From the 1940s Abrams established himself as an influential and respected drum teacher, first at
Trinity College of Music and then at his own drum school in London, where over the years he taught "countless professional drummers".
Bill Eyden,
Jack Parnell and
Ed Thigpen, and then a later generation of rock drummers such as
Brian Bennett,
Stewart Copeland,
Carl Palmer,
Simon Phillips,
Tony Meehan and studio session musician Neal Wilkinson. He also taught the guitar amplification pioneer
Jim Marshall and several celebrity variety artists, including
Norman Wisdom,
Anthony Valentine and
Roy Castle. He also narrated and demonstrated techniques on a set of tuition records issued by
Parlophone in 1935: the poet and jazz fan
Philip Larkin recalled that while a boy he persuaded his parents to buy him "an elementary drum kit and a set of tuition records by Max Abrams". He wrote a regular "Drummer's Corner"' column in
Crescendo magazine during the 1960s. ==Final years==