â Dave Grohl (Queens of the Stone Age)
Grohl pummels the kit with monstrous triplet fills that lock in like clockwork. Itâs heavy, hypnotic, and oddly danceableâthe holy trinity of desert rock.
âPride (In the Name of Love)â â Larry Mullen Jr. (U2)
Mullenâs playing is all about restraint and feel. The tom fill here is subtle but uplifting, propelling the songâs passion without stealing its spotlight.
âProto-Cosmosâ â Tony Williams (Lifetime)
This oneâs for the drummers. Williams delivers three solos in one track, but that final burst is pure fireâunleashed energy packed into blazing rolls and delicate phrasing.
âRain Is Fallingâ â Bev Bevan (ELO)
Bevanâs fills echo like raindrops on chrome. Moody, melodic, and just enough drama to carry the songâs wistful tone without overstepping.
âReelinâ In the Yearsâ â Jim Hodder (Steely Dan)
Tight, tasteful fills that perfectly bridge verse and chorus. Hodderâs timing and tone make it easy to overlook the complexity under all that smooth guitar.
âRosannaâ â Jeff Porcaro (Toto)
Studio drumming perfection. The ghost notes, the shuffle, the fillsâthey all merge seamlessly. Porcaro made it sound effortless, but itâs anything but.
âSad But Trueâ â Lars Ulrich (Metallica)
Say what you will, but this fill is heavy and deliberate, dropping like anvils between riffs. Itâs not flashyâitâs final.
âSeparate Ways (Worlds Apart)â â Steve Smith (Journey)
Smithâs fill into the final chorus is a stadium-sized stomp. Itâs clean, melodic, and perfectly timed to make you raise your fists without even realizing it.
âShe Said She Saidâ â Ringo Starr (The Beatles)
Classic Ringo: quirky, lyrical, and locked in. His fills feel conversational, like the drums are part of the story instead of just backing it.
âSmells Like Teen Spiritâ â Dave Grohl (Nirvana)
Instant recognition. That intro fill is raw and brashâjust like the song. Grohlâs snare crack is a call to arms for a new generation of disenchanted teens.
âSoberâ â Danny Carey (Tool)
Careyâs playing is complex but never cluttered. The fill on âSoberâ is moody and mechanical, like gears grinding into something dark and beautiful.
âStairway to Heavenâ â John Bonham (Led Zeppelin)
One fill, four seconds, endless debate. Bonhamâs moment here is subtle but powerful, and somehow sounds different every time you hear it.
âStargazerâ â Cozy Powell (Rainbow)
The drum intro here is thunder on a mountain. Powell sets the tone with ferocity, and the fill explodes like a battle cry from Valhalla.
âStratusâ â Billy Cobham (Solo)
Cobhamâs fill is a blur of single strokes down concert tomsâcontrolled chaos. Itâs a moment that leaves jaws on the floor and sticks in splinters.
âSunshine of Your Loveâ â Ginger Baker (Cream)
More of a groove than a fill, but no less legendary. Bakerâs tribal thump walks the line between jazz and psychedelia, setting the tone for Creamâs swirling madness.
âTom Sawyerâ â Neil Peart (Rush)
What is there to say? A technical masterclass that also makes you want to drive 90 in a school zone. This fill is the sound of pure adrenaline in 7/8.
âTwilightâ â Bev Bevan (ELO)
Synths swirl, guitars shimmer, and Bevanâs drums fill in the gaps like thunder under starlight. Each fill lands like punctuation in a space opera.
âWipeoutâ â Ron Wilson (The Surfaris)
This oneâs pure joy. Wilsonâs rapid-fire rolls introduced generations to the full drum kitâand gave gym teachers everywhere a go-to warmup song.
âWonât Get Fooled Againâ â Keith Moon (The Who)
Moon didnât play solosâhe erupted. The fill before the final scream is a glorious mess of flams and crashes that somehow lands in perfect time. Moon magic.
So whether youâre a drummer, an air-drummer, or just a fan of musical fireworks, these fills prove that a few well-placed hits can shake the soul. And if your steering wheel doesnât know at least ten of these by heart, itâs time to give it a proper education.