/r/drumstudy
I’ve been playing for about a year and a half and was just looking at some pictures of the notations and stuff and I’m confused is ‘low floor Tom’ and ‘floor Tom’ separate things, they are in different places on the bars on the image. I’ve tried looking it up but I can’t seem to find an answer on google it just comes up with floor tom. If so what is the difference?
I’m very new to drumming and I was listening to this song and I can’t figure out what it is that changes between the chorus and the verse. Is it just the guitars or is the groove changing from 2 and 4 to 1 and 3 or is it something else? It’s beyond my skill but I’m trying to stretch myself a bit
Yo!
I'm just wondering what is the best way to learn new styles/genres of drumset playing. I've been a gigging drummer for a while but I'm starting to run into the problem that I don't know a certain clave pattern or a specific Latin groove/feeling. There's so many genres that I don't know and it feels impossible to google a groove that I don't know the name of y'know?
Thanks!
I have always wanted to learn drums, but money has always held me back. Recently I've decided I can't keep waiting and so I'm going to buy a practice pad and drumsticks.
1st question: what practice pad and sticks do you all recommend (particularly for someone who doesn't have a drumset at all, and also has a limited budget)
2nd question: once I have that in where do I even begin? A practice pad lesson series on YouTube would be great but really any direction would be helpful!
Thanks in advance!
I have been practicing doing a one handed roll for several weeks now to no avail. I’ve tried perfecting hand technique, using the rim as a fulcrum point, building upon different time signatures, etc. What seems to happen whenever I try and do a one handed roll/gravity blast is my stick loses bounce and starts rubbing against the drum head and seizes all momentum. Is this an issue of poor finger timing/coordination or am I missing something?
Bit Music Studio è una scuola di batteria a Roma che offre diversi corsi, adatti a musicisti di ogni livello o per chi comincia da zero. Scopri la didattica e la sala prove accedendo al sito ufficiale.
Hi! A bit of background - I have been playing drums for like 10 years. I have played in bands and toured extensively in various underground music circles. That of course stopped over covid and I recently got an electronic drum set so i can play more and practice more. My favorite drum book I have gone through is Benny Grebs alphabet one (I don't recall the exact name but I am sure you know the one). I predominantly played in metal, grind, and power violence bands so i have heavy hands and probably bad technique. I want to reevaluate my technique and increase my genre pallete. But before diving into learning new styles, i want to reevaluate my hands and focus on grip and really ground up stuff. Does anyone have any recommended media (books are preferred) that go in depth on grip and hand technique? I've focused on french, German, and moeller technique at the instruction of my previous teacher but id love to dive more into those and focus on even more fundamental stuff like where I put the fulcrum and stuff because I largely started playing and figured stuff out later so I want to undo any bad habits I probably developed. Thank you!
So old guy here. I inherited a marching snare and was considering learning how to play it. Can’t go back to 6th grade so wondering if it’s too late to pick it up?
Hi guys and girls,
I recently started a YouTube channel where I remove the drums from popular tracks. The whole idea behind it was so my kid could play along but also get to know some of the music I grew up playing to when I started out.
Its been less than a week since I started but I've been uploading 3 tracks a day with the aim to build an extensive library of drum free music. Im open to suggestions if there is anything in particular you would like to see on there.
Let me know what you think and keep on drumming!
I can do different things with my hands, but when I try to get creative and make the bass drum complex, then it throws me off. This is even worse when I add in a simple quarter note high-hat pedal on my left foot.
Giant ceremonial drums Dong Son. Metal workers of Vietnam during the Iron Age. Dong Son culture is best known for its giant bronze ceremonial drums. These drums have been found throughout Southeast Asia. The drums are also known as "rain drums" both for the fertility images depicted in the drawing and for the unique sound they emit when hit by the heavy monsoon rains of Southeast Asia. https://crono.news/Y:2022/M:04/D:13/h:15/m:33/s:17/giant-ceremonial-drums-dong-son-lavoratori-di-metallo-del- vietnam-1 /
I just want a specific practice routine so I don't waste time doing unnecessary things.
Love how these drums sound and hit, amazing…
my drum game is really lacking on my tracks and I’d like to achieve something similar, anyone know how to get my drums to sound like this?
As part of my bachelor's project (studying at The Royal Academy of Music in Denmark), I did a focused course over 7 months, where I tried to improve my practicing and daily structure, and it completely changed how I live now. I worked with different theories including the Pomodoro Technique and GTD (Getting Things Done). I thought it could be useful in this subreddit. You can watch the episode on Youtube with video or listen to it on your favorite streaming-service! :)
Youtube: tinyurl.com/PodcastForMusicians
Spotify: tinyurl.com/PodcastForMusicians2
David Garibaldi said this beat was the most important beat he ever learned