I was just gonna say... what about the Buddy Rich?
Is anyone familiar with this drumming discipline? It seems to be a slightly black art but as far as i know it's to do with using a looser grip, allowing greater stick rebound to increase speed and power via down and up strokes. Or something.
Apparently Jim Chapin and Freddie Gruber teach it and Neil Peart and Dave Weckl are proponents of it.
"But primarily, the drummer's supposed to sit back there and swing the band." The actual Buddy Rich
I was just gonna say... what about the Buddy Rich?
He he. Buddy's style was definitely a black art.
"But primarily, the drummer's supposed to sit back there and swing the band." The actual Buddy Rich
Send Calum McIntyre a message via MySpace:
www.myspace.com/calumdrums
I have a feeling he'll know. Just don't let his seizure-inducing webpage put you into a coma.
Fantastic! Sounds like someones been listening to mr bungle. Do you know the guy?
"But primarily, the drummer's supposed to sit back there and swing the band." The actual Buddy Rich
I know Calum, aye. I've played a couple of gigs with him before, and he's a regular denizen at the Edinburgh Jazz Bar. In fact, if he's not at home he's usually down there. A mighty find drummer, he also has a tasty habit for mono, second-line drumming. He also looks tired a lot.
I've just started learning it, to be honest it feels very strange, but I can see the point in it so will stick with it.
Buy the JoJo Mayer DVD, he describes it brilliantly among other things to do with grip and technique.
Aye i looked at that one, theres another guy that teaches it too, michael michalkows, who has a dvd out too.
Im going to start off with jim chapins book/dvd thing. Moeller taught him and he taught mayer so it'll be along the same lines. Plus chapin wears a suit and tie during the whole thing-sartorial elegance and bafflingly fast hands, what a guy.
I've been doing the basic exercises on the pad and theres definitely a logic to it. Dave Weckls clips on youtube make a lot of sense. He maintains the rebound/bounce is part of the upstroke, though Chapin says it's not. Whatever, i think i'll go for the weckl dvd too.
Keep me posted how ur doing with it.
"But primarily, the drummer's supposed to sit back there and swing the band." The actual Buddy Rich
Last edited by TBH; 20-Feb-09 at 10:32.
I suffer from weak wrists as i've broken both too many times. I find this video from tony royster good fun to have a bash at. His explanation to the Moeller method.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4U66XZjaRt0
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SOOOOOOOOOOOO will one be seeing an improvement in technique at the weekend senor mac........???????? after seeing the videos (that I've not yet watched)
I'll be scrutinising & giving marks out of 1 just as the acoustic basher asks to be turned up/down/completely out of the mix yes
Nice to see Roysters take on it. Interesting that he seems to totally disregard the idea of the stick bouncing on the downstroke.
Chapin seems to favour an exaggerated-movement version of it but i suppose this is for beginners at it like moi who need to get it logged in the muscle memory-note his right hand index finger is not wrapped round the stick, allowing the stick to bounce up to fully vertical. Weckl prescribes this too.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7yNb-kUPwMI
"But primarily, the drummer's supposed to sit back there and swing the band." The actual Buddy Rich
I got Jim Chapins book today. Im gonna put on a suit and tie and start practicing circular motion and be bop rhythms right this second!
"But primarily, the drummer's supposed to sit back there and swing the band." The actual Buddy Rich
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