I assume that you're right handed. This is totally normal. You are training your left hand to do things it has never done before.
all the best...
I am a total beginner, 2 months now and wonder Is it common for your left hand not to be able play as accurate as with your right? I can play single strokes fairly fast and spot on with my right hand but with my left hand it's awkward, not as fast, almost like my left hand is retarded or something.
I assume that you're right handed. This is totally normal. You are training your left hand to do things it has never done before.
all the best...
Very normal. Get the book "Stick Control" by George Lawrence Stone. Practice the exercises (one example below) as suggested. It will take time, but, you'll get there.
It takes years to get your weak hand even close to your dominate hand. Don't let it discourage you. Just keep practicing and it will come with time.
What ^^ drummer said.
inthpktplayer has posted that chart. Go through it thoroughly. Spend hours on them. Find the nuances in your technique (with the chart) and find physical solutions to them. You'll probably find more faults with your technique and playing. Don't be discourage; this means you're getting better at being a drum player.
Oh and BTW; the Single Stroke Roll is the Hardest rudiment to perfect. (if you don't get this bold statement now you hopefully will one day).
Last edited by EyePea; 03-30-2016 at 09:24 AM.
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That's a relief to know it's not just me. Thank you for the support. I appreciate. It.
I wish I could do more with my drumming. If I could ever come just a tiny bit remotely close to someone like Steve Smith for example I'd be happy with that.
I just want the ability to sit down and do a good sounding solo some day.
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Stick Control is an excellent book to use. Don't get discouraged if you can't get off the first page. Start slow. Use a metronome.
For us right-handed people, the left hand is retarded! I've been playing a long, long time, and my left hand is still retarded . The reason is quite simple - we do everything with our right hands, and use our left hand only to support what the right hand is doing - and then only as a last resort.
Now that I'm into this drumming thing for over fifty years, I'm finally beginning to give my left hand a little attention. Whenever I remember to remind myself of this quest, I try to switch up sometimes, using my left hand to do things that normally automatically go to my right hand. Ever tried cutting your steak the way a lefty would? Or brushing your teeth left handed? These little "exercises" have helped me quite a bit in trying to escape right hand dominance.
So, is a "weak" left hand normal? Yep. And trying to break that brain-determined preference for the right hand feels very unnatural. If you can read drum exercise music, the exercises posted above will help enormously is improving the left hand's "intelligence!"
GeeDeeEmm
I've been trying to "straighten" my left in order to play matched(I play trad just fine) and I think it's harder for a righty to train a left hand when you're older. My stick seems to follow an arc outwards or inwards when doing doubles' second strokes. The strength is there but the muscles are just confused.
So young beginners have an advantage there-no prior, bad habits to eliminate. Maybe just strengthen those needed muscles' memory with repetition. And good luck with that page of stick control...that alone won't do it, but when you go thru it you'll feel better.
(just an idea: If you have time and nobody's around, find a medium weight hammer, some wood and some nails and start hammering nails to build up your left wrist and arm motions.Hammer accurately.)
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I've been trying to use my left hand more for normal tasks as well. Seems to help a bit. Get it used to a new range of motion. I hammer a lot of sheet metal at work. I constantly switch hands to build strength for drumming.
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SONOR 6 pc Special Edition 3007's red maple, old Pearl Brass 14x6 FF snare, Yamaha Tour Custom maple 8 pc., Tama 4 pc., honey amber B/B, Ludwig Supralite chrome 14x6.5 steel snare, Paiste, Saluda & Zildjianhttp://www.facebook.com/DerailedRockers/
Loaned out Slingerland upgraded 4 pc 1963 black, wrapped maple + 14" Pearl birch FT
good idea bout the hammer exercise. That should really do it. Ive Never used a hammer with my left hand.
Hey Niko, I feel ya. I've been over analyzing my left hand for the past month now wondering how I could speed up the process of making it stronger. I've been doing things like attempting to write paragraphs with it, playing all the rudiments and such. Like others have already said it takes a LONG time, just keep at it. Check out Jojo Mayer's secrets for the modern drummer there are a lot of helpful tips on grip and hand technique on the videos.
Just watch jazz drummers play, especially when comping. They aren't "hammering" but playing conversations on the snare with left hand, like presses and grace notes etc...It really about practice.
all the best...
i think i am lucky being ambidextrous. i dont 'get these problems. But i think that using yor weak hand for normal tasks seems like a good move.
Technique doesn't mean **** if you can't blast beat and spin sticks - Steve Gadd
Thanks Goya, found a copy of the video on eBay for under $20 will check it out soon as I get some extra cash
Enjoy the little things in life because one day you`ll look back and realize they were the big things.
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Enjoy the little things in life because one day you`ll look back and realize they were the big things.
-Karrie
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