This is a great explanation of the intent of "Stick Control"! I took lessons when I was way too young (7 yrs old) to appreciate this book, and I frustrated my teacher to no end. When I stopped with lessons my teacher told me to try and master the first 2 pages of exercises and I'd be better than 90% of drummers. I'm now using this for hand control on hand drums and the effect is amazing for my technique. The basics will always serve us well, and Stone was the master teacher.
6 years later but this is super helpful. Almost every other explanation I’ve seen has people playing accents or doing it differently which is not inherently bad but this seems like a much more measured and logical approach. Thanks.
Thank you Matt for the explanation! I've been playing for over 60 years, and coincidentally, have been working on techniques to improve my hands. Not necessarily for speed, but to increase the effectiveness of my "Feel." Ciao
I found this amazing instruction due to a comment you had left on another video giving a guide of stick control. I'm so very glad you left that comment as it guided me here. I fully appreciate the tone in which you projected, as it was extremely positive and constructive, to the video maker, and you left no room for negative interpretation. You have my respect and gratitude. Now on with the lesson.
Thank you, Mr Patella! I've been using the Stick Control book for many years, worn through three copies, and I feel like you've really opened the door for me to utilise it properly for the first time. More of these vid's, please, taught sequentially.
This really has helped me to understand how to properly practice stick control! I have the stick control manual and I will practice the first page of the exercise as you explained it
Exactly. I had lessons with Jerry Granelli who also studied with Morello, and he taught me that way, with more use of the wrist and closed fingers though.
With his knowledge from the student of the author, that's all that I needed to believe this is the way its intended for the students to learn. Makes much more sense this way. Thank you for your time to post this video for us all to learn
This is EXCELLENT. Finally a solid interpretation of the exercises. I am going to share this video/info with my students. I have always wondered about the stroke to be used while working with the book. I had learned to start from ready position. Now I understand how using a velocity stroke promotes the use of physics for power, rather than muscle. Sure, it's great to have the kind of muscle control that allows for solid consistency, but why not let physics do that for you. Ultimately, the intention of the book has now become more defined. And in doing so, connects a few dots for me (makes sense of other theories and practices I've been using and teaching). Thanks, Matt! This video has started my day off well!
Very helpful..... thank you.... I've always heard that without direction Stick Control was not all that useful.....this really provides that direction.
Matt your Drum teaching has to be the best that I have ever learned. I learned more from you in this one lesson then all of my teacher’s put together, mostly because you have learned from many great teachers and are yourself a great teacher, not to mention the many years that you have been a Drummer. Thank you for this video and the proper interpretation which is very Impressive and inspirational in my journey as a Drummer. Much Respect 💯
Thank u for breaking the book down. I admit I been guilty of performing these exercises all wrong, now I cannot wait to apply this new method and am definitely looking forward to the next series of videos.
Fantastic, cheers Matt. I love this book, but have struggled to keep interested in it. Now I can approach it in a new way and help my pupils too. Thank you
I will officially launch my website on April 4th... I will be broadcasting via (ZOOM) all codes and IDs and times will be posted . www.thedrummersvoyage.com I am making this free for the Month of April if you want to be added to my mailing list email me mattpatella1246@gmail.com you will receive updates and PDF's, if required for the lessons so check it out. Tell me what you think. Keep practicing
Teresa Bondora.......this book came highly recommended to me many many years ago. So I sat down with it.....did page one, and YES!!!i it took forever. Never opened the book again. I concentrated on books by George Wilcoxin, especially his swing solos snare drum.book. that one got my hands and wrists stronger, and moving!
then go have fun with it No apology necessary. Excellent lesson. i was taught to do it the same way. Then go have fun with it if you wish. But I still 45 years later refer back to this approach as a benchmark for myself.
thanks Matt. equaling the power in each hand to help match the sound on each height. this should be a major help for beginner as well as the seasoned drummer. very valuable jewel,thnx again.
Do you have anyway to equal the strength for each hand? Im struggling with that and my left hand has a more drier tone as compared to my right hand which sounds more 'wet'
Some great points here! However----I used to play the whole book 20xs on each line every single day, just as Stone specifically asks. It took me about 4 hours each day and exploded my playing. I highly recommend it to all players. I also studied with Joe Morello regularly and over time. The intent behind the book your discussing here, broadly, was to develop stick control as the title of the book implies. The first time I cracked the book with Joe we were alla breve at about 90bpm. I think for different students he would have different assignments, as any good teacher will. Good point about the basic idea to be making the right hand and left hand sound the same, because if you can do that and each sound is happening at the precise time you intend, and that equal sound is ALSO the exact sound you intend, with the exact mechanic you intend, then you are achieving stick control. Blessings!
...once you get down to faster vamping the speed the sticks/strokes seem to come together naturally and the volumes are “equal enough”. The vamping must take the boredom but certainly offer exercise for left thumb and right hand.
"Accents and Rebounds" was the sequel, as I recall...I also utilized the first three pages of Stick Control with my feet for double kick drums ....only difference here is the "vamp" and I'm not sure why the instructions command 20 repetitions of each exercise without error before moving on....this seems to be an approach to the exercises having once "wired" them into your brain and having done the 20 reps initially...so, in a way I'm glad I stumbled across this....can't go wrong with Joe Morello or one of his students
Thanks bunch! Can you send links to step #2, #3 great stuff I been doing stick control book in not the best way for me I know now after watching this part #1 of this George C Lawrence stick control vid series, cheers !
Hi Matt, I just came across a link for this on another site. Thank you for the video! Stick heights and even strokes are something all drummers should know about. This is exactly how my first teacher, Mr. Wright, taught me many years ago. He was a saxophonist, but picked it up from drummers in jam sessions where they would switch instruments. Maybe it's not coincidence that Joe Morello Park is in the area. John X. also re-introducing the concepts to me after complications from surgeries got in the way. Excellent approach to share!
Amazing. It was so nice to get this "first hand" information, THANK YOU! I started playing Stick Control in the university with the only professor in drums here in Bulgaria...but again he wasn't a student of George Lawrence Stone as you can imagine. I've worked my way in to the book, put some double bass below the stickings from the first chapter. I've played it a million times and I already have my way of doing the things that probably won't change but it's really great to get to the core of this exercise and the meanining George Lawrence Stone put behind. Cheers and groove on! I subscribed. :)
Anyone who is interested in viewing live (Via Zoom ) Every Monday Tuesday and Wednesday at 7 pm est u are invited ((((((((((((((((((FREE))))))))))))))))) ID....8314773100................Passcode....... 596179 email.........mattpatella1001@gmail.com
Matt, with respect, if I am only doing 4 measures of each exercise and vamping for 4, am I getting enough practise at the sticking variations? It seems I’ll be doing far more vamping than sticking variation. Why didn’t GLS stipulate this in the book instead of saying repeat each exercise 20 times? Apologies if this has been answered elsewhere
I suspect that the 20 times was to insure his students played each exercise long enough to benefit from it. If you're having difficulty with one particular exercise than there is no limit to the amount of times you can play it.
Thanks a lot, great vid. I'll practice it this way from now on. Still a little proud though that i managed to do 1 page per day with the repeat 20 times system, gives you willpower hahah.
I’m a brand new player, just got a kit for Christmas. I take it this book would be a good thing to practice a portion of my playing time daily, say 15-20 minutes devoted to these exercises before anything else? As long as I focus on snapping wrist and letting sticks do the work and trying equal sound, all other stuff should come with time? Newly retired from military and taking up a new instrument. I’ve been playing guitar for awhile.
All well and good, maybe so. Then why was Gorge Stones work written with accents? Thats the way I was taught them, thats the way I played them. I was required to play all twenty six (at the time) rudiments to pass my juries for my NARD certification.
Thanks for the lesson! Been looking for an explanation like this! What exactly is the purpose of the vamping section? Also any suggestions on which tempos to use? Of course it'd be ideal to practice at as many tempos as possible, but as you point out in the video, there's only so much time in a day and you can't get through the book at a reasonable pace if you're playing everything 20 times each.
Yes!! I do it!! and you go into super turbo mode when you return to playing with sticks!! Trust me!!! Super control & warp 10 speed achieved!!! Playing with brushes is the best wrist workout you can do!!!Zero rebound or bounce!!
Just makes me wonder why anyone plays traditional grip...So often you see players with left shoulder slouched down and right shoulder raised up, got to be bad for your back etc...not saying anything against your drumming or teaching skills which are great, and you have managed like that for 60 yrs...
I'm not sure if I'm holding the sticks wrong or what but I can't do full stroke. The sticks never come back up fully. Just half that. And I get really bored with the stick control book. There must be something missing cuz many drummers praise this book. I don't have the patience for it maybe.
Dario Wirtha your stick will never come back to the same height. It's like dropping a basket ball from chest height and it bounces back up not even half up. It's physics. The variables are this: where the fulcrum of the stick is when held : how hard your stroke is : the surface you are striking Balancing these variables in time is what practicing helps to accomplish. Making practice fun and setting goals helps you get better. If you know where you want to go it makes it easy to get there. Good luck.
If your sticks aren't coming back up all the way, on a full-strokes, it might be because of the following; 1) you aren't throwing the stick down fast enough. Think of bouncing a ball. You have to have enough speed to bring it back up to the original position. 2) your grip is too tight. This will inhibit the natural flow/motion of the stick 3) you are stopping the stick by not letting your wrist go back to it's original position. I hope this helps. Check out Tiger Bill Meligari's DVDs. He goes into great lengths on the proper form for full, half, & low strokes. He was also a student of Joe Morello.
@@MattPatella access and ease to the knowledge one needs to further there skills. Chops take on new meaning seeing a bad ass solo..but when seen done by credible, tru masters teaching proper technic Slow to fast without a thought..... Its humbling motivating and is what I needed to progress
but the notes are 8th notes and your playing them in 1/4 notes. it should be double time to your metronome. still, i appreciate what you are saying about strength and balance. absolutely. ok.. at minute 11:25 in your present, that's double time. nice
Don't really know why he didn't write it in that way,when Joe Morello explained it to me he said that is the way George L Stone and himself played it and that is the way Stone wanted it played
This is a great explanation of the intent of "Stick Control"! I took lessons when I was way too young (7 yrs old) to appreciate this book, and I frustrated my teacher to no end. When I stopped with lessons my teacher told me to try and master the first 2 pages of exercises and I'd be better than 90% of drummers. I'm now using this for hand control on hand drums and the effect is amazing for my technique. The basics will always serve us well, and Stone was the master teacher.
Funny how long it takes for that revelation
6 years later but this is super helpful. Almost every other explanation I’ve seen has people playing accents or doing it differently which is not inherently bad but this seems like a much more measured and logical approach. Thanks.
And no apologies needed when you speak with passion and authority. The real information is needed to move forward with balance!
Thank you Matt for the explanation! I've been playing for over 60 years, and coincidentally, have been working on techniques to improve my hands. Not necessarily for speed, but to increase the effectiveness of my "Feel." Ciao
Thanks for sharing this Matt, just starting out with Stick Control, good to be set on the right path the way it was intended.
Check out ''Matt McGuire" on RUclips
Fantastic demonstration of the proper technique for these exercises...thanks so much Mr. Patella.
I found this amazing instruction due to a comment you had left on another video giving a guide of stick control. I'm so very glad you left that comment as it guided me here. I fully appreciate the tone in which you projected, as it was extremely positive and constructive, to the video maker, and you left no room for negative interpretation. You have my respect and gratitude. Now on with the lesson.
Thank you, Mr Patella! I've been using the Stick Control book for many years, worn through three copies, and I feel like you've really opened the door for me to utilise it properly for the first time. More of these vid's, please, taught sequentially.
Thanks Matt... You are one of the few, who is dealing with the basics ..... greets from switzerland
This really has helped me to understand how to properly practice stick control! I have the stick control manual and I will practice the first page of the exercise as you explained it
Thanks, looking forward to the next lesson.
Exactly. I had lessons with Jerry Granelli who also studied with Morello, and he taught me that way, with more use of the wrist and closed fingers though.
With his knowledge from the student of the author, that's all that I needed to believe this is the way its intended for the students to learn. Makes much more sense this way. Thank you for your time to post this video for us all to learn
Have watched for a while. Technique is fantastic. Thank you.
This is EXCELLENT. Finally a solid interpretation of the exercises. I am going to share this video/info with my students. I have always wondered about the stroke to be used while working with the book. I had learned to start from ready position. Now I understand how using a velocity stroke promotes the use of physics for power, rather than muscle. Sure, it's great to have the kind of muscle control that allows for solid consistency, but why not let physics do that for you. Ultimately, the intention of the book has now become more defined. And in doing so, connects a few dots for me (makes sense of other theories and practices I've been using and teaching). Thanks, Matt! This video has started my day off well!
Very helpful..... thank you.... I've always heard that without direction Stick Control was not all that useful.....this really provides that direction.
Matt your Drum teaching has to be the best that I have ever learned. I learned more from you in this one lesson then all of my teacher’s put together, mostly because you have learned from many great teachers and are yourself a great teacher, not to mention the many years that you have been a Drummer. Thank you for this video and the proper interpretation which is very Impressive and inspirational in my journey as a Drummer. Much Respect 💯
Thank u for breaking the book down. I admit I been guilty of performing these exercises all wrong, now I cannot wait to apply this new method and am definitely looking forward to the next series of videos.
Fantastic, cheers Matt. I love this book, but have struggled to keep interested in it. Now I can approach it in a new way and help my pupils too. Thank you
I will officially launch my website on April 4th... I will be broadcasting via (ZOOM)
all codes and IDs and times
will be posted .
www.thedrummersvoyage.com
I am making this free for the Month of April
if you want to be added to my mailing list email me
mattpatella1246@gmail.com
you will receive updates and PDF's, if required for the lessons
so check it out. Tell me what you think. Keep practicing
Game changer!!!! what a valuable resource for us lucky students
Great Video, Matt !!!
I really enjoyed it…
Thanks ks so much for sharing 🙏👍
One of my favorite books.........Shaughnessy got me into it...........Ralph Onofrio
Teresa Bondora.......this book came highly recommended to me many many years ago. So I sat down with it.....did page one, and YES!!!i it took forever. Never opened the book again. I concentrated on books by George Wilcoxin, especially his swing solos snare drum.book. that one got my hands and wrists stronger, and moving!
So glad I found this excellent explanation of Stick Control! I think my practice sessions will be much more productive!
Thanks Matt!
Tons of knowledge! Thanks Matt! Greetings from Greece ♥️
Love it, taught beautifully
Please please keep teaching us!
This is awesome, thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Greetings from Wales
then go have fun with it No apology necessary. Excellent lesson. i was taught to do it the same way. Then go have fun with it if you wish. But I still 45 years later refer back to this approach as a benchmark for myself.
great explanation !!!
Thank you very much master. Greetings from Spain.
Thanks for the video which makes a lot of sense, just need to get to regular practice these and concentrate on the stick height
Wow, I have played drums through school for 23 years and have never heard of this book! Excited to order it and check it out!
Thanks Matt! Very informative, and great to hear it from the student of the student of the author!!
You are the best!😀
Thank you Matt.
this is awesome matt, thanks
Thanks for sharing. It's awesome to hear about the lineage of these exercises.
thanks Matt. equaling the power in each hand to help match the sound on each height. this should be a major
help for beginner as well as the seasoned drummer. very valuable jewel,thnx again.
Do you have anyway to equal the strength for each hand? Im struggling with that and my left hand has a more drier tone as compared to my right hand which sounds more 'wet'
Very clear explanation, thanks a lot!
Some great points here! However----I used to play the whole book 20xs on each line every single day, just as Stone specifically asks. It took me about 4 hours each day and exploded my playing. I highly recommend it to all players. I also studied with Joe Morello regularly and over time. The intent behind the book your discussing here, broadly, was to develop stick control as the title of the book implies. The first time I cracked the book with Joe we were alla breve at about 90bpm. I think for different students he would have different assignments, as any good teacher will. Good point about the basic idea to be making the right hand and left hand sound the same, because if you can do that and each sound is happening at the precise time you intend, and that equal sound is ALSO the exact sound you intend, with the exact mechanic you intend, then you are achieving stick control. Blessings!
...once you get down to faster vamping the speed the sticks/strokes seem to come together naturally and the volumes are “equal enough”. The vamping must take the boredom but certainly offer exercise for left thumb and right hand.
Thanks for this video, I found it really interesting!
Thank you. I’m preparing to work through the book again, and great to be able to incorporate these insights. Much appreciated!
This is awesome, Thank You!
My volume was bang on max my ears popped so bad whwn he first hit the pad
I'm so glad this got recommended to me. I have been doing mine 20 times and taking soooo long!
Try switching the matching exercises like 1&2, you can put a double at the end of each and it's really cool. That's the Virgil Donati way I guess.
May I add that practicing the GLS books at LOW stick levels helps with softness of touch and speed....which he did discuss...
Love this video, you are a treasure Matt, hope to meet you someday soon!
"Accents and Rebounds" was the sequel, as I recall...I also utilized the first three pages of Stick Control with my feet for double kick drums ....only difference here is the "vamp" and I'm not sure why the instructions command 20 repetitions of each exercise without error before moving on....this seems to be an approach to the exercises having once "wired" them into your brain and having done the 20 reps initially...so, in a way I'm glad I stumbled across this....can't go wrong with Joe Morello or one of his students
Matt, your hands are AWESOME!!!!
Thanks, good information.
Immediately hooked. Thank you.
This video should definitely have more views
Your consistency is astonishing.. thank you so much for doing this video!
That was super helpful, thank you.
Thanks bunch! Can you send links to step #2, #3 great stuff I been doing stick control book in not the best way for me I know now after watching this part #1 of this George C Lawrence stick control vid series, cheers !
Hi Matt, I just came across a link for this on another site. Thank you for the video! Stick heights and even strokes are something all drummers should know about. This is exactly how my first teacher, Mr. Wright, taught me many years ago. He was a saxophonist, but picked it up from drummers in jam sessions where they would switch instruments. Maybe it's not coincidence that Joe Morello Park is in the area. John X. also re-introducing the concepts to me after complications from surgeries got in the way. Excellent approach to share!
Thanks love it keep it up, the explanation was great A+
matt patella youre an o.g.! brilliantly presented and honorable videos!
Fã Brasil de George Stone👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 aprendi muito vendo os vídeos de George .obrigado George
Thank you for sharing!!
Very helpful!!! Keep on doing these, it is one of the very best I've seen, helps me develop a lot! :) Thank you!
THANKKK YOU MATT !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Brilliant job 👍👍👍👍
I wish I could learn from you!! Very good video!!
I will be up again Streaming on you tube Starting Sept 7th free 1 pm and 7 pm est.ruclips.net/user/themattyp127live
Where are the following videos? I’m up for them.
Thank You, great video!
Amazing. It was so nice to get this "first hand" information, THANK YOU!
I started playing Stick Control in the university with the only professor in drums here in Bulgaria...but again he wasn't a student of George Lawrence Stone as you can imagine. I've worked my way in to the book, put some double bass below the stickings from the first chapter. I've played it a million times and I already have my way of doing the things that probably won't change but it's really great to get to the core of this exercise and the meanining George Lawrence Stone put behind.
Cheers and groove on!
I subscribed. :)
I'm glad I caught this video. My Stick Control book is showing up in a few days.
People come vist me via a zoom ,I stream every mon,tue wed and thur at 630pm est..email me for the codes and ID,,,,,,,,,,mattpatella1001@gmail.com
Thanks Matt ! Really helpful !
Thanks!!
thanks! this is great~
Anyone who is interested in viewing live (Via Zoom )
Every Monday Tuesday and Wednesday at 7 pm est u are invited
((((((((((((((((((FREE)))))))))))))))))
ID....8314773100................Passcode....... 596179
email.........mattpatella1001@gmail.com
What kind of practice pad or are you using? It sounds good.
Please demonstrate page 10 and 29
Is there a #2 following this lesson? That would be awesome. Thanks for the instruction!
Matt, with respect, if I am only doing 4 measures of each exercise and vamping for 4, am I getting enough practise at the sticking variations? It seems I’ll be doing far more vamping than sticking variation. Why didn’t GLS stipulate this in the book instead of saying repeat each exercise 20 times?
Apologies if this has been answered elsewhere
I suspect that the 20 times was to insure his students played each exercise long enough to benefit from it. If you're having difficulty with one particular exercise than there is no limit to the amount of times you can play it.
That's a loud pad!
Thanks a lot, great vid. I'll practice it this way from now on. Still a little proud though that i managed to do 1 page per day with the repeat 20 times system, gives you willpower hahah.
Hi Matt, did you ever do any of the follow up videos from this lesson?
great !!!
I’m a brand new player, just got a kit for Christmas. I take it this book would be a good thing to practice a portion of my playing time daily, say 15-20 minutes devoted to these exercises before anything else?
As long as I focus on snapping wrist and letting sticks do the work and trying equal sound, all other stuff should come with time?
Newly retired from military and taking up a new instrument. I’ve been playing guitar for awhile.
my you tube stream is
ruclips.net/user/themattyp127live.....every Mon Tue Wed and Thur/1pm and 7pm .............free Lessons
Matt Patella thanks sir!
Alan Dawson ideas?
All well and good, maybe so. Then why was Gorge Stones work written with accents? Thats the way I was taught them, thats the way I played them. I was required to play all twenty six (at the time) rudiments to pass my juries for my NARD certification.
NARD has nothing,to,do with this
stick control has no accents you mare thinking about accents and rebounds
Thanks for the lesson! Been looking for an explanation like this! What exactly is the purpose of the vamping section?
Also any suggestions on which tempos to use? Of course it'd be ideal to practice at as many tempos as possible, but as you point out in the video, there's only so much time in a day and you can't get through the book at a reasonable pace if you're playing everything 20 times each.
No need to apologize.
Joe Morello was great.
thank you so much for this!!! probably gonna change my life lmao
Great ;)
Sounds very much the way the great Joe Morello would teach. Will this method work with brushes? Thanks, Matt, looking forward to more instruction.
Yes!! I do it!! and you go into super turbo mode when you return to
playing with sticks!! Trust me!!!
Super control & warp 10 speed
achieved!!! Playing with brushes is the best wrist workout you can do!!!Zero rebound or bounce!!
You're a good guy, Matt Patella. Thanks! What pad is that?
Why didn't he write the instructions in the book like this?
Maybe he had a change of philosophy after he completed the book and it was too late to make the change in writing. Just a guess.
Just makes me wonder why anyone plays traditional grip...So often you see players with left shoulder slouched down and right shoulder raised up, got to be bad for your back etc...not saying anything against your drumming or teaching skills which are great, and you have managed like that for 60 yrs...
That and holding his left elbow against his side. In the end though, it's your feel within the band that matters.
I'm not sure if I'm holding the sticks wrong or what but I can't do full stroke. The sticks never come back up fully. Just half that. And I get really bored with the stick control book. There must be something missing cuz many drummers praise this book. I don't have the patience for it maybe.
I have a ton of formulas from stick control I have expanded to an endless zone
Dario Wirtha your stick will never come back to the same height. It's like dropping a basket ball from chest height and it bounces back up not even half up. It's physics.
The variables are this: where the fulcrum of the stick is when held
: how hard your stroke is
: the surface you are striking
Balancing these variables in time is what practicing helps to accomplish.
Making practice fun and setting goals helps you get better. If you know where you want to go it makes it easy to get there. Good luck.
If your sticks aren't coming back up all the way, on a full-strokes, it might be because of the following; 1) you aren't throwing the stick down fast enough. Think of bouncing a ball. You have to have enough speed to bring it back up to the original position. 2) your grip is too tight. This will inhibit the natural flow/motion of the stick 3) you are stopping the stick by not letting your wrist go back to it's original position. I hope this helps. Check out Tiger Bill Meligari's DVDs. He goes into great lengths on the proper form for full, half, & low strokes. He was also a student of Joe Morello.
What id give for this easy access to free gold. 15 years ago was lessons or a DVD..
dont understand the comment???
@@MattPatella access and ease to the knowledge one needs to further there skills. Chops take on new meaning seeing a bad ass solo..but when seen done by credible, tru masters teaching proper technic Slow to fast without a thought..... Its humbling motivating and is what I needed to progress
Joe Morello sent me. 😎
September/2018
but the notes are 8th notes and your playing them in 1/4 notes. it should be double time to your metronome. still, i appreciate what you are saying about strength and balance. absolutely.
ok.. at minute 11:25 in your present, that's double time. nice
Why do you have to repeat the number? Is it because it doesn't sound equ
alized to the other strokes?
Not sure about the questionj??
@Pedro: Matt counts 1 2 3 4 .. 2 2 3 4 .. 3 2 3 4, etc. The first count is the number of the bar / measure.
I wonder why Stone didn’t write it the way he intended it to be played?
Don't really know why he didn't write it in that way,when Joe Morello explained it to me he said that is the way George L Stone and himself played it and that is the way Stone wanted it played