Matt Garstka - Go-To Pad Exercises
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
- Matt Garstka breaks down some of his concepts to building hand technique, ghost note development and unique rhythmic vocabulary!
Watch Matt's "State Of The Art" course!
👉 drumchannel.co...
Follow DrumChannel on..
- Facebook: / drumchannel
- Instagram: / drumchannel
- Twitter: / drumchannel
Unisons ultra unified ... got it
Gabriel Isn’t he fantastic, lol!
Still looking to get them a little unified! No where close to ultra!
"Usually I'm actually playing more complicated patterns" damn straight Matt 😅
This isn't healthy for my brain
When you hear a metronome but it's actually his right hand beating xd
My brain’s note-to-self: “Don’t you even think about it”.
you had me at the thumbnail "Garstka" lol
There is nothing more unnerving than uberly unsatisfying un-ultra unified unisons. 😁
He hits that pad really hard... I cannot imagine how can he hit it so hard and be relaxed at the same time. I bet he is, but I just don't understand how.
I'll work on the ultra unified unsions - thanks!
Perfect I just bought a pad yesterday
Phase! Exactly what I was hearing and trying to avoid but didnt have the word for it.
What's phasing? That wasn't very clear to me
FYI he's supplying warm up CONCEPTS, not so much a note for note lesson...
right hand astonatos in standard 4
(ur choice of quarter notes, 8th, dotted quarter notes, or 3s)
& left hand doing odd number groupings that intertwine with the pulse. the reason it sounds more complicated is because as an odd number note grouping going to an even pulse gets 2 for one. up beat sound & downbeat. very puzzling but fun brain food
Hey I’m too noob to understand what’s going on, can someone break this down please? Thanks!!
Now reverse that right hand to play the two semi quavers then the quaver last. Rather than quaver.. two semi quavers etc. It’s very hard. Like a reverse samba pattern with the right hand.. gets too easy if the muscle memory only deals with one way round.
really helpful concept! Gonna work on this starting....now
Yeah. This looks great, after I study for 10 years
holy shit ive been waiting for a pro that actually speaks my language. i mean like erskine, smith and copeland (etc) just like the next drummer but im a new school guy. The nomenclature and explanation used and the exercise its self are INCREDIBLY modern when you compare it to traditional independance, rudiment and ghost note exercises. I do concede that it probably COMES from that though...
Great video overall and I RARELY comment on drum vids.
2:18 su cumbión piola
LMAO
Just get em unisons ultra unified fellas!
What pad are those
I see a Matt Gartska thumbnail. I CLICK.!
When he says "one on or one off" does he mean just not playing a note?
Yes, "on" means play the note and "off" means don't play the note. If you were to play a 5 note pattern as "one one, one off, two on, one off" that would be: X _ X X _
Correct.
In a group of 5 with one on one off
You would play 1 - 3 - 5
Who else had to rewind from 0:19?
Is there a transcription? Also would love to see this on the drumset!
Sounds like a samba practice?!
What he said
Dat voice
MagN8 he’s cute. like a stuffed animal!
As a leader
look up berklee chops videos from ages ago with Matt G on them ;)
Matt Garstka > Jim Chapin
woah woah woah
The few who disliked this video were just butthurt because they didn't understand it
Where's the lessons by Metal Matt tho?
Metal Matt lessons, if released to the public, would cause something similar to the famous "John Petrucci Psyco-Exercises Massacre" of 2008. They have since been locked away in a vault.
Nice vid
So good
I guess u could say to play these PADERNS 😂👌🏼
Just so I understand, you want to cut down on phase during pad exercises? I’m curious as to why.
because flamming when you're not trying to flam is NOT COOL
he has the cutest voice!
Get 'em Dirty D!
WTF
Nice
Amazing
Cool stuff
Cool cool !
Thanks!
@0:51
Matt 👏
What's phasing?
Matt uses the term "phase" in this context to describe two notes that are played in unison that still sound like two notes played one after the other, and don't sound like one note. Here is an in-depth video all about phase and how it relates to audio waveforms: ruclips.net/video/W0y8RTweE7c/видео.html
@@drumchannel oh I see! Thanks :)