Have watched several videos now about the same thing, this one although the quality isn't as good as some of the others, you covered the points much better so that I (a professional jazz drummer lol) could understand and grasp the concepts properly. Thank you, this was appreciated.
Thanks man - I’m struggling with my left foot on this one, I can do it ALL DAY with my right foot, but keeping it consistent on my left AND combining into 4 strokes cleanly is so insanely difficult!!
It’s a pleasure, Man.. Indeed, this technique requires control.. But you’ll get there eventually.. Keep working on it.. I’m also working on it every day to play different range of tempo.. Cheers.. 🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
Greetings, Man.. Thank you very much for stopping by, please let me know if my lesson and hacks help you to improve your heel-toe playing.. Cheers.. 🤘🏻🤘🏻
You mentioned the sweet spot, but at the end of the video when you demonstrate the various applications your feet seem to be all the way into the pedal when you engage the technique?
Ah yes, thanks for noticing.. I happened to make the backing track within my comfortable tempo for the sake of demonstration only, just to show that we can do this and that with the heeltoe.. Cheers, buddy..
@TimPetersonMusic Thanks for explaining. I just started heel toe a couple of days ago and your video helped very much. I have it to a point where I can keep it steady at around 180bpm (feet only). While playing, I am struggling with transitioning from heel up to heel toe, as well as incorporating the hands with heel toe. Any pointers? I know it's early days yet for me.
@@rightfootlefthand Try this.. Since the rebound of both technique feels different, try to hit only with your heel (no toe) for your first heel-toe hit after your heel-up ~ then continue with the heel-toe motion.. Let me know if that works, if it doesn't, let's find another method..
@TimPetersonMusic That did help, thank you! Once you get the technique down the feeling is quite different compared to the broken-out 2 step technique I started with.
Was the part 5:10 recorded with triggers ? Is the second hit with the toe's as strong as the first one ? thank you for your help and thank you for the very great video
If you play this kind of heel-toe like me, at the same range of tempo, then yes, first hit and second hit nearly the same volume, and it’s all about control, hence no need to trigger.. If the heel-toe is played on the extreme tempo like many other guys out there, then you need the trigger ‘cause played acoustically you barely hear anything, ‘cause you will notice almost no beater swing.. This video was nearly two years ago, and now I am using different set of pedals, definitely more attack.. I hope this helps, Man, cheers.. 🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
I am now playing the Czarcie Kopyto.. I did this on my previous pedals which is Pearl Eliminator, did it on Yamaha, DW, Tama, even cheap single-chained no-brand pedals.. So every pedal will do if you can perform the technique well.. Cheers, Buddy.. Thanks for stopping by.. 🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
I like your technique, but it sounds choppy, like an uneven double - stroke on the snare with the hands. Sounds like shit compared to single strokes. Unless a drummer has a triggers bassdrums with some nice loud speakers for big shows, ummmmm..... will sound not right. You want your drums to sound even , no?
One of the best explanations I've seen on RUclips, by far!
Thank you for the compliment, Buddy.. Cheers.. 🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
BEST explanation ive seen. Thanks a lot brother
For real? Thanks Man!! I appreciate your kind words.. Cheers, Brother..
I Like the way you broke it down you explained everything in a clear way. that i can work with 👍
Have watched several videos now about the same thing, this one although the quality isn't as good as some of the others, you covered the points much better so that I (a professional jazz drummer lol) could understand and grasp the concepts properly. Thank you, this was appreciated.
Great explanation + Quality video = subscribed.
Thank you soo much for this video! Bye from Italy 🤗🎵
Thank you for your kind words and I hope this video helps.. Cheers, my Man..
🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
Excelente video !!! Thiago from Brazil !!!
Thanks a lot, Thiago, muito obrigado.. 🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
Bro thank you for acknowledging the two variations of this technique. It's been driving me crazy wondering if I'm using the technique correctly
This is great. You're funny too!
THANK YOU
Very good video. Thank you 😊
Thank you very much and you’re welcome Man.. I hope this lesson helps..
Thanks man - I’m struggling with my left foot on this one, I can do it ALL DAY with my right foot, but keeping it consistent on my left AND combining into 4 strokes cleanly is so insanely difficult!!
It’s a pleasure, Man.. Indeed, this technique requires control.. But you’ll get there eventually.. Keep working on it.. I’m also working on it every day to play different range of tempo.. Cheers.. 🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
Thx a lot bro, i literally need this tutorial.
I appreciate it, thank you very much.. I hope this lesson helps.. 🤘🏻
Cant wait to practice this
Let me know if my tutorial helps, Man.. Cheers..
Awesome video, I’m trying hard to get this down.
Thank you bro. \m/
You’re welcome, Man.. 🤘🏻🤘🏻
Hey! That was very helpfull! And you explained everything in a very calm and clear way, thank you, greetings from the Netherlands 🤘🏻
Greetings, Man.. Thank you very much for stopping by, please let me know if my lesson and hacks help you to improve your heel-toe playing.. Cheers.. 🤘🏻🤘🏻
New to the channel, great explanations and content. Cheers 🤘🏼🥁🤘🏼
Thanks a lot for your support, Man! Feel free to share ‘em.. More lessons are coming soon.. Rock on!! 🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
The two variations you explained are a lot like Moeller doubles vs Bounce-roll doubles with the hands.
🤣 Brilliant, brother.
🤣 Thanks a lot, Brother..
I noticed you were using the red cam. Does it help doing the heel toe?
Its seems impossible to do it xDD but i will get it. Thx you're awesome
Nothing is impossible, Buddy.. You’re awesome too and you can do it.. Cheers.. Come on..🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
After watching this, my style is more like your reference to “sweet spot” heel toe.
are you mic'ing your bass drums or triggering? they sound amazing in the mixes
Nice man, what about pedal settings... It would be awesome to check your settings and how they affect the response!
02:47 Here, Man.. Thanks a lot.. Cheers.. 🤘🤘🤘
Make sure your spring tension is quite tight to get that rebound..
You mentioned the sweet spot, but at the end of the video when you demonstrate the various applications your feet seem to be all the way into the pedal when you engage the technique?
Ah yes, thanks for noticing.. I happened to make the backing track within my comfortable tempo for the sake of demonstration only, just to show that we can do this and that with the heeltoe.. Cheers, buddy..
@TimPetersonMusic Thanks for explaining. I just started heel toe a couple of days ago and your video helped very much. I have it to a point where I can keep it steady at around 180bpm (feet only). While playing, I am struggling with transitioning from heel up to heel toe, as well as incorporating the hands with heel toe. Any pointers? I know it's early days yet for me.
@@rightfootlefthand Try this.. Since the rebound of both technique feels different, try to hit only with your heel (no toe) for your first heel-toe hit after your heel-up ~ then continue with the heel-toe motion.. Let me know if that works, if it doesn't, let's find another method..
@TimPetersonMusic That did help, thank you! Once you get the technique down the feeling is quite different compared to the broken-out 2 step technique I started with.
Does this work with a short board pedal..????
I played this technique with lots of different pedals, and the answer is yes, you can play this technique with any pedal.. Cheers, Buddy.. 🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
@@TimPetersonMusic thought of getting the iron cobra 200 ..i hope it will work fine
@ipaddrummer5772 It is a fine pedal, Buddy.. Good luck.. Cheers.. 🤘🏻🤘🏻
Was the part 5:10 recorded with triggers ? Is the second hit with the toe's as strong as the first one ? thank you for your help and thank you for the very great video
If you play this kind of heel-toe like me, at the same range of tempo, then yes,
first hit and second hit nearly the same volume, and it’s all about control, hence no need to trigger..
If the heel-toe is played on the extreme tempo like many other guys out there, then you need the trigger ‘cause played acoustically you barely hear anything, ‘cause you will notice almost no beater swing..
This video was nearly two years ago, and now I am using different set of pedals, definitely more attack..
I hope this helps, Man, cheers.. 🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
Question how to oractice this
hey man, nice tutorial just wondering can i still do this on a non longboard pedal like a dw 3000?
I am now playing the Czarcie Kopyto..
I did this on my previous pedals which is Pearl Eliminator, did it on Yamaha, DW, Tama, even cheap single-chained no-brand pedals.. So every pedal will do if you can perform the technique well.. Cheers, Buddy.. Thanks for stopping by.. 🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
@@TimPetersonMusic thanks bro appreciate it
could be beneficial to see the actual foot in a really slow play demo.... 🙂
??o?o?? ?
Sorry, I don’t understand, Man.. Anyway thanks for stopping by.. 🤘🏻🤘🏻
I like your technique, but it sounds choppy, like an uneven double - stroke on the snare with the hands. Sounds like shit compared to single strokes. Unless a drummer has a triggers bassdrums with some nice loud speakers for big shows, ummmmm..... will sound not right. You want your drums to sound even , no?