Drum Teacher Reacts: ED SHEERAN & VINNIE COLAIUTA Just dropped the mic! Talent is a lie
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- Опубліковано 8 тра 2024
- Ed Sheeran reality check - / c5lch4ro0ja
Vinnie's Ringo influence - • Vinnie Colaiuta On Get...
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#mindset #vinniecolaiuta #edsheeran
Dear Andrew. Every time I sit behind my drums or my piano I become very sad, depressed, because I feel like I'm eight years old again when I first began to play and take lessons. My hands are blistered and my knuckles bleed and I am never good enough. I am 62 years old now and I know I will NEVER be good enough. When people say to me 'that was so good', it makes me sad. God help me.
Know how ya feel.
@@psychoelectric Thank You. It's a lonely feeling sometimes.
Spot on and I say to people who I teach "I can show you how to practice then it's up to you to put in the work, I will give you a musical map then you have to put in the hard yards in order to be proficient" something like that, this has reinforced my theory
100%
It’s so easy to write off someone as a person because you don’t like their creative output. It’s even unfortunately common to make character judgements based their public performance. I was in that boat but Ed is really worthy of respect for working hard to get there. Being happy to share your most embarrassing failure to help others is pure class
Class. And honesty. Not perpetuating silly myths.
Hats off to him
Imminence with Songs from the new album “The Black.”
MV= Music Video
Vis= Visualizer
1. Come Hell or Highwater (MV & Vis)
2. Desolation (MV & Vis)
3. Heaven Shall Burn(MV & Vis)
4. Beyond the Pale (Vis)
5. Come What May (Vis)
6. Death by a Thousand Cuts (MV & Vis)
7. The Call of the Void (Vis)
8. Continuum (MV & Vis)
9. The Black (Vis)
Instrumental songs
1. Cul-de-Sac (Vis)
2. L’ appel Du Vide (Vis)
3. Le Noir (Vis)
Please feel free to pick a song. This is for the band IMMINENCE from Sweden. The lead singer, Eddie Berg, plays violin at the same time as he sings and screams.
This is the storyline of videos that go together.
Storyline w/ music videos…..
1. Come Hell or Highwater
2. Desolation
3. Heaven Shall Burn
4. Death by a Thousand Cuts
5. Continuum
No Storyline w/ visualizers…..
1. Beyond the Pale
2. The Call of the Void
3. Come What May
4. The Black
Yes. Unless you learn to fail, you'll fail to learn. (I'm still working on that one)😂
And that's really hard to do. Especially repeatedly.
Such a misunderstood concept
Just watched Rick Beato's interview with Jimmy Chamberlin.Jimmy recounted the story where he broke his right arm when he was 13, did he stop practicing? Nope, just jammed the stick down into his cast even though he could basically only tap the ride with a stiff arm action.What he did do was work extra hard on his left hand technique where to this dat he says he is still very left hand dominate.
I'm in my 40's now and when I was in my teens, I was that student you were talking about, that was always looking for an excuse. I don't have the answer on how you reach that person at that time. But I can say without a doubt that when I picked up guitar again at the beginning of covid, and I applied myself, it was literally a mind blowing experience when I started to actually recognize the improvements. The even crazier thing is I started to realize that if I did that with other things in my life, I'd get better at those too!
Ha, well, anyways, just wanted to say that I love your vids dude. I'm gonna start taking notes.
Thanks for watching.
I did the 3 years in a conservatory. Learnt the hard way that progress is slow.
People just underestimate the work required and the time frames
I taught myself to play drums by spending about six hours a day, every day, between the ages of 14 and 20 practicing. I never had a teacher but I had books like Advanced Techniques For The Modern Drummer (1948) by Jim Chapin. I would play along with Genesis, Steely Dan, Rush, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd. I would challenge myself by inverting my kit from right to left. The ten thousand hour rule is a real thing. I am still playing today (forty years later) at a reasonably competent level. My only regret is not getting a teacher when I was young. But the true key, as Mr. Rooney (and ALL of the others) say is simply putting in the time with hard, intense practice. As the old trope goes - how do you get to Carnegie Hall? Practice, practice, practice.
Everyone's a critic. And an artist is his/her own worse critic. Talent is esoteric. There's no failures/mistakes in music, only more great ideas.
"My flaws and imperfections are just as much a blessing as my achievements and successes, and I lay them all at God's feet."
🥢⬅️hot rods, drum sticks
I hear ya on your own worst critic
Vinnie's body of work is just unbelievable. While it's hard to pick one GOAT, if I had to choose one Vinnie would be it. Great video and points made.
Another thing, from Joe Walsh. He said just because you wrote the song doesn't mean you remember how to play it!🙃
When it comes to "talent" I think people have different ideas of what it actually means to have talent.
You can only achieve so much with natural talent , you can also only achieve so much with drive , now combine natural talent with drive, and then I'll show you a champion 👍
Yeah the passion overrides everything.
As Vinnie said. He was obsessed. And that's the trick!
Perfection is achieved through your countless mistakes! No-one is born a perfectionist at ANYTHING! The old saying goes.. and rings true... Practice makes perfect! No pain, no gain etc! 💙👊🏼
But "nobody is born a perfectionist isn't the point, some people have these mental make ups and we all have a personality type, being perfect (close to it) and a "perfectionist isn't the same thing, sorry
Well said!
@@kippsguitar6539 I understand and respect what you're saying and I agree but that wasn't exactly my point in what I was saying. Yeah, you can be born with the capabilities to easier hone a craft.... but until you practice at it, you won't know whether you're apt to it or not. And even afterwards, you'll need to practice to be & stay perfect at it
Day 10 of requesting you to react austin archey playing into the earth it's super fast but he's really calm and it's the fastest song of Lorna shore but he's heel toe is insane he hit 32 notes in 2 SECONDS
I find anything involving ed Sheeran to be the exact opposite of essential listening lol.
I'm the not the target either
love Vinnie's work with sting though..
I get your message, but let's not go too far in the other direction. Yes, hard work is crucial, but saying that talent is irrelevant is just as wrong as saying that hard work isn't necessary.
We'll never know.
It's an impossible test to experiment with.
It might be coincidence that the best people are always the hardest workers.
@@AndrewRooneyDrums Sure we know. When I started playing (guitar and then bass), several friends of mine were too (ahh, the '90s, such good times, everybody wanted to rock!) and we could see that some of us were fast learners and some were struggling with basic left-right hand coordination or time keeping.
Another example: I've always been good at maths and physics at school, I barely had to open the book or do exercises until late high school. I just remembered everything after the first explanation and it immediately made sense to me. Meanwhile some of my friends couldn't grasp it no matter how many hours of study they put in it. Is maths magically different than other activities?
Please note I never said it's a coincidence that the best are all hard workers. As I said earlier, hard work is indeed crucial, far from me to deny that! But some people _are_ naturally skilled at drawing, some at acting, some at running, some at maths. Pick _any_ activity, some people are better inclined than the average at that. Sure, we all must work hard on top of that to become good, but that doesn't mean that the starting point is the same for everybody, and it doesn't mean that the same amount of work gives the same result for everyone. People are all different.
(I would even argue that being willing to work hard is itself a "talent", if you squint just a bit: as Colaiuta said, he was the guy who couldn't have enough, who always wanted more. Not everybody is like that, or for everything. But that's beside my point.)
The mistake you're making is the notion that innate talent somehow means the hard work isn't necessary to master that talent. Innate talent does not mean a free ride to success. Like Einstein said, 10% inspiration, 90% inspiration. Don't disregard the individual advantage that comes with using that 10%. Plenty of studies about this. Example, an innately talented billiard player that can see the angles to make a shot is not the same as actually making the shot. That comes with hours of practicing along with everyone else.
The mistake you are making is misquoting Einstein, he ACTUALLY said and I quote " genius is 1% talent and 99% hard work" maybe you should practice your maths grinds, additionally Thomas Edison said talent is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration, let's do better
@@kippsguitar6539 ""Success is 10% inspiration and 90% perspiration", goes the old saying by Thomas Edison."" One of many many choices from Google. Reminds me of Rhetoric and Idioms class from college. The quote can be found quoted a lot of different ways and attributed to a lot of different people. It doesn't really matter because they all make the same point. All the genetic issues aside we are all not born clones starting from the place. If your perspective of talent is correct please explain prodigies? I completely agree with you when someone uses someone else's skills at anything as a crutch to rationalize they own lack of skills but the science is against you on innate talent. Maybe Vinnie's innate talent isn't drumming but an innate talent to focus and channel all of his energies on being the best he can be at no matter what he chose to do? Who knows? Again, we don't all start from the same place. BTW, I'm not trolling here. I really enjoy what you do which is why I subscribed. We just disagree on this one.
'an innately talented billiard player'
How do we know someone is an innately talented billiard player?
@@AndrewRooneyDrums About 3 cushion billiards I would need a more private communication method for obvious reasons. I can say I've seen kids to small to play the game discuss the game with pros who were amazed by what the kids were seeing on the table. For now try "Two Set Violin." Two orchestral violinists who have videos here on you tube tracking young kids who all work their backsides off but they will point out those with the spark to be labeled prodigies. As I said, prodigy does not forego the hard work. They were just born with something others aren't and they were lucky enough to be born into a situation where their talent could be discovered. And, we normal humans just don't posses the intense focus and drive they do.
ua-cam.com/video/ayB-ZN7OF6s/v-deo.html&pp=ygUWdHdvIHNldCB2aW9saW4gcHJvZGlneQ%3D%3D
@@AndrewRooneyDrums Answered the questions but it's not showing? Consider El Estepario. Does he demonstrate physical skills that can't be found in many other drummers? No. Does he demonstrate musicality that has never been seen before? I'd say yes. It's why he has so many subscribers that aren't drummers. Did he have to develop his physical playing skills to play what he hears in his head? Yes. His talent is his musicality, not his physical skills. Again, physical skills are the result of a lot of hard work. The drive to put in the hard work may be a talent of it's own or a result of talent. There are different thoughts on that. Hard work itself is not a talent. What someone does with all that hard work may or may not be talent.
Will this post disappear too?
Sorry all I can say Sheeran is as boring being interviewed as I find his music. I did try so hard guys honestly