I'm half Egyptian and my father bought me a Darbuka in Alexandria like 30 years ago. First now I actually started to learn :) And wow, so much fun even when you start to learn the basic :)) Thanks for great tuts.
I'm a beginner darbuka player and I love your very clear and easy to follow lessons. Still working on a consistent doum and ka. Thanks for these tutorials
You´re such a good teacher!! Been struggling with other UA-cam teaching videos but you know how to ease the beginner into the different rhythms gradually so that I’m progressing very well, thank you!!!
1:00 Ayoub D D T 1:37 Ayoub D kD T + Dk kD T 2:19 Karachi T T D 3:04 Karachi T kT D + Tk kT D 3:40 Malfouf D T T 4:28 Malfouf D kT kTk 5:00 Khaligi D D T 5:48 Khaligi D kD kTk it'd be good if you copy-pasted the time values into the description :) your onscreen notation is perfect! GREAT lesson!! - -
Thank you so much for your videos. I play my darbuka at the local Hindu temple for bhajans and I want to get good for the congregation. I am progressing thanks to your wonderful instruction.
It is so disorienting that my tek sounds like your ka, and vice versa. If I try to play along, it feels like I'm playing backward. Your teaching is excellent, though.
Tek and ka are the same sound but played on different hands. (so only slightly different because of the difference in hands). the main reason for tek and ka is to see what you're playing with your right and left (dominant and accompanying) hands. I'm just learning too but that's what I got from the video. Hope that helps.
@@peterfernandez5173 Oh yes, I'm aware. I just mean that the timbre of the tek and ka hits are slightly different, and in the video the sounds are like the reverse of what I get from my drum. It could be my tuning, or youtube audio compression, or any aspect of the recording or playback, but I just thought it was interesting.
I'm half Egyptian and my father bought me a Darbuka in Alexandria like 30 years ago. First now I actually started to learn :) And wow, so much fun even when you start to learn the basic :)) Thanks for great tuts.
I'm a beginner darbuka player and I love your very clear and easy to follow lessons. Still working on a consistent doum and ka. Thanks for these tutorials
Amazingly clear instructor i love your tutorials
Hey Geoff, I am Layla.. learned a lot from your tutorials! Thanks!,
Very clear! I have a mini doumbek and I'm enjoying learning the different rhytms!
Thank you so much! Love the style of these lessons 🙌 this was so fun.
Wow. You are an excellent teacher Geoff.
You´re such a good teacher!! Been struggling with other UA-cam teaching videos but you know how to ease the beginner into the different rhythms gradually so that I’m progressing very well, thank you!!!
This is super helpful for me in studying Arabic rhythms! Exactly the type of teaching I needed
🌻Thank you very much for the great teaching.🌻
Thanks a lot! Well articulated teaching!
Ayoub 1:05, with extra beats: 1:54. Excellent video, by the way, thanks so much for uploading! :)
Thank you so much! I'm going to be playing at a Sufi dance ceremony, good to know these rhythms!
Hey, how did that Sufi dance ceremony go? Sounds like an amazing opportunity!
These lessons are good for the beginner's 👌
1:00 Ayoub D D T
1:37 Ayoub D kD T + Dk kD T
2:19 Karachi T T D
3:04 Karachi T kT D + Tk kT D
3:40 Malfouf D T T
4:28 Malfouf D kT kTk
5:00 Khaligi D D T
5:48 Khaligi D kD kTk
it'd be good if you copy-pasted the time values into the description :)
your onscreen notation is perfect!
GREAT lesson!!
- -
Very helpful - nicely done. Thanks!
Geoff you are an amazing teacher, i don't have a darbuka but i am playing it on a frame drum, and its lovely
thank you for your time an your knowledge, best regards from Colombia.
Thank you so much for your videos. I play my darbuka at the local Hindu temple for bhajans and I want to get good for the congregation. I am progressing thanks to your wonderful instruction.
Truly an excellent lesson and perfect instruction. Thank you....
Hello Geoff, Your lessons are awesome! Do you have a lesson on how to play contra?
Nice Teacher! Nice tecnique
Nice man
Very good
thanks man!
👍👍👍👏👏👏👏👏
2:20 I am from Karachi 😁😁
❤
Maksum and baladi are also used commonly
Yep, I cover them in Part 2, which is all about 4/4 rhythms.
🕉️🎶🌺💜
Counter rhythm
I do not value music in my country ... I thank you very much. I am Iranian
mmmm i am confused...maybe slow motion
Which part are you confused about?
I thought it was very clear
Geoff Childers it was very clear great!!
It is so disorienting that my tek sounds like your ka, and vice versa. If I try to play along, it feels like I'm playing backward.
Your teaching is excellent, though.
Tek and ka are the same sound but played on different hands. (so only slightly different because of the difference in hands). the main reason for tek and ka is to see what you're playing with your right and left (dominant and accompanying) hands. I'm just learning too but that's what I got from the video. Hope that helps.
Also, interesting that we are learning to play Darbuka on the same day.
@@peterfernandez5173 Oh yes, I'm aware. I just mean that the timbre of the tek and ka hits are slightly different, and in the video the sounds are like the reverse of what I get from my drum. It could be my tuning, or youtube audio compression, or any aspect of the recording or playback, but I just thought it was interesting.
💚