History Of The Drumset. All Parts. Daniel Glass.
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- Опубліковано 22 лис 2015
- Спасибо за просмотр, лайк и комментарии
Поддержать канал финансово любой суммой карта сбербанк 2202 2002 1789 6651 Александр Леонидович Д.
Enjoy!
★★★★★WDL Мировая Лига Барабанщиков★★★★★ - club1515616
George Thinlines - is_sus
Thank you very much Mr.Daniel Glass.
And all the staff and those who worked on the project
Thanks for watching
The drum set is a symbol for freedom and people coming together (paradoxically, it's played by one person).
This should be required watching for every studying drummer. Love it. Bravo.
I’ll do you one better: not only should this be required watching for drummers, this should be watched at LEAST once a year.
I learned this during my Jazz Studies at music conservatory in Germany...
Especially about Scott Joplin Ragtime and New Orleans Style😂😂😂
I JUST WANTED TO SAY WHAT'S UP TO ALL THE FELLOW DRUMMERS AND DRUM ENTHUSIASTS!
AWESOME VIDEO!
K.d. Bellamy hello 👋 friend!!!!!!! I agree. Drums are the best!!!!!!!
The farther backward in time you look, the farther forward you are likely to see ❣
I have seen this 5 times ! Every drummer needs this education!!
Now we need a video of 1970-2020
The drumset hasnt evolved that much since then. Whats changed? A whole video worth of things?
@@DrummerJacob new styles in playing...rock, jazz, funk, soundtrack, etc; new instruments/sounds...cymbals, electronics, accessories, etc.
@@Jhnny025 not that much has changed. "styles" not really, its just variations.
Dude, there are definitely massive changes. Have you listened to Tigran Hamasyan, Animals as Leaders, or those composers with really wierd time signatures that are making their way into pop music with the "trap" beats.
You can only go so far with rhythm combinations and how a drummer implements them. Bach is famouse for trying to write every rhythm in every key ever and ultimately fail because theirs infinite combinations. I think at the point he was at when he gave up rhythm must of all sounded the same after a certain point
Shoutouts to Vic Firth and Daniel Glass for putting together this AWESOMELY informative drum history series, and the OP for uploading this in it's entirety to youtube. I've been casually playing the drums for over 15 years, and this has made me appreciate playing the drums SO MUCH MORE! I was blown away at how early 1900s drummers designed innovative devices and tools that most modern drummers overlook and underappreciate. I loved how they gave a spotlight for each style of music, and the music artists in their respective time periods. Every drummer from beginners and pros alike, has got to watch this.
Thanks for this history lesson! Love those Bosphorus's!
It's amazing how necessity is the mother of invention. So many advancements were made just to fill a need, like playing in a stadium for the first time, or playing for people that want to sit and listen instead of dance. Really cool.
What a great history lesson, I thank you sir.This knowledge will be able to be passed down through generations of players.So glad this has been documented.
Thanku so much for helping us know what our roots are...😇🤘
Awesome knowledge. I LOVE drums... and I am a bassist.
You chose bass over drums? Its okay, friend. Nobody's perfect.
Rule #2
I love bass and I'm a drummer. haha
Loved the personal bit in the end, about caring about history, quite a bit. Great watch
Ive been TRYING to learn the drums off and on for the last couple years(at age 43, 45 now). I get really lazy and so busy with work and life. Its very discouraging. I have an entry level Yamaha E-kit and also an entry level SPL 5 piece birch and a couple lower end cymbal kits. They spend a lot of time collecting dust. I just get home so tired from work. And I live in an apartment so the accoustic kit cant always be played.
I first saw Daniel Glass on a Drumeo episode. Then I watched this. I have to say it is extremely informative and extremely inspiring. I really want to get serious about practicing and learning. I really should seek out a good teacher. This video was very uplifting!!!
Excellent historylesson: music, economy, social etcetera. Really interesting!!!
wait i think i just saw the preview for this and thought "ah if i had money id buy that dvd". Second video below it seems to be ripped, but i can only really thank you. But we should all really be thanking Daniel Glass!
Such a great video thank you!
Awesome historical time line and advice on how to improve ones chops.
Essential Viewing!
Thank you Daniel!!
Thank you so much. I gain the knowledge now😀😀
Peace from Portland, OR
7:13 1909 the birth of pedal. cool , 36:46 the Hi hat, 57:08 Double Bass
This video is really fantastic and exciting. Congratulations to you.
This just changed a lot for me !
this was so cool to watch.
Awesome video! I watched every minute of it and learned a few things that I didn't previously know. THANKS !!
Wow, thank you for this great film!!!
Hello fellow drummer and lovers of drums!!! 😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
So well done and very good playing as well! Thank you!
You're presentation is unmatched! Thanks for bringing the importance of Gene Krupa to your audience. He was my hero when I was a child (1955-1960.) I have felt his contribution to the modern style of playing as well as how we play has been overshadowed by the attraction of incredible playing. We have to remember where it all came from!
I had to play the "standards" as they were called then with my dad's band, but wanted to play jazz and later rock. It's hard to relate how hard it was to 'just keep time.' BVut really, for a lot of that music, including Duke Ellington etc., it wasn't possible. They didn't want the drummer stealing the show, but contributing to the overall sound.
Great editing of the originals!
Thank you! I have no words to describe my feelings about this amazing video :-)
Fantastic drum Doc.
Based on thorough research. Very well explained! Extremely instructive!
Great video! great drumming! great lesson!
What a great vid!!!! all drummers should know these interesting fact about the drum set!!
Muzik = Life
This video was suggested to me by my drum set teacher.Wonderful.Thankyou!
Seriously Thanks Brother for this amazing video, really helpfull for contempory drummers !
Gotta get my fly swatters out!!!
Cool documentary, thanks!
Both educational and entertaining. Thanks...
I’m in a Satan-worshipping death core band and looking forward to incorporating the dog barking device! Thanks!
may GOD save your soul
@@marcostb13 hail Satan 😂😂😂😂
Brilliant video.
That ‘What’d I’d Say’ cover was dope.
Very well done! Thanks for posting this.
Louie Bellson is the GOAT 🐐🥁
Hes the first to use double bass baby! metal heads unite lol
Nah Mike the Master Mangini is with out question the goat
Bell was in his time tho
You’d think with pretty much all drum tech being 100+ years old, the prices would’ve dropped off by now.
I understand there are certain and specific inventions all the time, but for the most part pretty much all the stuff we use has been around a loooong time.
Sheeit. I was born in 1972. You ought to see what $800 would have bought you in 1990, my senior year of high school, compared to what $800 in 2023 dollars will buy you today. Drummers get more bang for the buck today than ever at any point in history. If you disagree, that is only because you haven't been alive long enough.
Thank you very much for this entertaining and very informative documentary much appreciated
excellent video.
Excellent excellent, just what I was looking for. ❤👍
Amazing!
great, now i wanna be a drummer!
Wonderful information👍👌
HISTORY!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
thank you so much!
Brilliant!!
Thanks for apload this video..
Love this. I have a Radio King kit Gold sparkle. I believe it is from late 30s. Big 28 bass drum.
This was a very good and informative video.I would like to point out that Rockabilly began in 1927 in the town of Bakersfield California.Migrants from the Midwest, particularly Kansas and Oklahoma travelled West and some settled in Bakersfield,having brought there musical instruments with them.From this,the First Rockabilly emerged.The Rockabilly mentioned here occurred later and became popular,for whatever reasons it did,but it was not new.You can research this and see for yourself.The information about the drumset and it's evolution was very interesting and useful.Thanks!
really cool, thanks!
Thanks dude!
Thank you
In 2019, traps has a toooootally different meaning.
Not gay btw
Sup
Awesome history... and told by a guy who is 85% Michael Cole...
realtrisk Never thought about it, but you're right. LOL.
realtrisk hahahaha I knew he looked familiar
“This new demographic known as the teenager” lmfao
Good stuff
BRILLIANT
Buenisimo
Absolutely FANTASTIC!! Thanks
6:17 the ragtime bit was good, it needed a little more cowbell.
I gotta have more cowbell!!!!
I GOT A FEVER AND THE ONLY PRESCRIPTION IS MORE COWBELL!!!!!!
#morecowbell
Oh man that's funny trap set well it's still the same as far as labels go I have a trap set folder for ableton
1:11:47 i wanted to say that whatever song that is, is so terrible, then you hit this perfect sizzle into a face-melting fill. you are a freaking good drummer dude
Very cool, thanks for the post.
It's difficult for my 21st century brain to think of I Wanna Hold Your Hand as being "hard", but Ringo goes full drum face at 1:18:09 - like he's doing the breakdown in a Rage Against the Machine song.
спасибо огромное!
хм. а как же ютуб "пропустил" это видео? :)
Carl Perkins said, "Everyone has their own idea of what rock and roll is, but make no mistake. The very first time anyone ever played anything that could be called rockabilly was when Elvis Scotty and the boys started recording together"....and he lived it.
I don't think Perkins' claim is true through; at the very least it's certainly not beyond dispute. The Delmore Brothers' "Hillbilly Boogie" ua-cam.com/video/uiIL_F9EuuM/v-deo.html is pretty clearly rockabilly, at least in parts, including segments with a really pronounced backbeat, and that's from 1946. (Arthur Smith's "Guitar Boogie" ua-cam.com/video/8tNYyoelXTw/v-deo.html is apparently considered the father of this subgenre www.npr.org/2011/11/15/140112547/the-history-of-hillbilly-boogies-earliest-days?t=1556731403688 and it dates to 1945.)
Only thing I noticed is he refers to the kettle drum (as I've always called it) a tom tom.
Yeah yeah yeah - ride on *
THX surround sound in the 20s mean sneaking up behind the audience and firing blanks :D #dreamjob
I’m a right handed drummer, but a left handed percussionist. Is that weird?
what’s up beacon
So did Louie bellson invented linear drumming ?
oh yeah
So a drummer could’ve went from pioneering a drum set with a 36-40 inch bass drum and then 20-25 years later start playing BeBop and literally half the size of his/her bass.
Seems kinda nuts. Like going from a regular 22” bass to a cajon or something.
I would be interested to learn how to play all those style. Does anyone knows a drumbook about these ?
I find it weird that he assumes there was the kick snare kick snare pattern existing in the 1865 period, because no sheet music of that era shows, nor recording from the late 19th century
That's because "pics/video/recording or it didn't happen" is entirely a 21st-century invention. I don't need video of, say, Attila The Hun to know that I wouldn't want to mess with him. There are other forms of historical record, you know.
@@joeday4293 yes, so what are they for this aha
I litterally spoke of sheet music too 😅
Critical Drum Theory.
This video is not popular enough by a large large margin
cakes also taste pretty good
Ringo is a left handed drummer on a right hand kit. Thus he always played match grip. And funny that the start of rock & roll is credited to a guy who was an average drummer at best. Yet all the great drummers before him, had no effect on the history of R&R.
raythackston1960 What about Keith Moon? I can’t say he was a great drummer technically, but he embodied the qualities of r&r better than Ringo ever did, ex. My Generation.
Ginger Bakers contributions in the Graham Bond Organization is also noteworthy, though that was a r&b band and Ginger was more of a heavy jazzer like Art Blakey.
Well I would agree about Keith and Ginger. There are many more as well...Mitch Mitchell for one. But of all of them Keith was Rock & Roll all over. In the end it cost him his life. But what a life he had. I was just referring to how they skip over everyone but Ringo...rock & roll was around before the Beatles were even famous. But I will say The Beatles being on Ed Sullivan sped up the movement.
Who credited the start of Rock and Roll to Ringgo? I didnt see that anywhere.
He simply tells you what happened and how the US became infatuated with the band due to certain performances and media attention, overlooking other influential bands.
That right hand traditional....
Wow! What a glaring mistake. The hi hat was not called a hi hat. It was the sock cymbal. Only later did it become the hi hat.
Gillian and Jolie should fight, they have mad beef tings 🥩
I agree ^^
3:40
2 aggressive for u
So wait, this guy is left handed and also inverted his traditional grip? This is all very strange...
+fosterfoster7 if his kit is setup conversely to a right handed drummer, then it makes sense that his grip would do so as well
he can play traditional with both hands :-/
I play right handed set up with a left handed trad grip, however when i play bushes i move my traditional grip to my right hand. I have no idea why i did that when i first picked up the bushes but it works so why not.
Felix lol you freak! Haha just playin.
What do you call a guy that hangs around a bunch of musicians?
A drummer.
gang gang
I am sorry not to hear a bit about Charlie watt.