Maybe I'm too critical of myself - after all getting good takes time, and I know this from playing guitar. I really don't know.
Just a rant, as the title said.
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SoSexy
Italy3725 Posts
Maybe I'm too critical of myself - after all getting good takes time, and I know this from playing guitar. I really don't know. Just a rant, as the title said. | ||
SourApplez
United States61 Posts
Keep it up, believe in yourself, and recognize how far you have come =D | ||
aike
United States1629 Posts
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Ryuhou)aS(
United States1174 Posts
+ Show Spoiler [About Rolls/Practice] + You might want to work on the roll breakdown like this guy, except with double stroke roll you do Right Right Left Left Right Right Left Left and so on, instead of the single stroke he's doing. It helps to start real slow and very gradually increase the speed until you're at your limit then gradually slow it back down. This is a great exercise for rolls, do it over and over every time you practice (it's also a great warmup!). Over time you'll get cleaner and faster. You can essentially break down all the rudiments like this (which you probably should if you're really serious about drumming). I usually run through all the rudiments like this as my first part of "warmups". Anyways, have at it man! keep up the drumming!!! And like my late instructor always used to say "Put-it in tha pocket!" | ||
Ghost151
United States290 Posts
I'm currently doing this the other way around, trying (miserably) to learn guitar after 9-10 years of drumming on and off. A good sense of rhythm and solid time are great thing to bring to the table learning any instrument, but I have no ear for tonality (though I understand it well enough, playing with my cousin for so long) and I am really having a hard time breaking the habit of keeping my fingers from moving together on the fretboard. I also grip the shit out it, habit I guess from trying not to throw sticks all the time. One thing that always pissed me off (and it still does) is *not* not being able to play something, as I love to learn new things, , but when I hit one of those creative "walls" when playing and can't do anything new at my level that is interesting. So then I seek out new material to try and learn (most recently pop/rock form the 70s/80s, started with the Rosanna shuffle and kept going form there) until I can incorporate that too. | ||
FoxShine
United States156 Posts
The first thing is Rudiments. They are boring, but they are basically your mechanics. I hear you saying your rolls are sloppy, this will help them the most. "Single Stroke Seven" starting and stopping with opposite hands firmly and evenly builds strength and control. The 5 stroke/7 stroke double stroke roll is more or less snare only until your really good, but it really improves your 'sticking'. Getting these rolls nice and tight, alternating with proper accents is the goal. If you want quicker results learn Single and Double Paradiddles. You can do paradiddles around the drums starting and completing them between drums to get comfortable moving around the set. Second, mindset, I mean the same goes with any instrument. It takes discipline and practice. A big problem drummers run into is they don't treat the instrument with the same 'rigor' as piano or something. It's easy to pick it up and improve sporadically. Dedicating some time to your rudiments, tempo, and form really pays off. A good mantra to live by, "Practice doesn't make perfect. Perfect Practice makes perfect." So sit up straight, center yourself, and be balanced when you play. Herein lies the dilemma, aside from rudiments it's easy to be too critical about how your playing or hard on yourself. Trying to get certain things down can be really frustrating. So the other half of practicing is just jamming out. Just as much as you want to be disciplined when your practicing rudiments, conversely, you want to loosen way up and just feel it. Sit down for an hour or so and just play different things that come to mind, what you know, or try what you want to do, be creative. I used to jam for a few hours after practice, I found that after an hour or 2 of exhausting everything I knew or was working on, only then do I start doing new things or do certain stuff just "come together". Spend a lot of time to get over plateaus, but just remember that drums are ALL about dynamics. Seriously, this is the most fun thing to play with. There nothing better than just jamming out to the same beat or fill emphasizing different parts, changing accents, slowing down here, getting louder and softer there. Things start to sound waaay different and it feels reeeally good to get into the rhythm. Have fun! | ||
OtherWorld
France17333 Posts
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SoSexy
Italy3725 Posts
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