I cheat and use drum tab for ideas when I have none. F/T
I'm getting really frustrated with myself because I don't have too many fills when I play to songs. This is really killing me right now. Sometimes I just get frustrated and stop playing all together.
For those of you guys that have an endless amount of fills or enough to not get people bored, how did you get all of those fills???
Did you get by listening to a lot of songs?
Do you have any practice routines for fills?
Any advice would be much appreciated.
Thanks
http://www.youtube.com/user/UrFunny767
Drums:
Pearl Vision Birch
22x18 Kick
Pearl Sensitone Steel Snare 14x5.5
12x9,13x10,16x16 Toms
Cymbals:
Zildjian A Custom 16in Crash
Sabian XS20 16in Medium Thin Crash
Zildjian A Armand 10in Splash
Wuhan 16in China
Zildjian ZBT 14in Hats (I hate it)
Zildjian ZBT 20in Ride (I hate it)
Hardware:
Pearl Eliminator Demon Drive Single Kick Pedal
Crappy PDP Cymbal Stands
I cheat and use drum tab for ideas when I have none. F/T
i feel your pain, nik. same thing happens to me all the time. except i think of these awesome fills just as i'm laying in bed falling asleep, but in the morning when i try them out i always forget them. i need to start keeping a pad of paper beside my bed at all times.
Pearl Export with Remo's and Evans
Sabian AAX-plosion 16" Crash
Sabian AAX 16" Stage Crash
Meinl Classics 10" splash
Sabian AA Fusion 13" hi hats
Sabian 21" AA Dry Ride with rivets
Some weird little cymbal that I drilled holes in.
I just kinda flo wid it. Don't think about it too much. If you overthink fills you will screw them up. Just play something that fits, even if it's simple. Eventually, you'll learn to feel what fill fits where, and you will learn more complex fills.
I am currently suffering from gear acquisition syndrome. Will trade soul for drum gear. Donations accepted.
-Tama Superstar Hyper-Drive 5-piece
-SP Hardware
-Gibraltar Avenger DB-Pedal
-PST5 Cymbals
"Uncontrollable urticaria drivel spurting" -a sentence spawned from the half a word story.
Simple, dont do as many fills.
Like NorhternRedneck said, don't do as many. I wanted to put fills into all of my lessons my instructor would give me, the fills were not apart of the lesson plan, I would struggle trying to find the right one. Obsessed. Then I started playing along to music and found that there were not that many big fills in the music I listen to. Most of them were short and easy but the way they were played and the timing of them made them sound great. Just my.02 good luck.
Work on playing the fills you have "backwards". If the fill runs high to low, turn it around and play it low to high. After a while you should be able to switch directions mid fill. It will add a lot of different tones with the same fills.
Gretsch Catalina Maple- Cherry Red
PDP 800 series Hardware
Paiste 404 14" Medium Hi Hat
Sabian B8 Pro 14" Medium Hi hat
Paiste 404 18" Thin Crash
Paiste 2002 18" Thin Crash
Zildjian A 18" Medium Thin Crash
Wuhan S Series 20" Medium/Heavy Ride
ProMark 808N
" My worthless life is dedicated, to bringing God's children home".
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1j-_fPGSdQ
Rudiments and accent studies might help here.
- Zack
I agree we this. I found that different stickings, rudiments, dynamics/accents can make for much more interesting fills. Personally though when I'm playing I don't make a concious effort to 'learn' fills, I just sort of do them. I feel like if I learned a fill a day or something for a year and had 365 fills, I'd just forget most of them, so I prefer to just listen to songs and play along and make up fills as I go along. Similarly I don't learn songs note for note, I'll just play along and try and master that style of playing
~Pearl, Zildjian, Hammerax, Remo, Vic Firth, LP, Pulse~
Zildjian League
I can't agree with the "play less fills" thing. Your question was how to learn more diverse fills, not how to avoid them.
I would listen to and copy fills from as many different drummers as you care to listen to. As you learn other guys ideas and stickings and patterns and such, your own style and vocabulary will start to show over tiime.
You won't develope a lot of different fills quickly. As with anything else, you have to put the time in. You might start with simpler drummers like Ringo Starr or Nick Mason (of Pink Floyd. I understand there is a younger Nick Mason making a name for hiimself.) and then move on to more complex stuff. It depends on what your genre of music is and where you want your drumming to go.
Just don't ever give up. You never know when a break-through is around the corner.
Proudly playing:
Doc Sweeney Drums
A bunch of snares
A bunch of cymbals
Off-Set double pedals
I think I love to play the drums simply because you get to hit 'em!!!
thanks a lot guys
http://www.youtube.com/user/UrFunny767
Drums:
Pearl Vision Birch
22x18 Kick
Pearl Sensitone Steel Snare 14x5.5
12x9,13x10,16x16 Toms
Cymbals:
Zildjian A Custom 16in Crash
Sabian XS20 16in Medium Thin Crash
Zildjian A Armand 10in Splash
Wuhan 16in China
Zildjian ZBT 14in Hats (I hate it)
Zildjian ZBT 20in Ride (I hate it)
Hardware:
Pearl Eliminator Demon Drive Single Kick Pedal
Crappy PDP Cymbal Stands
Bookmarks