I agree. To an extent. Programs in some states are so successful well before HS which makes them so good by the time they’re in HS. But in the grand scheme, the programs are getting smaller, no one wants to grind at the elementary and middle school levels, so the talent is really bad and most programs don’t even have enough talent or kids to field a drum line. I’m experiencing it first hand in MD and PA. It’s sad. Nice to see programs like this flourish as a model for how to keep kids in music. There’s an interesting cultural aspect, too. If you notice, many of the CA kids are Asian. I lived out there for 8 years and taught several HS-level drum lines…many parents in the Asian communities tended to encourage music over sports and were always present and volunteering. Other kids and their families usually left the band for sports or because they were too busy with other things. Not saying all, but a majority.
@@FreestyleRudiments Absolutely. Love to see it. It paves the way for such a rich and fulfilling life of leadership, work ethic, teamwork, and the ability to learn another "language" of music. I look back on my HS and drum corps days and see how all of these traits affected me for the better. I'm fortunate to have had a great foundation from a young age.
@@Scooped_Orangedon't sleep on illinois, indiana, ohio, california, oklahoma, there are lots of talented drumlines in the midwest, only one texas school medaled at BOA this year.
How refreshing to see drummers holding the sticks with traditional grip. Most of the drummers today can only use match grip. A good well-rounded drummer should be able to be proficient in both grips, traditional and match.....
i'm having a hard time getting the singles in time with the diddles it's like my singles are to slow than my diddles are fast. i can play even single 16ths and even 16ths as rrll i just cant get them together to sound like a clean together and be even.
Great lesson, thanks! Time for a brew. Maybe a pint of Neck Oil (eww, is that a thing?)
Thanks appreciate the "super"
Absolutely insane how talented HS drumlines have become
I agree. To an extent. Programs in some states are so successful well before HS which makes them so good by the time they’re in HS. But in the grand scheme, the programs are getting smaller, no one wants to grind at the elementary and middle school levels, so the talent is really bad and most programs don’t even have enough talent or kids to field a drum line. I’m experiencing it first hand in MD and PA. It’s sad. Nice to see programs like this flourish as a model for how to keep kids in music.
There’s an interesting cultural aspect, too. If you notice, many of the CA kids are Asian. I lived out there for 8 years and taught several HS-level drum lines…many parents in the Asian communities tended to encourage music over sports and were always present and volunteering. Other kids and their families usually left the band for sports or because they were too busy with other things. Not saying all, but a majority.
The elite lines are getting such good education right from day one and its paying off.
@@FreestyleRudiments Absolutely. Love to see it. It paves the way for such a rich and fulfilling life of leadership, work ethic, teamwork, and the ability to learn another "language" of music. I look back on my HS and drum corps days and see how all of these traits affected me for the better. I'm fortunate to have had a great foundation from a young age.
i think its mostly super rich texas schools
@@Scooped_Orangedon't sleep on illinois, indiana, ohio, california, oklahoma, there are lots of talented drumlines in the midwest, only one texas school medaled at BOA this year.
This is a beautiful exercise! It’s not too complicated to be hard to learn, but it’s difficult enough to be hard to play well. Well done!!!
yea I agree, lots of the exercises are being written hard for the sake of writing hard at the moment.
@@FreestyleRudiments very true. I’m currently entering the intermediate skill stage rn and your flammus vid helped me a lot! Thanks dude!
Thank you for the lesson im gonna practice this im part of the marching bands and have a good day and love your videos 💕💕❤❤
Thanks for sharing this.
Thanks for watching 👍
I should show this to the snares in my line lol
yea man , do it
Love this rudimental exercise. Spur you on.
Love this!
thanks for watching and the comment
Menyalah Abang kuh🔥🔥
You're the best instructor fr. Any cool exercises on singles/ playing singles fast?
How refreshing to see drummers holding the sticks with traditional grip. Most of the drummers today can only use match grip. A good well-rounded drummer should be able to be proficient in both grips, traditional and match.....
True. But are these students being shown match grip. I see no point in non match-grip for flat drumming.
Hey!! Can you teach how to do GMU's 2023 WGI snare features? Love your channel!
Remind me of flow paradiddle from broken city
Very cool vid👍you should review the Galapagos pad by the turtle pad
not sure its available in the UK? but if they want to send me one I will review it!
@@FreestyleRudiments Alright thanks for the feedback
i think its just a gum rubber pad with a laminate right?
@@Scooped_Orange Pretty much I got it a couple days ago and its amazing
how long does it take yourself to practice something like this at this high of a tempo? an hour? a day? a week?
took me a few hours to master
i'm having a hard time getting the singles in time with the diddles it's like my singles are to slow than my diddles are fast. i can play even single 16ths and even 16ths as rrll i just cant get them together to sound like a clean together and be even.
try to use the same (or as close as possible) technique for both, dont make big changes in technique from Doubles to Singles.
where can I get printed version 🥺 please
Can you do Pugadazz by Chino Hills please?
3:30