If you want to increase your paradiddle speed, try this simple approach… slowly at first.
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- Опубліковано 28 лис 2023
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An accomplished musician and one man act with twelve albums under his belt, Freddy Charles is a singer/songwriter and multi instrumentalist currently based in Los Angeles. With a pop/rock sound influenced by hints of jazz and EDM, he records every note of his record himself and acts as his own engineer and producer, giving him complete artistic control of his musical vision.
Freddy got his start in music as a drummer, giving him a strong rhythmic foundation to build on as he began studying guitar, songwriting, and production. His early records found a small devoted fanbase as he began cultivating his style and coming into his own as an artist. Eventually, he would find a national audience when several of his songs were picked up by Sirius XM and broadcasted across the country, as well as being featured in several independent films. As he continued to make increasingly adventurous records, he became an in demand session drummer and educator.
Thanks for this mate
Well said and played, it's always good to go back to the basics
Thank you 👍
Awesome!
Thanks!
This sounds like great advice. I’ve been stuck for several years now. Thank you.
You're welcome.
The same would hold true for six stroke rolls or any other rudimentary employing a multiple bounce stroke. However, my biggest hurdle is moving from controlling each individual note to allowing the bounce (e.g. 2 bounces for one stroke). I just cannot seem to do it but I know that if I can get past this then it would open up so many possibilities. Another issue is getting bounces from toms, especially larger floor toms that are usually tuned lower (looser skins).
Focus on getting the bounces on the rebounding surfaces first. Then, when you get stronger you can get a feel for adding it to surfaces with less rebound.
Any tips for maintaining it whilst moving around the kit? I'm thinking about different surface tensions.. 🤔 Always makes for lack of smoothness. Thanks
Not OP but I use the drop catch method for the double on the kit, fingers make up for the lack of rebound on the looser surfaces
@@raws944 That's great advice. I do as well.
6 lug Gretsch?
It's a Gretsch Black Hawk 10 inch snare
It's very good .@@freddycharles