Interlacing Moeller Strokes - Drum Lesson by Freddy Charles

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  • Опубликовано: 20 апр 2017
  • Check out Mastering the Traditional Grip to unlock the secret of smooth and effortless playing!
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    An accomplished musician and one man act with twelve albums under his belt, Freddy Charles is a singer/songwriter and multi instrumentalist currently based in Los Angeles. With a pop/rock sound influenced by hints of jazz and EDM, he records every note of his record himself and acts as his own engineer and producer, giving him complete artistic control of his musical vision.
    Freddy got his start in music as a drummer, giving him a strong rhythmic foundation to build on as he began studying guitar, songwriting, and production. His early records found a small devoted fanbase as he began cultivating his style and coming into his own as an artist. Eventually, he would find a national audience when several of his songs were picked up by Sirius XM and broadcasted across the country, as well as being featured in several independent films. As he continued to make increasingly adventurous records, he became an in demand session drummer and educator.
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Комментарии • 13

  • @geworfenheit5541
    @geworfenheit5541 6 лет назад

    I like the way you're describing the connections to make, ways to think about putting it together...reloading, etc. I think that's the stuff that makes a good teacher. Thanks, dude!

  • @Jrenglehorn
    @Jrenglehorn 4 года назад

    I've been using this quarantine to learn Moeller. This is such a great video. Thanks for 'bridging' the beginning and end together. No other video like it! Thx!

  • @jerryhoran6036
    @jerryhoran6036 17 дней назад

    Cool, thanks. Good reminder. I've been playing with this for years but think I've been putting too much effort using fingers for the second and third note of triplet instead of milking the bounce.

  • @drumken
    @drumken 9 месяцев назад

    Old video, but nice.

  • @filemakerpro4050
    @filemakerpro4050 7 лет назад

    That's what that's called. Really focused and understandable video. I know that feeling you're talking about. Not from this exercise, but in general when your sticks are doing most of the hits/work from the bounce back and it sounds like syncopated rolling thunder on the floor Tom. Sometimes I wish I could do this kind of thing on the kick ... maybe with a new leg and foot. Ha ha !
    Subscribed.
    @transcendentalaccidentalism from Instagram LRLLRLRR

    • @freddycharles
      @freddycharles  7 лет назад

      HA! Thanks for checking it out Ryan. Thats the euphoric stick feeling we are searching for.

  • @sbirrito
    @sbirrito 7 лет назад

    I thought moeller strokes were used for one handed singles as opposed to alternating handed singles?

    • @freddycharles
      @freddycharles  7 лет назад +1

      Hi Steve- true, but the motion is good for interlacing the hands creating a smooth single stroke.

    • @sbirrito
      @sbirrito 7 лет назад

      I need to get my head around this.So do you use it to play three hits with each hand or 2 as they are interlaced before you reload?I always play fast singles with fingers and a small bit of wrist.Id use moeller for playing broken 16ths on the hats....1e& 2e& 3e& 4e& (this kinda thing) would you use it more for alternating singles as you are playing or one handed singles like my example above ?
      ps thanks for the replies, you always comment on instagram to my posts which i appreciate.

    • @freddycharles
      @freddycharles  7 лет назад

      great question and tricky to answer. 4 with each hand if you want to do 16th note singles, or 3 per hand for triplet roll.