just practice the 40 rudiments and just have fun with it ...blasting away can be fun but making some tricky fills is just as cool imo
Just got my new acoustic set and it came with a nice DW 7000 double bass pedal so i wanted to really develop in that department of drumming. I've only done very basic double bass things when i used to take lessons and i was never really taught anything that would really develop my coordination, speed and control. So my question is what double bass excercises could you do to really develop those three aspects?
just practice the 40 rudiments and just have fun with it ...blasting away can be fun but making some tricky fills is just as cool imo
Here are some double bass drum tips:
Also, I don't think that practicing the 40 drum rudiments is the best approach when it comes to starting out on double bass. That's a bit daunting and more on an advanced approach. What you want to do is get your singles down "real good" first. Get them to a fast speed. Then, you can throw in some more common and practical strokes like the 16th note triplet into the "and" where "&" is the snare drum and crash together. For example, "1-ta-ta" &. These types of beats will give you more of a direction and be more fun to practice.
The only double bass exercises I've ever done was to play along to songs. Pick songs that are fun but not too hard at first. I always refer people to the album Judas Priest - Painkiller. Songs like Hell Patrol are a nice steady pace. There are a few speed increases in the song but for the most part, easy and promotes stamina.
DW Performance Series
Peavey Radial Pro RBS-1
Roland TDW-20
Gibraltar rack system
Sabian AA/AAX/HHX/Vault
Tama pedals
just get comfortable using your left foot , everything else will come pretty easy after that . if I were you i would just use my left foot as much as i can .
Tamaholic
Invest in a metronome and start off slow.
http://www.drumchat.com/showthread.p...ht=double+bass
From my contribution in this post:
Last edited by Drumbledore; 06-04-2012 at 12:36 PM.
"...it's the Paradigm Of The Cosmos!" Stewart Copeland on Youtube
668: The Number Of The Guy Next Door To The Beast.
"A random act of kindness; it keeps my heart in shape!" - Late8
Yeah, that's what I do. For speed/endurance, I play along to a song that has long 16th note passages in it, e.g. Runes To My Memory - Amon Amarth, Esoteric Surgery - Gojira, Angel of Death - Slayer. For control, I'd play any of the Lamb of God songs I cannot play cleanly (I'm looking at you, The Faded Line ).
When I started out, I played straight 16ths through whatever songs were at the right tempo, but keeping the hand patterns the same. Actually I still do that, lol
- Zack
I got a trick I stole from Gene Hoglan, I picked it up in DRUM! or Modern Drummer, don't remember which. He said play with ankle weights! I went out and picked up a decent pair and play with them for a while, it helps with stamina then you feel like you can fly once you take them off. I have a double bass work-out routine. They are all played at as fast as you but not so fast that you don't play steady or consistent, remember practice makes permanent, not perfect.
play a minute of each with just a simple beat over (quarters on hats, crash or whatever and snare on 2&4)
straight triplets
straight 16ths
straight triplets (weighted)
straight 16ths (weighted)
straight triplets
straight 16ths
straight 16ths as long as you can untill it falls apart
now i also have a pattern from a song I throw in there, a minute weighted then a minute not. The song I use is Ruin by Lamb of God, I use the cool pattern Chris does in there. The pattern is the one he plays at 3:00 of the below video. I use that pattern to practice just not with the fancy technique he is showing there
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pl98kxzHOw0
hope that helps!
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