I was delighted to get together with Kalani to share about this amazing and endlessly fascinating instrument and subject. With the primary intention to introduce, and share a little something about tabla with the World Drum Club. In doing so, hopefully dispel any misconception, intimidation, or barriers about wanting to check it out and learn more about tabla. As a percussionist, like most of us, I'm just a humble perpetual lover and student of music...learning and trying, and sharing along the way. I have been incredibly fortunate to study this instrument with the most gracious and generous of teachers, PadmaShri Pandit Swapan Chaudhuri, who believes passionately in sharing this amazing subject of tabla with anyone who wants to learn, and believes firmly that music (all music) is for everyone. To be able to pay that forward or back, an ocean or an eyedroppers worth, in whatever way I can (in my own way) is an honor and privilege to do so. humbly yours,
Still a student of tabla...after messing with these incredible sounding drums for decades...RUclips has been a game changer {WDC} with lessons like these and many more, showing many techniques. I like to add tabla to recordings with other percussion...not trying to be flashy...just good enough to add some cool flavor. Many Thanks to you both.
Tabla has to be my favorite musical instrument. I had the amazing experience of seeing Zakir Hussain up close while he played in Remember Shakhti. Absolutely mind-blowing. Thanks for posting.
Sir, Randy Gloss, thank you for taking trouble and learning Tabala, the father or Mother of all kinds of Rhythms. I am astonished seeing the way you explain and play with accuracy. Great and Great. God bless you.
thank you so very much. I'm just a student of tabla, but I do love it so...and I know full well it is for ANYONE and EVERYONE that wants to learn...Music is not elite or exclusive, it IS for everyone. If I know even only one thing about music from ALL of my teachers, that would be IT. Indian Classical Music (and India itself) has given me sooooo much in my lifetime. it was an honor for me to talk about this subject with the hope of others not being intimidated to also try and learn too. If I can do it...anyone who wants to learn can also do it. thank you again for your kind message. all my best,
Thank you Sir for your kind reply. This is the first time I got a you tube reply from an artist. God bless you with long life, good health, music spirit and abundance.
fantastic .. I am a table player from India and I love the way Randy played here.. We have lot of talent in India who needs exposure to the world, I request you to visit India, Bangalore once..
I surely know there is immense talent in India. After all I was drawn to want to learn and know more. it's actually overwhelming, the skill level and ability, to be perfectly honest. this is why I hope to try and dispel misconceptions and any intimidation for others to want to check it out too. I hope. Yes definitely, I have been to India many times. it is my wife and my favorite place to visit , we go about every other year, and absolutely love India. ...and yes I also have been to Bangalore too. my first trip to Bangalore was in 1997. Quite a lot has changed since then. anyway, I just wanted to say thank you for the kind words of support and encouragement.
I've been following the same learning process for congas and bongos (I've not yet played a tabla, and look forward to it). If you map out the different sound combos you can get from different parts of the head & different striking methods, then you can infuse even the simplest rhythms with interesting tonal variations.
Man soooooooo enjoyed in school doing synthesizer skills of my own deep house lounge music & used this tabla drum just came natural to me just felt those deep chill vibes through my deep house lounge tracks I was creating & it just went great! Oh miss those days!
I have studied South Indian percussion and related repertoire and tala concepts, but not actually mridangam. I studied for many years with mridangist Poovalur Sriji, but studying solkattu, kanjira, and applications of South Indian Tala to other drums and percussion instruments. I don't play mridangam at all though. However, I love that drum and have deep respect for it and for Carnatic music in general. I also love visiting there, and I love South Indian food too!!!! :))
indian instruments like tabla, pakhawaj, mridangam, mridanga all of them are the same its just they’re all a bit different (but mridangam is a bit more different as it is carnatic not hindustani)
Really cool stuff. Now I feel tempted to get my own set. Japanese taiko drumming also has an oral notation system for different drum sounds (called kuchi shoga).
Of all the Indian instruments, tabla ranks 2nd among my favorite. The first? Bansuri. Tabalchis know that mastering this instrument is not child's play. There's a rigor involved in learning and practicing this instrument. I've been fortunate to play music with professional and amateur tabalchis while in college and church -- mostly in Mumbai. I could easily spend an afternoon listening to my friend, Saurab, playing the tabla while he was doing his riaz. Honestly, I tried, but this is not for the casual let-me-give-it-a-try kind of person. You have to know you want to, and you have to be know for sure that you really want to.
It's depend by leather quality and strings. Each leathers are designed for a best note to resonance. You must pull the string very strong, then insert the pieces of wood to keep up the correct strings to keep the right note. Then with the hammer, you must accord each point of the leather corona. Keep attention where you hit. My tun or ta is very resonance and it keeps some seconds to the silence. A good tabla and a good teacher can teach you to make it.
What a great job of communicating the basic concepts. It would be fun to try a tabla but they are surprisingly expensive new and the used ones I have seen are quite old and typically have multiple issues. Hard to get around the intimidation factor that Indian music is very formal and rigid not to mention complex. Stoned hippy improv with indian instruments has always struck me as sort of sacreligious - although Randy Gloss is saying it is ok to fool around on one here.
definitely not sacrilegious. I personally believe you should learn the tradition, repertoire, history of the instruments you study and play. if the foundation is strong, you can build to great heights. however, at some point you have to speak music in your own way...being true to who you are, your influences, ideas, perspective...it is definitely okay to embrace these things and be honest in our approach. This is something in varying ways that ALL of my teachers and mentors have instilled in me: PadmaShri Pandit Swapan Chaudhuri, John Bergamo, Poovalur Sriji, Guello, Carlos Stasi, Houman Pourmehdi, Dan Kennedy, Alfred Ladzekpo, Adam Rudolph and more have all taught, mentored and guided me in such a way as being endlessly giving with information but have also steered me to tap into 'who am I" as a musician in the process of learning...helping me to no end in finding my voice as a musician. Not to solely mimic, but to comprehend musical languages, to be able to express in my own way. So In that way, I surely encourage people to experiment, explore, create, have fun!!!!!! after all, who should have an issue with anyone sincerely and honestly expressing themselves through music or any artistic medium? all my best,
they're are not at all expensive. in fact you can get some on them for below 100 dollars to start with. consider looking into things a little more before making weird comments that everyone can see
I'm just a humble, perpetual lover and student of music...learning and trying, and sharing along the way. I appreciate any feedback, but for my talim, hand positioning, and what I know about tabla, I listen, follow, and defer to my teacher, Padmashri Pandit Swapan Chaudhuri. respectfully,
Yes I have recorded some deep house lounge music tracks using my friends tabla & for me it wasn't hard at all just a joy to add in my own styles of my deep house lounge tracks that I have done!! I do want to get a tabla but what is the best to get since I am a professional conga bongo drummer locally & don't want a cheap sounding tabla so would appreciate your help! Also I add in my antique cash registers for Percussion too yeah it is crazy but since that is my other hobby collecting antique cash registers why not use it for Percussion oh is it ever fun!
any time you learn to speak or sing a rhythm,(like hickory dicory dock) it helps you remember it ,any body know THIS one GO GO heel toe SLAP to heel toe (on conga ) ??
@@TaalPanchamSawari It's sort of the same point regardless, I was really using hyperbole. None-the-less the tabla seem to have multiple uncertain origins and theories, according to wikipedia. One is when the Muslims invaded India in 15th 16th centuryish, as you say, which simply says they brought it over. How long did they have it prior? It wasn't mentioned. Other observations note mention of it in Vedic texts of Ancient India possibly making it ever older than 5000 years. It also depends of exactly what a tabla is regards shape, size and materials. It didn't magically appear, it evolved a development and iteration of previous drums. At what point did a tabla become a tabla? And did a tabla exist prior with other names?
Hey Randy, if u dont mind me sharimg... The black Spot strokes, are pronounced, "Tay- T". The "Tay" word comes 1st. Cos as ur saying right now... me n my buddies just finished laughing for a good 15 odd minutes.... cos the young little boy's eyes popped up when he heard u saying "T-Tay", n we all cought it. U cannot hide it from the Indians. "T-Tay" means Balls... Bollocks. N in a crude funny way.... So we're specifically thought to say "Tay-T". Whether u start at the 'fore' finger or with the 3 Fingers, its STILL pronounced "Tay-T". Still, thank you for that LAUGHTER. Phew.... Anyway.... Pranam to Pt ji Swapan Ji... Thank you Randy... Cheers....
As you know there many many languages in India and several gharanas of tabla playing. I’ve been a devout student of the greatest exponant of Lucknow gharana, Padmashri Pandit Swapan Chaudhuri for the past 25 years. In that time I have amassed the single largest archive of his teachings. I have countless audio and video recordings of him teaching and reciting, and can assure you that in this gharana and with MY teacher, my understanding of the bols is more than fine...enough that he trusts me to work with his students in his absence. So I appreciate the message in some way, and good to know I was good for a laugh, but likewise I find your message also and maybe equally a bit comical too.
What I find particularly “funny” is the need to publicly ridicule anyone in this manner. The irony is made even more profound when you consider that I likely have more knowledge and information on “your”subject, emassed through 25 years of diligent study with a true MASTER. I would think it’d be better to be supportive and encourage people interested in “your” subject rather than ridicule and discourage. But what would I know anyway??? If you give me your name I’d be delighted to give Swapanda your pranam, along with your wonderful message!!!! Cheers,
@@randygloss7295 thanks broo..dangdut is a blend of traditional music and modern musical instruments, and percussion blows with more variety are in coplo music
❤️ Dangdut classic, Koplo this sub genre from Dangdut.. Dangdut koplo, dangdut banyuwangi, dangdut tarling, dangdut campursari, and bla bla bla hihihi 😂 love music Indonesia
cost is a relative word with musical instruments. compared to the cost of string instruments, or even the cost of other types of drums, my instruments of choice aren't usually expensive in comparison. I tend to gravitate to sound over looks, and quality over price tag.
I was delighted to get together with Kalani to share about this amazing and endlessly fascinating instrument and subject. With the primary intention to introduce, and share a little something about tabla with the World Drum Club. In doing so, hopefully dispel any misconception, intimidation, or barriers about wanting to check it out and learn more about tabla. As a percussionist, like most of us, I'm just a humble perpetual lover and student of music...learning and trying, and sharing along the way. I have been incredibly fortunate to study this instrument with the most gracious and generous of teachers, PadmaShri Pandit Swapan Chaudhuri, who believes passionately in sharing this amazing subject of tabla with anyone who wants to learn, and believes firmly that music (all music) is for everyone. To be able to pay that forward or back, an ocean or an eyedroppers worth, in whatever way I can (in my own way) is an honor and privilege to do so. humbly yours,
A former student of yours, Patrick Fitzgibbon, has taught me frame drumming and tabla. Best wishes from MI
@@DolphinPain awesome!!!! Please send my regards to Patrick when you see him. all my best,
Randy Gloss you’re the best my brother!!! I miss seeing you on the daily! You are still the greatest bringer of Light I’ve come across:)
Alex Snydman thank you Alex!!!!! I really appreciate it...and you!!!!! My absolute best,
Still a student of tabla...after messing with these incredible sounding drums for decades...RUclips has been a game changer {WDC} with lessons like these and many more, showing many techniques. I like to add tabla to recordings with other percussion...not trying to be flashy...just good enough to add some cool flavor. Many Thanks to you both.
Tabla has to be my favorite musical instrument. I had the amazing experience of seeing Zakir Hussain up close while he played in Remember Shakhti. Absolutely mind-blowing. Thanks for posting.
Lucky!!
Wow, your comment doesn’t contribute to the world in anyway. Keep posting
Danny Carey made me fall in love with those, even though I've only seen him emulating it in his mandala pads. o/
Same here, dude! They fit amazingly well in Tool music
Yes!
I learned so much about percussion tones in general just from this Tabla video, this guy is awesome.
4am and Im watching this. And not mad about it.
Sir, Randy Gloss, thank you for taking trouble and learning Tabala, the father or Mother of all kinds of Rhythms. I am astonished seeing the way you explain and play with accuracy. Great and Great. God bless you.
thank you so very much. I'm just a student of tabla, but I do love it so...and I know full well it is for ANYONE and EVERYONE that wants to learn...Music is not elite or exclusive, it IS for everyone. If I know even only one thing about music from ALL of my teachers, that would be IT. Indian Classical Music (and India itself) has given me sooooo much in my lifetime. it was an honor for me to talk about this subject with the hope of others not being intimidated to also try and learn too. If I can do it...anyone who wants to learn can also do it. thank you again for your kind message. all my best,
Thank you Sir for your kind reply. This is the first time I got a you tube reply from an artist. God bless you with long life, good health, music spirit and abundance.
What makes somebody dislike a video like this? I can never understand. Kudos Randy and Kalani. First timer to your videos. Thoroughly enjoyed it.
The price of freedom is the allowance to like or dislike something.
fantastic .. I am a table player from India and I love the way Randy played here.. We have lot of talent in India who needs exposure to the world, I request you to visit India, Bangalore once..
I surely know there is immense talent in India. After all I was drawn to want to learn and know more. it's actually overwhelming, the skill level and ability, to be perfectly honest. this is why I hope to try and dispel misconceptions and any intimidation for others to want to check it out too. I hope. Yes definitely, I have been to India many times. it is my wife and my favorite place to visit , we go about every other year, and absolutely love India. ...and yes I also have been to Bangalore too. my first trip to Bangalore was in 1997. Quite a lot has changed since then. anyway, I just wanted to say thank you for the kind words of support and encouragement.
'Table' player?
i never seen anyone playing a table. please give us a demo.
@@richardabraham5576 😂 I bet that must be the work of the great autocorrect
rishikesh aartis and swamis for me :-)
Thank you both🙏
I've been following the same learning process for congas and bongos (I've not yet played a tabla, and look forward to it). If you map out the different sound combos you can get from different parts of the head & different striking methods, then you can infuse even the simplest rhythms with interesting tonal variations.
Wow! Thank you so much. Tabla is amazing, and it is a deep subject. Really enjoyed the video. Many thanks!
Man soooooooo enjoyed in school doing synthesizer skills of my own deep house lounge music & used this tabla drum just came natural to me just felt those deep chill vibes through my deep house lounge tracks I was creating & it just went great! Oh miss those days!
You should also do something about the Mridangam. It also works on a similar principle and is used intensely in south India
I have studied South Indian percussion and related repertoire and tala concepts, but not actually mridangam. I studied for many years with mridangist Poovalur Sriji, but studying solkattu, kanjira, and applications of South Indian Tala to other drums and percussion instruments. I don't play mridangam at all though. However, I love that drum and have deep respect for it and for Carnatic music in general. I also love visiting there, and I love South Indian food too!!!! :))
@@randygloss7295 Nice
indian instruments like tabla, pakhawaj, mridangam, mridanga all of them are the same its just they’re all a bit different (but mridangam is a bit more different as it is carnatic not hindustani)
We have tabla and kendang as main instrument in dangdut music, which is very India influenced, greeting from Indonesia
❤️❤️❤️Dangdut classic, no kolpo 😂😂😂
Cool to see Indian influences in other countries’ music.
Dude, kendang sunda--assuming you're from West Java--is the BEST kendang. I love it.
Looking forward for a video on a JUGALBANDI between Tabla and Djembe. It will be interesting. Thanks for the lovely video.
You're welcome!
Music is universal language
*pornhub intro starts playing*
Randy gloss ..u r great
wow
Fluent with the bole. Splendid
Wow Ive always been curious about these drums. Thanks!
Really cool stuff. Now I feel tempted to get my own set. Japanese taiko drumming also has an oral notation system for different drum sounds (called kuchi shoga).
Both instruments are amazing
Of all the Indian instruments, tabla ranks 2nd among my favorite. The first? Bansuri.
Tabalchis know that mastering this instrument is not child's play. There's a rigor involved in learning and practicing this instrument. I've been fortunate to play music with professional and amateur tabalchis while in college and church -- mostly in Mumbai. I could easily spend an afternoon listening to my friend, Saurab, playing the tabla while he was doing his riaz. Honestly, I tried, but this is not for the casual let-me-give-it-a-try kind of person. You have to know you want to, and you have to be know for sure that you really want to.
I could never tune them as good as he has.
Correct. Same goes for me as well. I think that is the quality of leather used in tabla.
It's depend by leather quality and strings. Each leathers are designed for a best note to resonance. You must pull the string very strong, then insert the pieces of wood to keep up the correct strings to keep the right note. Then with the hammer, you must accord each point of the leather corona. Keep attention where you hit.
My tun or ta is very resonance and it keeps some seconds to the silence.
A good tabla and a good teacher can teach you to make it.
If you want to learn please can follow my channel
My game just got changed
Loved this
Amazing!! U are the best drummer! :)
Randy Gloss is a fantastic drummer and passionate educator.
What a great job of communicating the basic concepts. It would be fun to try a tabla but they are surprisingly expensive new and the used ones I have seen are quite old and typically have multiple issues. Hard to get around the intimidation factor that Indian music is very formal and rigid not to mention complex. Stoned hippy improv with indian instruments has always struck me as sort of sacreligious - although Randy Gloss is saying it is ok to fool around on one here.
Here in india Tablas are very cheap
definitely not sacrilegious. I personally believe you should learn the tradition, repertoire, history of the instruments you study and play. if the foundation is strong, you can build to great heights. however, at some point you have to speak music in your own way...being true to who you are, your influences, ideas, perspective...it is definitely okay to embrace these things and be honest in our approach. This is something in varying ways that ALL of my teachers and mentors have instilled in me: PadmaShri Pandit Swapan Chaudhuri, John Bergamo, Poovalur Sriji, Guello, Carlos Stasi, Houman Pourmehdi, Dan Kennedy, Alfred Ladzekpo, Adam Rudolph and more have all taught, mentored and guided me in such a way as being endlessly giving with information but have also steered me to tap into 'who am I" as a musician in the process of learning...helping me to no end in finding my voice as a musician. Not to solely mimic, but to comprehend musical languages, to be able to express in my own way. So In that way, I surely encourage people to experiment, explore, create, have fun!!!!!! after all, who should have an issue with anyone sincerely and honestly expressing themselves through music or any artistic medium? all my best,
they're are not at all expensive. in fact you can get some on them for below 100 dollars to start with. consider looking into things a little more before making weird comments that everyone can see
Excellent
I like it
since the release of tablas, the game has changed
I play tabla this is proud for myself
You bought a tabla form Alok Dutta? Wasn't this Danny Carey's tabla teacher!? So amazing!
Aaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Nice.......
Hi, just saw your video. I am learning tabla and came across this video.
Trying keeping your hand a little close to the black portion (shahi) while playing ti ta or tir ki ta
If you have feedback or advice for Randy, you can contact him directly through the email addresses we share at the end of the video.
I'm just a humble, perpetual lover and student of music...learning and trying, and sharing along the way. I appreciate any feedback, but for my talim, hand positioning, and what I know about tabla, I listen, follow, and defer to my teacher, Padmashri Pandit Swapan Chaudhuri. respectfully,
Yes I have recorded some deep house lounge music tracks using my friends tabla & for me it wasn't hard at all just a joy to add in my own styles of my deep house lounge tracks that I have done!! I do want to get a tabla but what is the best to get since I am a professional conga bongo drummer locally & don't want a cheap sounding tabla so would appreciate your help! Also I add in my antique cash registers for Percussion too yeah it is crazy but since that is my other hobby collecting antique cash registers why not use it for Percussion oh is it ever fun!
Need more playing less talking
any time you learn to speak or sing a rhythm,(like hickory dicory dock) it helps you remember it ,any body know THIS one GO GO heel toe SLAP to heel toe (on conga ) ??
Tabla is a game changer. Yeah 5000 years ago!
its founded in the 15 th or 16th Century
@@TaalPanchamSawari It's sort of the same point regardless, I was really using hyperbole.
None-the-less the tabla seem to have multiple uncertain origins and theories, according to wikipedia. One is when the Muslims invaded India in 15th 16th centuryish, as you say, which simply says they brought it over. How long did they have it prior? It wasn't mentioned.
Other observations note mention of it in Vedic texts of Ancient India possibly making it ever older than 5000 years.
It also depends of exactly what a tabla is regards shape, size and materials. It didn't magically appear, it evolved a development and iteration of previous drums. At what point did a tabla become a tabla? And did a tabla exist prior with other names?
please, can you put subtitles? i understand a litle bit, but sometimes i lose it.
I don't know how I got to this video
Yada yada yada...play that.
Hey Randy, if u dont mind me sharimg...
The black Spot strokes, are pronounced, "Tay- T".
The "Tay" word comes 1st.
Cos as ur saying right now... me n my buddies just finished laughing for a good 15 odd minutes.... cos the young little boy's eyes popped up when he heard u saying "T-Tay", n we all cought it. U cannot hide it from the Indians.
"T-Tay" means Balls... Bollocks. N in a crude funny way....
So we're specifically thought to say "Tay-T".
Whether u start at the 'fore' finger or with the 3 Fingers, its STILL pronounced "Tay-T". Still, thank you for that LAUGHTER. Phew....
Anyway.... Pranam to Pt ji Swapan Ji...
Thank you Randy...
Cheers....
As you know there many many languages in India and several gharanas of tabla playing. I’ve been a devout student of the greatest exponant of Lucknow gharana, Padmashri Pandit Swapan Chaudhuri for the past 25 years. In that time I have amassed the single largest archive of his teachings. I have countless audio and video recordings of him teaching and reciting, and can assure you that in this gharana and with MY teacher, my understanding of the bols is more than fine...enough that he trusts me to work with his students in his absence.
So I appreciate the message in some way, and good to know I was good for a laugh, but likewise I find your message also and maybe equally a bit comical too.
What I find particularly “funny” is the need to publicly ridicule anyone in this manner. The irony is made even more profound when you consider that I likely have more knowledge and information on “your”subject, emassed through 25 years of diligent study with a true MASTER. I would think it’d be better to be supportive and encourage people interested in “your” subject rather than ridicule and discourage. But what would I know anyway??? If you give me your name I’d be delighted to give Swapanda your pranam, along with your wonderful message!!!! Cheers,
🎶🎶🙏🙏🙏🎵🎵🎙🎙
All I kept hearing in the singing at the start was "gottogetadog, gottogetadog, gottogetadog..."
try to listen to dangdut music from Indonesia ... and you will find percussion similar to that
I have heard, and it is super cool!!!!!!!!
@@randygloss7295 thanks broo..dangdut is a blend of traditional music and modern musical instruments, and percussion blows with more variety are in coplo music
❤️ Dangdut classic, Koplo this sub genre from Dangdut.. Dangdut koplo, dangdut banyuwangi, dangdut tarling, dangdut campursari, and bla bla bla hihihi 😂 love music Indonesia
I need to get a tabla
@Bruce Thomson hell naw
@@conlangknow8787 around 100-200$ in India
@Bruce Thomson you can get ones for around 100 dollars and they are good enough to stsrt with
can sombody write the stokes names?
Any tool fans here?
Matt17O I'm a massive Tool fan just for the awesome drums and instruments they play. I often get my Djembe out and rock with Tool xx
Me.
my favourite tool is the “the hacksaw”
Here from the king’s Mountain View...
Amazing
From india
Mst
Rimpa shiva
*_Fun fact: it takes 16 yrs to master tabla._*
Wrong. It takes a lifetime
@@johnrambo3465 theek h bhai
you both wrong, if you wanna know the naswer go to www.funfact.krom
@@77easy77 okay
@Justin Jehoshaphat no, I'm into guitars.
My friend has master's degree in tabla, he mentioned this to me.
Mr.Randy ..your tabla set appears to be very COSTLY
.....how much is it...??
cost is a relative word with musical instruments. compared to the cost of string instruments, or even the cost of other types of drums, my instruments of choice aren't usually expensive in comparison. I tend to gravitate to sound over looks, and quality over price tag.
I did not catch the idea about game changer.
Why tabla is game changer?
Why not handpan,for example?
Try mridangam next time
Here bc of TOOL
You can get the same sound from an empty glass vase
Shut up
@@showaxd3539 Relax no disrespect it's just what I used to do as a kid.. Talk before you think
@@goran3149 ok
How is Tabla game changer when it's been around for centuries?
normies: tha ki thom num
randy gloss: tha te tin ne😂😂😂
“tha ki thom num” sounds like carnatic (south indian music)
Tari khan???
You have the skin from tabla hi? The skin is broken, ?
I can help you to get new skins
View ketipung indonesian
Cal arts education in less than an hour...
6:00 GAY GAY GAY GAY GAY
Some douchebag had to crack this joke.
And just from that he has so many ideas lol
His arm posture is little bad , in tabla the arms never off from the chatti
What is this a sales pitch or a religion or something?
Baxter, you know I don’t speak Spanish...
the opening riff wasn't impressive to me. hiding the tones with just slaps.
Rapping
Da degga degga daa? Shut up and play the tabla.
I AM 6:00
Wrong way to play tabla
fool.
Randy gloss ..u r great
Aaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Nice.......