Hi, thank you for the comment and question. Those are a plastic version of the wooden « hotrods », known as « blasticks », those are just the brand name names for them though, many different companies make a similar product. It’s basically several small pieces of wood, or as in this example plastic, held together with either tape or an adjustable plastic band. They are good for quieter practice or playing. I tend to prefer the wooden ones but they are expensive and start to deteriorate quickly, so I have a plastic pair as backup because for better for for worse, they’ll last forever!
@@PeterG-ej5ly Thank you so much! I really appreciate the positive feedback. The Vitamin C groove is a doozie, but learning it will definitely help us open up our playing and free up our coordination to come up with our own grooves and ideas influenced by the ideas in that beat!
Thanks. What sticks are you using there?
Hi, thank you for the comment and question. Those are a plastic version of the wooden « hotrods », known as « blasticks », those are just the brand name names for them though, many different companies make a similar product. It’s basically several small pieces of wood, or as in this example plastic, held together with either tape or an adjustable plastic band. They are good for quieter practice or playing. I tend to prefer the wooden ones but they are expensive and start to deteriorate quickly, so I have a plastic pair as backup because for better for for worse, they’ll last forever!
@@5-minutedrumlessons Thanks for taking the time to reply. Great info. Love all your videos. Currently trying to figure out Vitamin C 😮
@@PeterG-ej5ly Thank you so much! I really appreciate the positive feedback. The Vitamin C groove is a doozie, but learning it will definitely help us open up our playing and free up our coordination to come up with our own grooves and ideas influenced by the ideas in that beat!