I've always had a hard time with control with my foot. I started doing this exercise and did it for 20 minutes and I'm already improving. You have taught me finger control and now foot control. You are the man.
Oh man, today I got to 180 bpm, heel up, and maintained it smoothly all the way with that second exercise (sixteenths on the 4)! I started at 60 bpm, for 3 minutes straight, then up by 20 bpm, 3 minutes straight at each rate. By the time I got to 180, it was no problem at all. Thanks a million for these exercises!
this is sick ! I tried this without a metronome and failed, then I got a metronome and tried the first excercise for an hour, and it’s giving results just by now ! thanks !
Jared, You are The Man.... I notice that you sit well above the Kit in height. I'm a 69 YO , resurrected Drummer , playing recreationally in my Basement. I just got back into playing drums after a 50 Year Hiatus (as a HS Teenager, played in a Garage Band with HS Buddies that never got out of the Garage!!). My wifey of 46 years, played Santa Claus in 2018 and gifted me a cheapo Kit - Gammon , to be able to "resume" playing drums in my upcoming Retirement. I just retired Now. I play Heel Down due primarily to physical disabilities (which contributed to the need to retire), spinal /lumbar stuff, that limits my ability to raise my heel to toe playing. It is difficult for me to do Double Bass drum strokes, and quick triples is generally out of the question with a single bass drum pedal (now using a PDP direct drive Long Board). I just ordered a Mapex Double Pedal - going to try it to see what it will do. Question: when using a double pedal, do yu typically, move your left foot from the HiHat to the second pedal, shifting it back and forth? Or do you just not use the HiHat ? Moreover, I just found a Cannon Percussion Heel and Toe driven double pedal after researching some more - found a used on at Guitar Center , new ones are very hard to find. With my disabilities, and eben before that, for some weird reason, I am able to play much quicker with my heel - i.e. Playing "air drums". Although I will "probably" not play with a Band (hey You never know.... I might bump into a Geriatric Band somewhere), I play typically to MY Music in my COVID Hibernation created "studio" in the finished Basement. Typical Music: CCR, Petty, Eagles, CARS, Stones, Beatles, Mellencamp (not as good as Ken Aranoff , for sure), M. Etheridge, Hollies, ELO, Clapton, and Linda Ronstadt { for you folks who don't know of her..... play her music. She was the Original DIVA and was a terrific }. Be well all.
Thanks for this. I'm a long-time guitarist but I just bought a little electric kit. It will be nice to learn some rudimentary drum techniques using your online lessons. Thanks again!
Hey! I'm having troubles with hitting the bass drum and placing my weight and because of that whenever I use toe-down I sometimes hit the head twice or when I use the heel-down technique I miss beats because I dont hit it strong enough, could it be something about the way I sit behind the kit or should I just try and focus on developing one of the techniques and try to make the hits constant and even?
I had the same problem! On those 16th patterns, you're playing 5 notes with your foot, but 3 of those line up exactly with the right hand on the hat! Slow it down (you don't have to start at 70bpm like he did) and concentrate on nailing all three of those notes in unison. That way your foot's not thinking "holy crap I need to play a bunch of notes fast", it's thinking "lets lay down a steady beat and keep this all together"
I've been learning for almost a year now. I really haven't focused on speed much yet. I'm more working on getting a kick in at different places in the beat. E & A's I just tried these and I did alright but I was around 60 bpm except for #1. I could do that at 120 bpm but I could only make it about 1 minute or so.
Thanks Jared, I didn't know that this heel up technique was what I've been playing as a beginner and feel comfortable with. I just started playing what I heard in my head from my favorite music and copied that.
Also, it wouldn't be a bad idea to bring this up with your instructor. He/she may have some insight. On the other hand, you mentioned you have only been playing nearly every day for 8-9 months. Great start, and great dedication, but keep in mind that it's gonna take some time, and on top of that good technique. You want to play relaxed. Tensing up can cause not only timing issues, but injuries as well. It's also more fun to play when you are relaxed.
I'm just starting out so excuse the silly question but: the leg you use to hit the pedal is lifted all the time? It never rests? Is that just a matter of stamina or is there some kind of trick to prevent exhaustion? Seems kinda weird to have you leg lifted slightly above the ground all the time
I started playing drums maybe 25 years ago. I honestly have a tough time keeping my foot flat on the footboard during faster tempos. I'd say you want to keep your foot parallel with the floor during faster tempos. Not a constant angle like the slope of the footboard. Maybe raise or even lower your drum throne until it feels more comfortable? If I tried to do double bass keeping my foot flat my ankles would kill me in a short amount of time.
i play heel down as well, i think thats what you do right? and i can NOT play with my heels up at all, never the less, i can still play fast bass, its all based on what youre comfortable with
Rabin Miguel This guy plays the modern heel up technique. I find this version a bit counter productive. If you look at the way Jojo Mayer plays the bass drum, I feel that this actually is better, as it allows the bass to resonate more (traditional heel up). This isn't at all wrong, but I prefer his tecnique.
It's not a silly questions at all. Start all exercises at a very slow tempo. You can even practice the leg motion while watching TV or online. There are many different bass drum techniques, and with this particular one, the heel never touches the ground. I'm not a great drummer at all, but this video had really helped me with my speed and timing. Have fun and good luck!!!
It frustrates me so much that my leg just stops working after a couple of hits. I have my heel up, my pedal set up correct and the height of my throne is also perfect. My upper leg starts hurting like hell and my ankle just refuses to keep a steady beat.
Hi everybody I need some help: What Is the best regulation for the pedal to play with flat foot? spring should be pull? Angle of swing should be 45°? sorry for my english hope someone can help
Use very loose tension, loosen the spring tension all the way then tighten up a small 1/8 thread. The angle can be 45° or less better for drum featuring
This use to happened to me every time i sat at the kit. Still from time to time i can feel my hand wanting to follow my foot. When in reality it should be your foot following your hand. I started breaking this by practicing 16th note base and hi hat combos in loops. Then finding beats that have them and playing them over and over but at very very deadly slow tempos. After playing it slow so many times faster tempo as expected became easier. Just takes time. :-/
Im a beginner.. So i have a question . How to use the pedal if the pedal speeds are like dodo-pa-dodo-pa (the "pa" is where the kick/bass/pedal stops playing) but the snare and the hi-hat closed are fast paced? Im having trouble with this and also having trouble making this question cus you may be cant understand the sentence.. Thx in advance
I normally lose control and speed up on the sixteenth notes with the bass drum. I am getting better though :) Don't worry, you are not bad. Tighten up the fulcrum on your fingers, and also USE your fingers and get the stick off you palm. Relax on them, cause if you are tense, you will lock up, and stick to being slow. Keep Drumming! :)
When you say "tip of your feet," do you mean your toes, or the ball of your foot? I found years ago that when I would try to play faster I would end up using my toes, and it would cause a lot of strain. That's because it wasn't the right way. Also, you say you are having different results between lessons and at home. I could be wrong, but I'm guessing the height of your throne at your lessons is different from your kit at home. That can make a difference. That being said, practice makes perfect.
first time doing that exercises and after 2-3 min I feel pain near the adductor (maybe the quadriceps tendons?!? i'm not a sportsman but when i play drum never feel that) is that normal???
I didnt see him break it down but it seems like he is doing the eighths with the full leg and the 16ths with just the ankle. Important tip that should be mentioned.
Hi Jared. I've been having a lot of trouble with bass drum speed and control. I use the heel up technique but when I get fast double strokes I use heel-toe. I've been trying to learn a specific song and it has a variety of double stroke while playing 8th note triplets on the cymbals. When I play the song at a very slow pace, I still seem to have a bit of trouble because when I go in for the double stroke, my foot chokes and stiffens up and doesn't let me do the heel-toe. I'm in desperate need of help given that I have a concert on January 8th. I haven't even gotten half way across the song and I made the mistake of choosing this song that is very far out of my difficulty level. I've also made the mistake of looking at so many ways of increasing my foot speed and control that my brain has become disoriented and makes it nearly impossible to increase speed. I'm feeling stuck and unmotivated.
Man I went from a cheap $80 mapex pedal able to hold a constant 16th note grove ( on the bass drum ) too a $200 dw 9000. So was I using my legs too much with my old pedal? It diffidently seems I need to rework my technique and use my control with my ankles now when it comes with anything over an 8th note; given how smooth the dw pedal is. advice Jared or anything?
Well, I can answer you. You were using the higher resistance of the old pedal to play against. Its like the same way most people can drive a car 30 miles an hour around a racetrack, but bring them up to 200 miles an hour and they're probably going to crash. It's harder to control a faster motion.
@BoyoyongGrowee I looked for a phrase "snare sound" in the Internet. A lot of people use these words in such form. I thought it was something like "drum stick", "snare drum", etc. But probably you're right too... OK, we don't discuss grammar here, don't we? =)
Do you have a hard time with keeping up the sixteenth notes? I have the same issue. I can't roll on a hi-hat, or any drums. I end up hitting it with both sticks, and it messes up the timing. I'm the bad drummer for not knowing basic drum rolls.
im starting out and im having trouble seperating my bass beats and my eighth notes on cymbals when i play more off beat bass beats or when i play any subdivision of triplets. in short my right hand wants to do what my foot is doing. are there any exercise to develop more rythmic independence with my legs and arms??
+charles campbell I'm new to drums and I'm having the same problem as well. Could you please explain that a bit more. Just as the main comment spoke about his right hand wanting to do what his foot did is the same thing that applies with me. No matter how much I try to trick my brain to do two things it just won't budge. Please help.
Seperate them by only playing a kick, then play a kick and a hi hat simultaneously as you do automatically. Rinse and repeat that and after a while you are used to playing a kick before a HH. Then remove the simultaneous kick that goes together with the HH and you should find it easier.
Just whatever is most comfortable and satisfying to you. I tend to just use mostly my ankles and sometimes my knees to shift my foot or go fast. Also make sure your throne is at proper height. Too low, you'll feel like your using more energy than you should. Too high, you won't feel properly balanced.
@MrMike0113 I'm not an English-speaker, but I think he meant "snare sound is horrible" (the sound of snare). am I right? if I'm right then what's wrong with the apostrophe?
My biggest problem on that is that i always lift my feet, loosing motion on that. Its something that i still struggles with event with 6 years of playing (i know its not that much). The problem is a live in apartament só i never had that "everyday-training". I Just got a shit eletrônic drums, just for pedal training.
My problem is that I have too much speed, and by that I mean, I have trouble matching the speed. For example, a bass drum plays every beat at 120 beats per minute, my problem is that I'll play it, but my foot will have random jolts of energy and play a really fast triplet, or a few even, and it's really hard to play cause I will randomly speed up for a second, then slow down. How can I fix this?
I've always had a hard time with control with my foot. I started doing this exercise and did it for 20 minutes and I'm already improving. You have taught me finger control and now foot control. You are the man.
Instablaster...
Oh man, today I got to 180 bpm, heel up, and maintained it smoothly all the way with that second exercise (sixteenths on the 4)! I started at 60 bpm, for 3 minutes straight, then up by 20 bpm, 3 minutes straight at each rate. By the time I got to 180, it was no problem at all. Thanks a million for these exercises!
Every time I do I fast rhythm with my foot my right hand want to to the same thing
LB OUTDOORS Same here!
Same. Damn. Problem.
@@travis3328 thats my problem..
Lawrence Benard I think that’s everyone
Me too
Thanks man! I am a 52 yr old woman just learning!
You're 64 now. How's it going?
this is sick ! I tried this without a metronome and failed, then I got a metronome and tried the first excercise for an hour, and it’s giving results just by now ! thanks !
Amazing lesson, such great work on this channel, thank you for that.
Jared, You are The Man.... I notice that you sit well above the Kit in height. I'm a 69 YO , resurrected Drummer , playing recreationally in my Basement. I just got back into playing drums after a 50 Year Hiatus (as a HS Teenager, played in a Garage Band with HS Buddies that never got out of the Garage!!). My wifey of 46 years, played Santa Claus in 2018 and gifted me a cheapo Kit - Gammon , to be able to "resume" playing drums in my upcoming Retirement. I just retired Now. I play Heel Down due primarily to physical disabilities (which contributed to the need to retire), spinal /lumbar stuff, that limits my ability to raise my heel to toe playing. It is difficult for me to do Double Bass drum strokes, and quick triples is generally out of the question with a single bass drum pedal (now using a PDP direct drive Long Board). I just ordered a Mapex Double Pedal - going to try it to see what it will do. Question: when using a double pedal, do yu typically, move your left foot from the HiHat to the second pedal, shifting it back and forth? Or do you just not use the HiHat ? Moreover, I just found a Cannon Percussion Heel and Toe driven double pedal after researching some more - found a used on at Guitar Center , new ones are very hard to find. With my disabilities, and eben before that, for some weird reason, I am able to play much quicker with my heel - i.e. Playing "air drums". Although I will "probably" not play with a Band (hey You never know.... I might bump into a Geriatric Band somewhere), I play typically to MY Music in my COVID Hibernation created "studio" in the finished Basement. Typical Music: CCR, Petty, Eagles, CARS, Stones, Beatles, Mellencamp (not as good as Ken Aranoff , for sure), M. Etheridge, Hollies, ELO, Clapton, and Linda Ronstadt { for you folks who don't know of her..... play her music. She was the Original DIVA and was a terrific }. Be well all.
So good tutorial Jared
Thank you man....you are doing a really nice thing for all the beginner drummers.....I wish the best things for you.
Drums are so Awesome, Thanks for the Awesome Lesson, That was Very Cool.
I find the last exercise hard..Especially kicking the bass drums 4x. Trains consistency and control.
Thanks for this. I'm a long-time guitarist but I just bought a little electric kit. It will be nice to learn some rudimentary drum techniques using your online lessons. Thanks again!
My foot just doesn't understand that speed without seizing up and quiting
Sameeeee, the cramps make a good addition to the paint nd embarrassment too
Hey! I'm having troubles with hitting the bass drum and placing my weight and because of that whenever I use toe-down I sometimes hit the head twice or when I use the heel-down technique I miss beats because I dont hit it strong enough, could it be something about the way I sit behind the kit or should I just try and focus on developing one of the techniques and try to make the hits constant and even?
I have the exact same problem
I had the same problem! On those 16th patterns, you're playing 5 notes with your foot, but 3 of those line up exactly with the right hand on the hat! Slow it down (you don't have to start at 70bpm like he did) and concentrate on nailing all three of those notes in unison. That way your foot's not thinking "holy crap I need to play a bunch of notes fast", it's thinking "lets lay down a steady beat and keep this all together"
I've been learning for almost a year now. I really haven't focused on speed much yet. I'm more working on getting a kick in at different places in the beat. E & A's I just tried these and I did alright but I was around 60 bpm except for #1. I could do that at 120 bpm but I could only make it about 1 minute or so.
Thanks Jared, I didn't know that this heel up technique was what I've been playing as a beginner and feel comfortable with. I just started playing what I heard in my head from my favorite music and copied that.
Thank you Jared.
you made the second and third beat look so easy
Also, it wouldn't be a bad idea to bring this up with your instructor. He/she may have some insight. On the other hand, you mentioned you have only been playing nearly every day for 8-9 months. Great start, and great dedication, but keep in mind that it's gonna take some time, and on top of that good technique. You want to play relaxed. Tensing up can cause not only timing issues, but injuries as well. It's also more fun to play when you are relaxed.
I'm just starting out so excuse the silly question but: the leg you use to hit the pedal is lifted all the time? It never rests? Is that just a matter of stamina or is there some kind of trick to prevent exhaustion? Seems kinda weird to have you leg lifted slightly above the ground all the time
I started playing drums maybe 25 years ago. I honestly have a tough time keeping my foot flat on the footboard during faster tempos. I'd say you want to keep your foot parallel with the floor during faster tempos. Not a constant angle like the slope of the footboard. Maybe raise or even lower your drum throne until it feels more comfortable? If I tried to do double bass keeping my foot flat my ankles would kill me in a short amount of time.
i play heel down as well, i think thats what you do right? and i can NOT play with my heels up at all, never the less, i can still play fast bass, its all based on what youre comfortable with
Rabin Miguel Playing heel up and heel down is different. People find it easier to control depending on their technique
Rabin Miguel This guy plays the modern heel up technique. I find this version a bit counter productive. If you look at the way Jojo Mayer plays the bass drum, I feel that this actually is better, as it allows the bass to resonate more (traditional heel up). This isn't at all wrong, but I prefer his tecnique.
It's not a silly questions at all. Start all exercises at a very slow tempo. You can even practice the leg motion while watching TV or online. There are many different bass drum techniques, and with this particular one, the heel never touches the ground. I'm not a great drummer at all, but this video had really helped me with my speed and timing. Have fun and good luck!!!
I love this channel
Another awesome video. Thanks Jared!
I love see drumeo sir
Thank you so much. Subscribes after one video. Don't regret it one beat.
It frustrates me so much that my leg just stops working after a couple of hits. I have my heel up, my pedal set up correct and the height of my throne is also perfect. My upper leg starts hurting like hell and my ankle just refuses to keep a steady beat.
This guy´s amazing.
Thanks for the awesome lessons Hopefully this can help me out with some of the sixteenth note beats I'm getting into.
Love the Conan Shirt!
Great video and explanation once again
starting off at 60bpm instead of 70bpm is rlly helpful. thanks for da vid this is great, ur a fucking beast on the drums by the way
Thank you 😀
men youre great, awesome class.
yeah they are. Got same pedals and they're great. Recommend them to anyone :)
My brain just got a massage from this basedrum.
That's really good...all i need now is drums.
Oh my god he's got speed cobras!! Yess!!!! Love them.
nice lesson bro
i like you drum play
cool, thanks for this just needed this
Damn the advanced lesson must be bad ass for this one!
wow it's been 6 years when this video 📹 appeared here... nice video..
I already loved Jared but now that I see that Team Conan shirt? +100000 points
Hi everybody I need some help:
What Is the best regulation for the pedal to play with flat foot? spring should be pull? Angle of swing should be 45°? sorry for my english hope someone can help
Use very loose tension, loosen the spring tension all the way then tighten up a small 1/8 thread. The angle can be 45° or less better for drum featuring
GREAT STUFF!!!!!
nicko mcbrain uses the "flat foot" technique
Also excellent to work on *not* flamming bass&snare when played together
My teacher never told me about heel up and that it might be mire useful... Now i have to adapt to it up after 3 years of drumming
Same 🙄
This use to happened to me every time i sat at the kit. Still from time to time i can feel my hand wanting to follow my foot. When in reality it should be your foot following your hand. I started breaking this by practicing 16th note base and hi hat combos in loops. Then finding beats that have them and playing them over and over but at very very deadly slow tempos. After playing it slow so many times faster tempo as expected became easier. Just takes time. :-/
Nice drum drum drum
Jared could you make a video on indepence exercises ..
Im a beginner.. So i have a question .
How to use the pedal if the pedal speeds are like dodo-pa-dodo-pa (the "pa" is where the kick/bass/pedal stops playing) but the snare and the hi-hat closed are fast paced? Im having trouble with this and also having trouble making this question cus you may be cant understand the sentence..
Thx in advance
Is there any way to avoid your upper leg from gripping when having heel off of pedal?
I almost agree...the snare doesn't sound like it usually does.
These are great. Thanks for making!!
@redeye998 Try tightening the spring tension. That should solve your problem.
@voodoovibes007 If you notice on the overhead cam, he actually isn't hitting the snare dead center, that's why it has a bit of ring.
How long should one practice this in a day? 10-20 minutes? Longer?
Does the pedal matter when playing? are there specific pedals that would allow you to play quicker easier?
@besszera it's far too resonant, he should use a moongel to cancel that out. that horrible ring, i cut the 2 end snare wires too, that also helps.
Is it possible to do this exercise with heel-toe technique ?? I find that very difficult ..
I normally lose control and speed up on the sixteenth notes with the bass drum. I am getting better though :) Don't worry, you are not bad. Tighten up the fulcrum on your fingers, and also USE your fingers and get the stick off you palm. Relax on them, cause if you are tense, you will lock up, and stick to being slow.
Keep Drumming! :)
Thanks!
Very helpful video, thank you.
I can't say much to help, but I have the exact same problem. Right hand copies what the right foot is doing, at least on the fast parts.
When you say "tip of your feet," do you mean your toes, or the ball of your foot? I found years ago that when I would try to play faster I would end up using my toes, and it would cause a lot of strain. That's because it wasn't the right way. Also, you say you are having different results between lessons and at home. I could be wrong, but I'm guessing the height of your throne at your lessons is different from your kit at home. That can make a difference. That being said, practice makes perfect.
first time doing that exercises and after 2-3 min I feel pain near the adductor (maybe the quadriceps tendons?!? i'm not a sportsman but when i play drum never feel that) is that normal???
I didnt see him break it down but it seems like he is doing the eighths with the full leg and the 16ths with just the ankle. Important tip that should be mentioned.
I recommend playing with only one limb at a time. This will train your limbs to think differently.
2:15
It's better to have a loose tension on the pedal? I'm trying to improve my control at volume and speed also. Thanks for anyone who respond me!
Thanks!! :D
sit low no go sit high watch it fly!
gold!
@Biffy300Clyro
You know,the snare sound is a personal preference
good thanks.....
So I have a question, my kick drum pedal is position backed so much that my ankle is touching it which irritates me. How do I fix this?
2 days playing 2 hours each day
i am faster than ever nice lesson
can you pls demnstrate, what is the proper way or how tigthing the spring of pedal..
Hi Jared. I've been having a lot of trouble with bass drum speed and control. I use the heel up technique but when I get fast double strokes I use heel-toe. I've been trying to learn a specific song and it has a variety of double stroke while playing 8th note triplets on the cymbals. When I play the song at a very slow pace, I still seem to have a bit of trouble because when I go in for the double stroke, my foot chokes and stiffens up and doesn't let me do the heel-toe. I'm in desperate need of help given that I have a concert on January 8th. I haven't even gotten half way across the song and I made the mistake of choosing this song that is very far out of my difficulty level. I've also made the mistake of looking at so many ways of increasing my foot speed and control that my brain has become disoriented and makes it nearly impossible to increase speed. I'm feeling stuck and unmotivated.
+Alex Diaz DONT!!!1 FUCKING!!!!!!!! GIVE!!!!!!!!! UP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Man I went from a cheap $80 mapex pedal able to hold a constant 16th note grove ( on the bass drum ) too a $200 dw 9000.
So was I using my legs too much with my old pedal? It diffidently seems I need to rework my technique and use my control with my ankles now when it comes with anything over an 8th note; given how smooth the dw pedal is.
advice Jared or anything?
Well, I can answer you. You were using the higher resistance of the old pedal to play against. Its like the same way most people can drive a car 30 miles an hour around a racetrack, but bring them up to 200 miles an hour and they're probably going to crash.
It's harder to control a faster motion.
Tama speed cobras!
why are you using the slice technique at the end if you said that you prefer the heel toe technique?
team conan!
@BoyoyongGrowee I looked for a phrase "snare sound" in the Internet. A lot of people use these words in such form. I thought it was something like "drum stick", "snare drum", etc. But probably you're right too...
OK, we don't discuss grammar here, don't we? =)
Do you have a hard time with keeping up the sixteenth notes? I have the same issue. I can't roll on a hi-hat, or any drums. I end up hitting it with both sticks, and it messes up the timing.
I'm the bad drummer for not knowing basic drum rolls.
what kind of bass pedal are you using?
im starting out and im having trouble seperating my bass beats and my eighth notes on cymbals when i play more off beat bass beats or when i play any subdivision of triplets. in short my right hand wants to do what my foot is doing. are there any exercise to develop more rythmic independence with my legs and arms??
ok
The Automatic Stops You can also practice whole music sheets of basic (rock) grooves and play them in off beat to practice ignoring your hand motions.
+charles campbell I'm new to drums and I'm having the same problem as well. Could you please explain that a bit more. Just as the main comment spoke about his right hand wanting to do what his foot did is the same thing that applies with me. No matter how much I try to trick my brain to do two things it just won't budge. Please help.
Seperate them by only playing a kick, then play a kick and a hi hat simultaneously as you do automatically. Rinse and repeat that and after a while you are used to playing a kick before a HH. Then remove the simultaneous kick that goes together with the HH and you should find it easier.
Thank you:D
i always play heel down unless im doing slide and missing my double pedal :)
We have the same pedals brah
lol, team coco ftw!
@LaughingOutKraut i actually did o.o im a big fan of these vids
If anybody knows, does one move the entire leg to hit the pedal or do you just move your ankle and foot?
it depends on you. but for me Im just using my ankle and foot.
Just whatever is most comfortable and satisfying to you. I tend to just use mostly my ankles and sometimes my knees to shift my foot or go fast. Also make sure your throne is at proper height. Too low, you'll feel like your using more energy than you should. Too high, you won't feel properly balanced.
@MrMike0113 I'm not an English-speaker, but I think he meant "snare sound is horrible" (the sound of snare). am I right? if I'm right then what's wrong with the apostrophe?
maaan when i try to do the 16th note with drum bass my right hand either stops or doesnt play along..is this normal for a beginner??
My right hand is following the sixteenth note
My biggest problem on that is that i always lift my feet, loosing motion on that. Its something that i still struggles with event with 6 years of playing (i know its not that much). The problem is a live in apartament só i never had that "everyday-training". I Just got a shit eletrônic drums, just for pedal training.
I need some advice, I heard that if you put a hole in the Reso of the bass drum that t makes it sound better. Is that true?
"Better" no. Different, yes. It makes your kick deeper and helps project more. It's also better to mic.
@Bigbuster242 yes
My problem is that I have too much speed, and by that I mean, I have trouble matching the speed. For example, a bass drum plays every beat at 120 beats per minute, my problem is that I'll play it, but my foot will have random jolts of energy and play a really fast triplet, or a few even, and it's really hard to play cause I will randomly speed up for a second, then slow down. How can I fix this?
@MrRennylson i think it should be "snare's sound is horrible"