Gavin Harrison just posted your lesson to his facebook page, calling it a 'very nicefully done lesson' :) I love it when the musicians in focus appreciate a youtubers playing and they get recognition! Congrats.
I was literally thinking to myself as I was watching this that I think that Gavin himself (master of masters) would be impressed with Austin and his ability to not only transcribe and teach extremely difficult pieces, but then to be able to turn around and actually play it with skill, precision and feel......... Outstanding!
This is utterly amazing. 1) You really did a great job in the transcription. 2) You really did a WONDERFUL job at actually playing it. 3) I have tried to get this part right several times, so thanks for the video, I'm gonna try again following your advices. 4) I think this is the best video out there of a drummer playing a Gavin Harrison's composition, besides Gavin himself. 5) Gavin Harrison shared and appreciated your video. What else? Really awesome.
Austen; we all want to thank you for sharing 'the learning of the art form of the drums'. It is so appreciated that you are keeping us 'in the loop' as to what is 'happening' and 'current' on the scene. Equally as important, is providing a wide variety of different styles and drummers to come to our attention and be inspired by. You may be studying the 'greats', but for what it is worth, someone needs to tell you that 'you' are a 'great' man for making the effort of 'bringing to the light', the endless study of drumming for those of us that are under no illusions; that we all will 'never stop learning'. More power to you. Massive Respect
Careful , he might get touchy about it, haha. Recently on facebook Pridgen got pissed at a drummer on another youtube channel for doing a lesson on a lick he played. It was a pretty ridiculous reaction really.
Hey Austin i'd like to thank you for 'Study the great' videos! They are very usefoul for new inspiration and new concepts! Thanks a lot. Regards from Italy :-) Elvin
I miss the MD fest DVDs, the 2008 one really got me into Derek Roddy and Gavin. I wish they'd start doing them again. Great lesson btw dude, I've been using overrides since I worked my way through Gavin's books a few years back and this is a really clear explanation of the concept.
Dude your kicking ass with your S.T.G the greats series. Great production, presentation, playing, awesome quality all around. PS: You waited a little longer for da ...uMmnn!!!! ...had me on tha edge there for a second.
It all made more sense to me once I realized that the third bar, with an odd number, makes the bell of cymbal notes switch from on and off and on the beat to off and on and off the beat This means you have to play the 19 bar phrase twice to get back to start. I was listening at first, and didn't get it. then I saw that on screen and my life got easier. Now I love, absolutely love this tune, but I only play in a concert band. We do have plenty of set parts, which I share with a stronger player, but I will probably Never need to know this kinda stuff nor do I ever expect to play this kinda stuff. I watched this, get it, and can't play it anyways, but thank you for the great music and the great explaination,
Yess! Finally a Gavin Harrison study the greats video.Great job as always Austin.Super fan on Insta.I loveee Gavin harrison.Maybe in the future they should study you.
Excellent lesson and your performance was outstanding. Back in the day I used to think that great drummers were like Nick Menza. Then I discovered drummers like Gavin Harrison and he is in a league of his own. Easily my favorite.
Very nicely done man, excellent episode. I absolutely love this Study The Greats series, it's teaching me a lot and it's really fascinating. Thanks so much!
Damn that was awesome stuff! I've tried this part of the song a few times but never got the dotted eights going. This will definitely help me practicing it.
Dude, you are just a master at transcription and performance. While I could play this with minimal effort, you are just fricken the master at analyzing and explaining drum parts!!!!!!!!!!!!. My hat is off to you!
Love the dotted 8th on the right hand, I've doing it for a while against basic rock grooves, it makes even a simple one like poum - tchak - poum poum tchak - sounds very complex. I would recommand learning the dotted 8th feel against a 4/4 beat (so you get a 6/4) before going into weird time signature. For the ghost notes, I love to play the 2 sixteeth between the ride hits. It becomes then a great coordination and control exercice.
+iopklmification The easiest way to learn displacement of dotted 8ths is something I saw juan carlito mendoza play. It was 16th note paradiddles alternating between the bass drum and snare and dotted 8ths on the ride. Honestly, it was hard at first but it's so much easier now with practice
Nice, reminds me of a tune Bruford did off his early album where he played in 7 and played and open HH on the 'and' of the first measure (disco-like) and the second measure would automatically be 'on' the beat. Try it. Easy but cool.
people always told me Gavin Harrison was great but I never looked into his work. Definitely going to check out his stuff now. Can you suggest some other drummers who dominate odd time?
+backspace3111 Most of the top fusion and prog drummers can own any time signature. Vinnie Colaiuta, Virgil Donati, and Danny Carey are a few that immediately come to mind...
not sure where people are supposed to submit entries, but you should check out the groove from shinjuku strut from omar hakim's video "let it flow". not an overly complicated pattern but man is it a dope groove !
I love your video series. I have always wanted to learn how to play Mudvaynes Dig. I was wondering if you could break down the double bass pattern to that song........
really tight compound time signiture lesson man. those dots are right on the money. you should do Dana hawkins sweat'n or Chris Dave melody 1 break beat section.
Austin you're a great drummer. A really great drummer. I don't think there are many people who, being honest, would disagree with this. You must mess up though at times doing your demo's and i think it would be great if you posted a blooper reel. ;)
Hey Austin, Thank you for this wealth of breakdowns, proving just how important transcription is! There is such a myriad of instruction and drum videos now on youtube, its hard to filter. Do have any recommendations of any "modern youtube educators" that we can check out. Love to hear about who's out there that you dig! looking forward to some of dat Dennis ; )
Well, the main players in the game I would say are Drumeo, Mike Johnston, OrlandoDrummer, etc... and they're all great. If you want some legit fusion tutorials definitely check out Steve Holmes. He's got some really helpful lessons on his channel. I dunno, I follow a lot of different people but I guess those are the first ones that come to mind...
If you haven't heard it already, Periphery has a whole song called MK Ultra that's overriding a regular 4/4 feel. It's where I learned the concept from!
Hey man awesome videos, been checking out a bunch of them, worked on the epic steve gadd lick today. Thanks so much for putting all this work in to give us these videos! How long does it usually take you to make a video like this?
+twistedm16 For sure, a lot of the time is dedicated to practicing it because this stuff is super advanced so it's not like I can just sit down and play it immediately haha. So I'll work with it for a few days til it starts to feel okay then I have to script out the easiest way to explain it without rambling on. Then to film and edit it takes at least a full day if not 2 sometimes. Kinda crazy but that's what it takes for me to get these things done!
Great series. I dont know if you'll do metal stuff in this series, but it would be awesome to see thomas haake in meshuggah's bleed. I couldnt play that song to save my life lol
I think they pretty much accept anyone that wants to go. When I applied, all I had to do was fill out the application and send them a couple tracks of me playing and that was about it. No real auditions to see if you're advanced enough or anything like that, unless they've changed it. Having said that, I think it can be beneficial to attain a certain level of playing and knowledge before going so you can absorb the information better while you're there. I don't know your skill level but if you're just beginning, a lot of your energy would just be going to basic stuff like coordination, technique, etc... I think it's better to go when you're more intermediate because you don't have to worry about that stuff as much and you can concentrate on the material they're teaching instead. That's just my opinion but really, they give you so much material in such a short time that really they're just setting you up with a ton of stuff to teach yourself whenever you get out. There's just not enough time in the program to really soak everything in but you graduate with a head full of material to work on and the framework to know how to do it. I guess that's the real benefit of drum school... but anyways dude, good luck! It's a cool experience if you decide to go!
+Nicholas Bonds I'd define intermediate as someone who can play different kinds of songs without sounding terrible, has a firm grasp of rudiments and sticking patterns, basic reading abilities, and enough coordination and independence facility to learn new rhythmic concepts fairly quickly. You know, just somewhere between being terrible and being great...
+Trevor K This one was tough to get down. I had to slow it way down and work through the transcription in segments to see where everything lines up. Once you can do it slowly then you can start speeding it up and adding in the ghost notes and stuff. It's tricky for sure... just have to sit w/ it until it clicks in your brain.
Nice lesson, man! ( : Master Harrison is one of my all time favourites. Can I ask you about the kick drum? It has a killer voice... :O What kind of skin you have on? Dampening? Tuning? I wanna know everything :D
+Gara Petrilla It's a Powerstroke 3 coated batter, Ebony Ambassador resonant w/ a port on front. In this video, I used a full pillow up against the batter head and a folded up towel laying against the front head to mimic Gavin's super tight kick sound. Tuning wise, batter head pretty low, as low as it gets while still producing a tone... front head a little bit higher. Audix D6 mic inside the port aiming at the beater... that's about it!
hey, at frirst big thanks to you for this lesson. i have 2 Drummer they i want see in study the greats. It´s Anika nilles and luke Holland. I want to Know what they are use for tricks in his fill-ins. Maybe u can help me. It would make my very happy
Gavin Harrison just posted your lesson to his facebook page, calling it a 'very nicefully done lesson' :) I love it when the musicians in focus appreciate a youtubers playing and they get recognition! Congrats.
thanks! :)
Really nice!
I was literally thinking to myself as I was watching this that I think that Gavin himself (master of masters) would be impressed with Austin and his ability to not only transcribe and teach extremely difficult pieces, but then to be able to turn around and actually play it with skill, precision and feel.........
Outstanding!
This is utterly amazing.
1) You really did a great job in the transcription.
2) You really did a WONDERFUL job at actually playing it.
3) I have tried to get this part right several times, so thanks for the video, I'm gonna try again following your advices.
4) I think this is the best video out there of a drummer playing a Gavin Harrison's composition, besides Gavin himself.
5) Gavin Harrison shared and appreciated your video. What else?
Really awesome.
+KKun10 thanks! :)
I bet I've watched Gavin's performance from that years MD festival 50 times. It's brilliant. Nice work Austin
Austen; we all want to thank you for sharing 'the learning of the art form of the drums'. It is so appreciated that you are keeping us 'in the loop' as to what is 'happening' and 'current' on the scene. Equally as important, is providing a wide variety of different styles and drummers to come to our attention and be inspired by. You may be studying the 'greats', but for what it is worth, someone needs to tell you that 'you' are a 'great' man for making the effort of 'bringing to the light', the endless study of drumming for those of us that are under no illusions; that we all will 'never stop learning'. More power to you. Massive Respect
+Netzah Lee Thank you so much man! I really appreciate that.
Second part is the same polyrythm as in "What happens now" by Porcupine Tree, except that it is in 7 all through out the entire polyrithm section.
Incredible lesson. So concise. Quickly becoming my favourite drumming channel on youtube.
That was awesome. Would be cool to see some Thomas Pridgen in study the greats.
I second this!
Careful , he might get touchy about it, haha. Recently on facebook Pridgen got pissed at a drummer on another youtube channel for doing a lesson on a lick he played. It was a pretty ridiculous reaction really.
Everything I've read about people's interactions with Pridgen make him sound like a conceited jackass.
what a great teacher you are, and what a monster drummer gavin is!
Hey Austin i'd like to thank you for 'Study the great' videos! They are very usefoul for new inspiration and new concepts!
Thanks a lot.
Regards from Italy :-)
Elvin
Great job transcribing and performing the piece. Also, "19 days" itself is a wonderful study on how to approach odd time in a musical fashion.
I miss the MD fest DVDs, the 2008 one really got me into Derek Roddy and Gavin. I wish they'd start doing them again. Great lesson btw dude, I've been using overrides since I worked my way through Gavin's books a few years back and this is a really clear explanation of the concept.
+James Lyon thanks man
Glad to see your views climbing! Channel's awesome. Hope more people continue to find it.
Thanks man! Me too haha
Gavin has uploaded this video to his facebook page. So glad to find your channel, keep it up. Thanks for the lesson, greetings from Chile!
Dude your kicking ass with your S.T.G the greats series. Great production, presentation, playing, awesome quality all around.
PS: You waited a little longer for da ...uMmnn!!!! ...had me on tha edge there for a second.
+HidefVince haha sorry bout that
You did it! That's a very challenging section to play. Gavin Harrison has a whole lot of great material to study.
This is great stuff! I like the way you break things down and I'm definitely becoming a regular visitor. Keep the videos coming!
It all made more sense to me once I realized that the third bar, with an odd number, makes the bell of cymbal notes switch from on and off and on the beat to off and on and off the beat This means you have to play the 19 bar phrase twice to get back to start. I was listening at first, and didn't get it. then I saw that on screen and my life got easier.
Now I love, absolutely love this tune, but I only play in a concert band. We do have plenty of set parts, which I share with a stronger player, but I will probably Never need to know this kinda stuff nor do I ever expect to play this kinda stuff. I watched this, get it, and can't play it anyways, but thank you for the great music and the great explaination,
Yess! Finally a Gavin Harrison study the greats video.Great job as always Austin.Super fan on Insta.I loveee Gavin harrison.Maybe in the future they should study you.
+Amanda Paterson haha not sure that'll happen but I appreciate the support!
Excellent lesson and your performance was outstanding. Back in the day I used to think that great drummers were like Nick Menza. Then I discovered drummers like Gavin Harrison and he is in a league of his own. Easily my favorite.
Great drummer n a great teacher 💐💐
another awesome video man. Thanks !
+Adrien Drums :)
Please do a study the greats on Bill BrufordBruford. He's a super tasty drummer and he's one of my favorites next to Eric Moore and Gavin Harrison
Man!! sweet episode!! found this channel a week ago!!! I am loving it!!!
+Sergio Zambrano awesome :)
Woow, you're a great teacher. now I'm following you
You make great videos. Always enjoy watching and learning. Thank you!
Very nicely done man, excellent episode. I absolutely love this Study The Greats series, it's teaching me a lot and it's really fascinating. Thanks so much!
+chicken6111 glad you enjoy the videos :)
I appreciate the quality of these videos so much!!!
Not just great drumming but also amazingly produced educational content. Had to subscribe to your channel :) Thanks so very much!
This is quality right here, so glad I subscribed. Excellent content, my friend! :)
+Blackwood Drummer thanks :)
You have really made the lesson very simpler n now much easy to play. Thanks a ton Sir
Great video. Great playing. Thanks Austin.
Super cool video and concept on Studying the Greats!
Damn that was awesome stuff! I've tried this part of the song a few times but never got the dotted eights going. This will definitely help me practicing it.
Dude, you are just a master at transcription and performance.
While I could play this with minimal effort, you are just fricken the master at analyzing and explaining drum parts!!!!!!!!!!!!.
My hat is off to you!
thanks austin due to the different stages u taught i could develop the independence we need to do this .. great teacher
Great your working for the drums and the famous drummers!!
Great lesson! More Gavin Harrison's lick in the future please :)
That was good stuff... I have a suggestion, Todd Sucherman's Tears of Joy.
Saw Gavins FB post of this. Subscribed! Awesome lesson!
Killin it!! Great job as always! Thanks for the work!
Another awesome video Austin! Friggin hard!
Great job as always AB! That was a 28 oz porterhouse lesson!
Love the dotted 8th on the right hand, I've doing it for a while against basic rock grooves, it makes even a simple one like poum - tchak - poum poum tchak - sounds very complex. I would recommand learning the dotted 8th feel against a 4/4 beat (so you get a 6/4) before going into weird time signature.
For the ghost notes, I love to play the 2 sixteeth between the ride hits. It becomes then a great coordination and control exercice.
it,s like a samba feel!
+iopklmification The easiest way to learn displacement of dotted 8ths is something I saw juan carlito mendoza play. It was 16th note paradiddles alternating between the bass drum and snare and dotted 8ths on the ride. Honestly, it was hard at first but it's so much easier now with practice
wow. freaking phenomenal
Drummers United bro. This is excellent!
Very nice. Love the overriding concepts!
sick. clean vids man great teaching and playing
I can only get up to the accented 1/8 notes on this lessons but it thanks to your breakdown that im able to do it while counting aloud
i whish some day i were like you. that meticulous. focused and smart. may god bless you and your drumming
+mitch doe thanks man!
Dude that was a fantastic job. I cannot do that stuff yet lol. I know personally how challenging it is.
Amazing work thank you very much 👍
Keep them coming! These are great!
Vinnie Colaiuta did this kind of thing when he played with Frank Zappa in the seventies and eighties. He is a monster!
Great explanation and break down. Would you please break down Gavin's drum fill on The Creator Has a Masterpiece at the 3:27 minute mark?
Nice, reminds me of a tune Bruford did off his early album where he played in 7 and played and open HH on the 'and' of the first measure (disco-like) and the second measure would automatically be 'on' the beat. Try it. Easy but cool.
wow Austin i see you, indonesia in here., you solve many problems and you my teacher now.. thanks a lot______
people always told me Gavin Harrison was great but I never looked into his work. Definitely going to check out his stuff now. Can you suggest some other drummers who dominate odd time?
+backspace3111 Most of the top fusion and prog drummers can own any time signature. Vinnie Colaiuta, Virgil Donati, and Danny Carey are a few that immediately come to mind...
thanks man, yeah im a big fan of donati. I'll check out the other guys asap
not sure where people are supposed to submit entries, but you should check out the groove from shinjuku strut from omar hakim's video "let it flow". not an overly complicated pattern but man is it a dope groove !
I love your video series. I have always wanted to learn how to play Mudvaynes Dig. I was wondering if you could break down the double bass pattern to that song........
Best drummer alive.
+Willian Mendes me?! oh why thank you ;)
really tight compound time signiture lesson man. those dots are right on the money. you should do Dana hawkins sweat'n or Chris Dave melody 1 break beat section.
This guy never ages
Hey Austin, not sure if you will read this, but is it possible for you to do one video on Mark Guiliana?
Challenging... Will be sheding some of this stuff. Thanks!
Loved it! Great concept!! ;) Keep going!
Gavin has shared this vid on his Facebook page, congrats :)
Austin you're a great drummer. A really great drummer. I don't think there are many people who, being honest, would disagree with this. You must mess up though at times doing your demo's and i think it would be great if you posted a blooper reel. ;)
Hey Austin, Thank you for this wealth of breakdowns, proving just how important transcription is! There is such a myriad of instruction and drum videos now on youtube, its hard to filter. Do have any recommendations of any "modern youtube educators" that we can check out. Love to hear about who's out there that you dig! looking forward to some of dat Dennis ; )
Well, the main players in the game I would say are Drumeo, Mike Johnston, OrlandoDrummer, etc... and they're all great. If you want some legit fusion tutorials definitely check out Steve Holmes. He's got some really helpful lessons on his channel. I dunno, I follow a lot of different people but I guess those are the first ones that come to mind...
Man you do a great job!!! thanks for all your video
Amazing stuff!
I enjoy your lessons even though I may never Apply them Physically
If you haven't heard it already, Periphery has a whole song called MK Ultra that's overriding a regular 4/4 feel. It's where I learned the concept from!
Dude, not only are you a great drummer, but you may just be a better teacher!
+American Fantasy League thank ya!
Hey man awesome videos, been checking out a bunch of them, worked on the epic steve gadd lick today. Thanks so much for putting all this work in to give us these videos! How long does it usually take you to make a video like this?
+twistedm16 it's A LOT of hours... takes me about a week from when I start transcribing to when I actually get it all done.
That's crazy man, all for about a 10 minute video on average. Well I'm super glad you do it! :)
+twistedm16 For sure, a lot of the time is dedicated to practicing it because this stuff is super advanced so it's not like I can just sit down and play it immediately haha. So I'll work with it for a few days til it starts to feel okay then I have to script out the easiest way to explain it without rambling on. Then to film and edit it takes at least a full day if not 2 sometimes. Kinda crazy but that's what it takes for me to get these things done!
really really well done video
If you think, the override part of this song is the same as "What Happens Now" override part.
Try listening to letlive. - that fear fever. The drums have a very similar funky bell part and it's just so fast
Great video ! And great stuff !
+Jack Canterville :)
the second override (groups of 3) is the same as in What Happens Now
Hola estimado aabb estaria bueno que pusieras la opcion de subtitulos en español tus videos son muy buenos te felicito.
amazing job
Could you do a vid on how to improve your left hand traditional grip
Would absolutely love to see a breakdown of some Matt Gartska. Might be the most technically gifted drummer playing right now.
Great series. I dont know if you'll do metal stuff in this series, but it would be awesome to see thomas haake in meshuggah's bleed. I couldnt play that song to save my life lol
WOW!!Compliments
Are you still accepting requests? I'd love a video on the chops Colaiuta drops on the outro of Sting's Seven Days.
That's my go-to-song when showing my non-drumming friends some of the best drumming in the world
Really really cool video !
what ride cymbal is that ? hhx evo ?
+JBHviews HHX 21" Groove Ride
+Austin Burcham I want to get into musicians institute any advice?
I think they pretty much accept anyone that wants to go. When I applied, all I had to do was fill out the application and send them a couple tracks of me playing and that was about it. No real auditions to see if you're advanced enough or anything like that, unless they've changed it. Having said that, I think it can be beneficial to attain a certain level of playing and knowledge before going so you can absorb the information better while you're there. I don't know your skill level but if you're just beginning, a lot of your energy would just be going to basic stuff like coordination, technique, etc... I think it's better to go when you're more intermediate because you don't have to worry about that stuff as much and you can concentrate on the material they're teaching instead. That's just my opinion but really, they give you so much material in such a short time that really they're just setting you up with a ton of stuff to teach yourself whenever you get out. There's just not enough time in the program to really soak everything in but you graduate with a head full of material to work on and the framework to know how to do it. I guess that's the real benefit of drum school... but anyways dude, good luck! It's a cool experience if you decide to go!
+Austin Burcham can you define intermediate drummer.
+Nicholas Bonds I'd define intermediate as someone who can play different kinds of songs without sounding terrible, has a firm grasp of rudiments and sticking patterns, basic reading abilities, and enough coordination and independence facility to learn new rhythmic concepts fairly quickly. You know, just somewhere between being terrible and being great...
great Job!
Do you practice this so much that it becomes muscle memory? Also, how do you practice when practicing these licks?
+Trevor K This one was tough to get down. I had to slow it way down and work through the transcription in segments to see where everything lines up. Once you can do it slowly then you can start speeding it up and adding in the ghost notes and stuff. It's tricky for sure... just have to sit w/ it until it clicks in your brain.
Nice lesson, man! ( :
Master Harrison is one of my all time favourites.
Can I ask you about the kick drum? It has a killer voice... :O
What kind of skin you have on? Dampening? Tuning? I wanna know everything :D
+Gara Petrilla It's a Powerstroke 3 coated batter, Ebony Ambassador resonant w/ a port on front. In this video, I used a full pillow up against the batter head and a folded up towel laying against the front head to mimic Gavin's super tight kick sound. Tuning wise, batter head pretty low, as low as it gets while still producing a tone... front head a little bit higher. Audix D6 mic inside the port aiming at the beater... that's about it!
awesome
dude. you are the freakin man!!!
All right cool
Could you do a vid on the Neil Peart crossover?
Henry Cole nearly does the same "over ride" pattern in Miguel Zenon group, but in a jazz context
Good Job!
hey, at frirst big thanks to you for this lesson. i have 2 Drummer they i want see in study the greats. It´s Anika nilles and luke Holland. I want to Know what they are use for tricks in his fill-ins. Maybe u can help me. It would make my very happy
Great work! Just subscribed ;-)
well done