You Don't Need To Practice ALL The Rudiments! | DRUM LESSON - That Swedish Drummer
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- Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
- Did you know that you really don't need to practice all of the rudiments?
That is of course subjective, but I mostly use 5 of them in my playing - and that is what I'm showing you in this drum lesson!
The rudiments featured in this lesson are:
The Inverted Paradiddle
The Six Stroke Roll
The Left Flam Triplet
The Paradiddle Diddle
The Blushda
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Cheers for watching, guys!
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There's 13 essential Rudiments and they're all you need to know and Master! ✌️
Thank you so much boss 🎉🙏🙏
Always great to stop by in here you’re fantastic drumming
@@ginogarcia4219 cheers!!🙏
Excellent. Suggestion - could you demonstrate in your videos taking it around the kit as part of demonstrating at slower speeds?
I leave that up to the viewer :) I post the stickings and breakdowns, then it's up to the viewer to apply it to their own playing (like a challenge!)
If you get really good at just a few, the others are just....rudimentary.
😅😅😅
Your point sound really funny
*badum tssh
Never played the Inverted Paradiddle. Ever, got humbled really quick. Put that Metronome on 40. Had trouble understanding the "prep" stoke.
🤟🔥
You are so right. It's good to know all 40. But what's more important is taking a simple rudiment like the paradiddle and go deep with just that one rudimenr. Different tempos. Around the kit. Maybe make the first stroke a 32nd double. Invert that bitch. Take it deep. A lot of musicians have a lot of surface knowledge but not a lot of deep wisdom.
Never heard the Blushda. But then again I was old schooled with the 26 rudiments. 40 is the added doubles to the singles in a lot of places. Nice little flavor i will add to my routine.
Rock on!😃✌️
Isn't the "blushda" just a flam drag??
@@mikelbell5419 it’s played a bit more open to sound “sloppier/fatter” and utilizes accents on the last stroke. It’s what some people refer to as a hybrid rudiment
TY for putting them into context. Without them Being in context, they're just rudiments and, what's the point? 👍🥁😎
Awesome and informative lesson as always. Like the way the non accented notes almost disappear which brings out the accented notes.
Something I must practise more often.
Glad you like it 😃🙏
These are my 5 favorite rudiments of all time! The combos with these are endless fun!😊
They are! 😃 cheers, bud!
As a newbie I start to notice all the really good drummers move efficiently in that no limb or stick moves any further or higher than it has to.
Indeed. Play smarter, not harder ;)
It's all about preference. As long as you sound good and play in time, there's no "wrong way" of playing drums ^^
I used to love just practicing rudiments all the damn time! I’m lucky if I even practice anything lately! I’ve been so stressed out. I got this killer electronic four piece kit I built. It’s an acoustic electric like the Roland VAD series drums. I use a TD27 module with drum software, EZ drummer 3 and Steven Slate 5.5 Drums. I really need to start practicing a lot more. I’m so rusty right now and I’ve never been rusty my whole life, for the last couple years I just hasn’t been in the mood. Watching your lessons are very good though! People should definitely take your advice!
I'm glad you enjoy my lessons!
And remember, the inspiration have to come to you. You can't force yourself to practice, but indeed - you can take small steps back! :)
Practicing the drums is supposed to be fun, not feel like a chore.
Hey CJ thanks for the video. It really inspired me to take these 5 rudiments and explore all the different ways I can orchestrate them around the drum set. Keep up the good work👍🥁
Go for it! And have fun!🤩🙌
Love the lesson on principal but for the beginner, the orchestration parts were TOO FAST. I'm scratching my head trying to figure out what drums you were even hitting and what part of the rudiment was landing there LOL.
Well, first of all: This is certainly not a beginner drum lesson, this is more towards intermediate/advanced drummers.
And second: As soon as you can play something at a slow tempo - try orchestrating it in that tempo around the drums.
I gotta leave something to the viewers to do themselves ;)
As a drum instructor, this channel is amazing. Your rudiments and explanations are perfect and easy to grasp. So glad I found you! cheers!
Awesome, thank you! More videos to come 😃🙌
Like the video 👍 at the end of the day we drummers who make a living from the skins just play without any thought whatsoever of why or what ! It's just hit stuff wherever it feels right that's why I've loved drumming over 55 years now
Máster, gracias por el valioso contenido. Un abrazo. Porfavor nunca dejes de compartir, me has ayudado mucho. ❤
Very nice sir. Could you please teach us how you record your drum? The mics, audio interface,and mixing? Your drum sounds is on point.
I might do a video of that later this year! :)
bad title. How about all the good things you can do with only a few rudiments. Pairing down language to make a click bait title is a disservice to new drummers who read words and may take them to heart. Otherwise. Sound video. Bad title.
It's not click bait at all. I'm only going through the rudiments I favor and use the most, and if someone would take a video-title completely to heart - you obviously don't know how RUclips works.
Plus, the title is true. You CAN practice all the rudiments, but you certainly don't NEED to.
If you're a drum set-drummer and wants to play for a living, then focusing on all the 40 rudiments will be a waste of time and resources, when instead you should focus on sound, timing, versatility and networking.
Sir nice rudiments... sir cymbals sounds are good wich model...?
I play Paiste, and I use a different array of series. Masters Thin, Formula 602 ME, Signature Traditionals etc. :)
How about the herta? My favorite
That's a good one too!
How do I become a member of this channel? I would love to have access to the transcriptions.
Depending on what device you use (usually desktop works best), on the front page of my channel - there should be a "Join" button. There you can join my channel membership :)
Also, if you check the pinned comment on this video - you'll see the link to the channel membership! :)
My favorite One Is paradiddle Diddle .i use It in my play very often .
Congrats on some very clean and sonically consistent rudimental chops. Have to say though that your notation accents don't match most of what you're playing but that doesn't at all take away from what you are playing. One example of what I'm getting at is your flams. Accented flams are sonically different than a flam. In your playing you are accenting both the grace and primary notes which sonically is at odds with the rest of your accent notation and the difference between the two is they sound completely different. Although I enjoy all the rudiments this is a a very informative video. Thank you.
Cheers! 🔥
Nice choices for your top 5! Personally, I prefer the Flam Accent as utilizes flams on both hands - interesting how all are triplet based 😎
Very smooth playing! Back to the pad ...
Cheers!
I am into learing the drums for 8 months now and made good progress and I am proud of what I reached so far…but every single time seeing someone playing those rudiments perfectly I am about to cry and feel like I will never be able to do this. I mean there are a lot of tutorials how to start and what is essential for learing it, like using the rebound combined with fingerstrokes and all that, but it does not work. I have the feeling the stick does not Hit the same spot on the pad and it whirls around to the side and sometimes I also let the stick Fall down and frustrating things like that. What in the world is the right approach to learn it step by step??? Including all these different parts? Holding the sticks, mastering the rebound, get the ghost notes right…any suggestions for videos that take care of all of that? Would be soo thankful
Don’t let videos on social media discourage you. Let them inspire you instead.
Every musician you watch and that you find interesting/professional has put years into their craft, so let it take time.
It’s all about practicing slowly and gradually take it up a notch. It takes time to learn new things, and you gotta remember that Rome wasn’t built in one day. You can’t rush progress ✊🔥
@@ThatSwedishDrummer I‘ll try…thanks for your words :-) In the meantime I included daily 20 minutes as an approach to only concentrate on sticking patterns for single- and doublestrokes on a pad. Guess this should be the Right thing to start with before going to the classic Rudiments in a few weeks/months. I‘ll find out I guess when it‘s time to venture that
I’m looking to get two practice surfaces, one quiet and one loud. Is there a practice pad or two that you’d recommend?
I actually only use this one, 'cause it's the one I have. And sometimes I practice on a pillow.
If budget is a concern, I've even recommended to people that they can get a cheap mouse pad. They work great as a practice pad on any surface ^^
@@ThatSwedishDrummer Thanks!
I tried to do a Pataflafla as a fill. It drove me to drink! I'm a resident in an insane hospital now. Shhh. The guards are coming...
😂 I spit out my water laughing at this
I can't even get my feet to hold sticks with this straight jacket on! 😮
5 stroke roll, para diddle, para diddle diddle, flams, pugguhduhs
Singles will take you really far. When I gig I do like 95% singles. Only use doubles and paradiddles for ride accents.
Nice!
Awesome video Great playing!! As far as knowing all the rudiments... They are really not hard to learn. A lot of rudiments are played the way they sound. The flam rudiments can make for some awesome chops. Anyway great playing my man
Bye the way,your kit is sounding fantastic, all the way around, keep up the good work
Wheres the kick lesson? Only the hand. Rudiment without knowing where the kick is?
YES! Thanks for this, mate!
Cheers!
How can I hold my stick to be fast enough
Keep a relaxed grip and don't hold the stick too far up or too far down.
Thanks you're the best
This is the solo that blows my mind.. the best out of all I seen. Out of the Carson shows and yes the impossible drum solo.. was awesome also.
I think the inverted paradiddle is my favorite here. Sounds like proper chops!🤑
Indeed! :D
What metronome u b using broskee
I use different ones on my phone (mainly Gap Click), but for my lessons I use the metronome in my DAW (Logic Pro X)
Rudiments are exactly what the name implies. Rudimentary technique. If you wanna skip what the masters refer to as "rudimentary" knowledge.... G'head. LoL.
I’m not saying that you should skip them, but as I say in the video - you seldom use all of them in a professional setting.
Rudiments come from the marching style drum technique, and if you want to be a working session drummer - you’d be wasting your time if you spend time on every single rudiment when you will probably only use 2-3 rudiments in a song.
I wish my Autistic kids had a drum set
Look into buying second hand, you can usually find some awesome bargains that way! (That's how I started out!)
Huge question? What if you play by ear and are good at replication without proper teaching? I play beats like this live and I have no idea what I'm doing or what it's called. Great video and thank you for explanations
What even is the question? Just sounds like a statement to me.
@@fj3571 I genuinely didn't mean it like that. And just enrolled in lessons to understand in full spectrum
If you have an ear for replicating and playing it correctly, that's great! But you wanna know WHAT it is you're playing. For example, if you're playing with a group an the MD tells you to play a pattern in sextuplets, half time shuffle and then a 32nd note patter - you wanna know what to do.
I played like that for 20 years... you can get away with it a long time in bands, but someday you may want to hit another level. For everyone that level is different, but I found that reaching it required studying, practice, and outside intervention. In many cases I had to unlearn bad habits...Believe me man- if you have the means, definitely take the lessons and pick up some books- or just stay with CJ's YT lessons!
thats nice snare sound ! thanks for the lesson!
Glad you like it!
Nice job, CJ! Just started my Shell Pack Membership. One request: Please put a title heading on the .pdf so that it matches the video title. This will help me keep track of what notation goes with each video. Thank you!
Hey!! Cheers and welcome to the membership! :D
I'll keep that in mind, but I usually do put the title on the PDF. (If you want to you can also download the pdf and re-name it yourself if it suits you).
Thanks for the support, buddy!
I most commonly use the 4, 5, and 6 stroke rolls, hertas, and flams. I also enjoy double paradiddles
Nice!
Loved this video! Thanks for posting. One small suggestion that I think would be a great addition would be when you go to show the sticking pattern played in a groove, say what tempo the groove is being played at. It sounds like the groove where you played the inverted paradiddle was at a tempo quite a bit faster than the last example you gave of it, but I think it would be nice to know what tempo the groove was being played at. Great videos though, keep it up! I always like seeing your content and sharing it with my daughter who also plays! Thanks again!
Great suggestion! I'll keep that in mind for future videos.
I usually show several examples in my videos, for example of both 16th notes and 32nd notes :)
first off, thanks for this Vid.
but what number was that last one, 'Blusdha', on my 40 Rudiments chart ?
and are there more than just those 40 ? how many should we all know ?
The is almost the same thing as a Flam Drag, but played a bit more open and utilizes accents on the last stroke. For some, it’s referred to as a hybrid rudiment 😊
According to this rudiments selection, I bet you love Gavin Harrison's style!
Haha guilty as charged!
Me ha gustado el vídeo y lo,pondré en práctica, muchas gracias. Un saludo
🙌🔥
Hey Buddy, I hope you are well and Happy New Year to you, thanks for all your vids over the year.. Martin.
Same to you!😃🔥
Just recently started practicing the flam accent and then your video pops up. Perfect timing! Will try these out in my next practice, thanks
Hope you enjoy! Cheers for watching 😃🙌
Fuckkkk the pataflafla…hahah I’m playing 42 yrs and I couldn’t give a shit about it..single stroke roll,double stroke roll.flam,drags and ruffs..in my yrs of playing and teaching…that’s key..but yes I love the press roll..paradiddles and 5 and 6 stroke rolls etc…keep these coming
Hi CJ , it’s very cool and interesting thank you very much. Bravo !
Cheers! Glad you enjoyed it 🤗🔥
Aren't the first and last note of the six stroke roll double the length of the rest? What you played was a displaced paraddidle-diddle
Technically you can call it a permutation of the paradiddle diddle, but according to the PAS Rudiment List, there’s no such thing.
You can play the six stroke roll straight (marching style), and linear (as sextuplets) 😊
Tkank you!!!!!!!!!
You’re welcome!
I have never estimated the power of reversed paradidles. Thanks for the trips I'll be working them more.
You're welcome! Have fun with it :)
Very efficient & well done video! More please , thank you!! 🤩😆
Thank you! More will come 😊
Great lesson! Thanks for posting.
You're most welcome!! :D
Thank you, I have easily learned the rudiments on this video😊
Wonderful!
Aww i was really wanting to hear the pataflafla 😂
THANKS!!!! tODAY I WILL USE MY DRUMS AND PRACTICE
Nice!
Sir that was great job ,all of them my favorite too.ممنون
Many thanks!
100% serious you're a cool dude. lfg, happy new year! i've been looking for some good new rudiment practice just like this. thanks!
Actually if you practice and learn these 4, everything else is just a combination of them:
Flams, Singles, Doubles, and Drags.
Just some nit-picky shit:
Paradiddles DO NOT HAVE ACCENTS
6 stroke roll is not just sextuplets as you're only showing 1 way to play them
left flam triplet is just a non-alternating flam accent.
Also you're showing your personal orchestration of these rudiments.
No rudiments originally have accents. This is about phrasing your rudiments and playing around with them. And of course it's my personal orchestration. It's my channel.
It's the viewer's job to take it and apply it to their drumming.
I'm confused? "Swedish" implies Swiss Rudimental training where both it and PASIC rudimental drumming has accented rudiments. The traditional notation for all flavors of paradiddles are accented on the first stroke with the exception of the inverted paradiddle but it's not a rudiment. Granted students are graded on being able to play the rudiments unaccented from p to pppp but that's about stick and stroke control.
Aaron, learning those 4 rudiments alone is not going to help you with pharsing the possibilities. But why bother with any rudiments? Considering what your thinking all you really need is the whole note through the 16th note singles. That will cover everything too.
@@dnczardnczar did you just confuse Sweden with Switzerland? 😅
LOL! Yes I did! My apologies for such an awkward error.
I also meant to add in my original posting an acknowledgement of your kit tuning. You have your kit sounding really good. Particularly what got my attention was the consistent tuning from tom to tom. I'm surprised by how many drummers here on You Tube have good sounding drums individually but as a kit the tuning doesn't work. I assume you have put some time in to marching with the quads? If you haven't already you might want to consider putting a video out on you head choices and tuning. Steve Jordan has often talked about work very good drummers have missed out on because of tuning. Chops aren't everything.
Nice choices, but for your flam triplet, I prefer to use the swiss army triplet, it's essentially the same, but with an easier sticking imo. (LR R L LR R L or RL L R RL L R, with an upstroke on the second note to prepare for the next accent). Same for the last one :p
O heck C.J, never thought you would take that over the Para diddle diddle or the six stroke roll,but glad I watched it,taught me something were you put the accents,thank you
Dude this is the worst advice you can give a new drummer. "Hey - here's all these things you can learn about your craft - make sure to ignore a bunch of them."
Guitar Teacher: "Don't learn the entire fretboard."
Racing Driver: "The brakes throttle and steering each have only two states or positions."
You’re taking this way out of context.
If you strive for becoming a drum corps drummer or old school jazz drummer - absolutely, fine. Work on all rudiments.
But you should also check out Dave Elitch’s post on IG about this very topic.
Rudiments are all good and fun, but they’re not necessary in modern drumming. Just play the music.
I certainly don’t “think in rudiments” when I play - and if I don’t benefit from playing triple ratamacue’s and pataflafla’s… why should I practice them?
@@ThatSwedishDrummer You play more rudiments than I think you realize when you're moving around the kit - and there are more rudiments than you think. The fact that you even made a drumming video assumes we all want to be the best drummer possible. Literally deliberately leaving fundamental knowledge on the table is a ridiculous notion.
@@cameronmcpherson6364 of course I play rudiments, but I’m just saying you don’t need to spend time on all of them.
I’m not saying “don’t practice rudiments”.
Ive been teaching myself to play with youtube just a quick question, is that a left swiss army triplet that you refer to as a left flam triplet? Some of the terminology can be confusing. Trying not to get bogged down with the terminology but im 44 so im a little dense.
forgot to mention, I like the way you teach. You start slow then ramp up and then include the rudiment as a fill for a groove. Keep up the good work.
Firstly, huge thanks for the kind words! I’m glad you find my content helpful 😃
Regarding the left flaming triplet: No, the Swiss army triplet is rL L R or lR R L.
The left flam is basically the left permutation of the flam accent, which is rL R L.
@@ThatSwedishDrummer til that I've been practicing flam triplets and thought they were Swiss army triplets. 🤣 easy enough of an adjustment though, thanks again.
this is very practical way to improve my practice as a drummer with day job, i can manage my time and know what to practice more according to my needs to play more effectively. i get overwhelmed sometimes with a lot of things to practice.
Great content, easy to follow and fun to play, thanks
So glad you enjoy it! Cheers, bud!
Thank you very much for this video! ❤
You're so welcome!
I’m about to be 50. Ages ago when I was in high school there was a dude named Jeff Russell, after school a few of us would hang out and watch this dude play drums. Idk how or where he learned the stuff he was playing, but it was advanced for sure. I think that’s where I first started to hear subdivisions and the possibilities that come with it. I thank Jeff Russell for inspiring me to play a drum kit. Hope he’s still out there somewhere
Merry x mas, your rather nice
Uncle Mike.
God Jul, Micke!!
For the beginner, It's hard for me..😭😢
Yeah this is not exactly a beginner video ^^
Very educative... thank you so much
My pleasure! I’m glad you like it 😃🔥
What a banger of a video. Thank you for doing this one!
Glad you enjoyed it!
❤❤❤
I don't have a weaker hand I have a monthly hand 😂
🤣
FLAM ACCENT TRIPLETS ALTERNATE THATS WHAT THE UPSTROKE IS FOR
Yeah, but depending of course how you apply it to the kit - it might not be "suitable" for what you want to play.
👍👏👏👏
Lame , sorry .
You're missing number six: the herta
That’s great too! (But I break down that one in another video🤗)
Virtual Riot?
So much of what I see here I just "do" without thinking of them as rudiments. I've never studied drumming or been taught properly. I've only learned by ear. And I just "feel" my way around the kit. I don't think I'd be so into drums if I had to "think" of what I have to do (even if it then becomes muscle memory/second nature), instead of just having that feel intuitively.
I totally get what you're saying, and if you feel no need of "knowing" what you're playing - then you're all good!
However, personally, I enjoy knowing the actual vocabulary of drumming so I know what to play and when to play it. I don't want to be in a position where i.e a band-leader says "In this section of the song, play paradiddle diddle's as 32nd notes and then go to Swiss Army Triplets around the toms", and I don't know the vocabulary...
AWEESOME!
When you play them faster, do you muscle them out or let them bounce? I struggle with that. If you could give some insight, I’d appreciate it!
Never "muscle out" rudiments, or any type of drumming.
If you hurt while playing, you need to stop and re-evaluate the playing. You should always be relaxed and let the stick do most of the work when playing faster :)
Isn't it an inverted Paradiddle-diddle this 6 stroke roll?
Technically you could call in an inverted paradiddle diddle, but you usually don’t have permutations of the Paradiddle diddle.
Still tho - same thing 😊
@@ThatSwedishDrummer Thnak's man! 🙂
This guys Swedish is really good
If you think that's good, should hear my English! ;)
I thought this was yourunclemeatball
Don't know who that is, but ok 😅
It's ok, Google is becoming popular now finally
Wow ... Outstanding
Cheers!
awesome! love your sound too!
Thank you!!
how do I make my left hand fast? 😅😢
Focus on mainly the left hand for a while! Try practicing left hand lead when you play rudiments, for every stroke you play with your right hand - double it with your left hand etc.
I am offended by your hair!
Good!
"Bam! Bam! BamBamBam!" BamBam - The Flintstones :D
Nice sound and video… what sticks are you using? 👍😊
Mostly Wincent!
@@ThatSwedishDrummer never heard of them? Which size?
@@jamesmason1347 it’s a Swedish brand, smaller but they’re growing fast!
I mostly play 5B or 5BXL. (And their newer line 5B Precision)
VERY INTERESTING
🙌
My Aunt Bleshda
😆
Thx this will make me finally push to get into paradidles..
👊🔥
Are you Swedish
Yup!!
excelente gracias por compartirlo 😄
Awesome stuff.
Thanks!