I had the honor of being taught by John in 2019 at the University of North Texas. I learned so much from him, he is an AMAZING player and teacher and is so well respected in the percussion community!
The Bouncy bouncy helped me a lot , I used to try and control that 2nd note and once I started bouncing it everything came together.Left hand lead is really important for drumset with this one, you can really find a ton of great ideas with it!Thanks John!
One of the toughest to coordinate for drummers. If anyone want something to practice to, listen to Tools track 'Triad'. He does it pretty much through the entire track and you can play to it.
This has always been one rudiment that has completely bewildered me but your comment here has literally improved it massively pretty much straight away. Before, I could never get any kind of repetetion going with my Swiss' but I can now by just following your advice. To top it all off, I really haven't had the best start to today but this gave me something to be happy with so thank you, kind internet stranger 😊
A flamadiddle is a paradiddle with a flam added on the first note. So (l)RLRR or (r)LRLL. These are typically played alternating. A Swiss Army Triplet is a flam followed by two strokes, the first of which is the same hand as the primary note of the flam. So (l)RRL or (r)LLR. These are typically not played alternating.
@@spencergsmith Oh! my mistake your right a paradiddle is not a triple at all!. doesn't Carter Beauford claim to have invented these, I think he called them triple billies? He sure loves to use them. I don't know just a rumor I guess
I had the honor of being taught by John in 2019 at the University of North Texas. I learned so much from him, he is an AMAZING player and teacher and is so well respected in the percussion community!
The Bouncy bouncy helped me a lot , I used to try and control that 2nd note and once I started bouncing it everything came together.Left hand lead is really important for drumset with this one, you can really find a ton of great ideas with it!Thanks John!
One of the toughest to coordinate for drummers. If anyone want something to practice to, listen to Tools track 'Triad'. He does it pretty much through the entire track and you can play to it.
I actually came here from a video of Danny saying "The Grudge" was the hardest Tool song to play in concert because of all the Swiss Triplets.
Duuude this guy omg I love him from the old Vic Firth videos 😮😮😮😮
Bro just unlocked a memory from another life lol
This guy’s the greatest!
Dr. Throwdown strikes again!! 👍👍🥁🥁
Excellent information.
I always thought of the Swiss Army Triplet as shuffle with one hand and the first two notes of a triplet with the other.
This has always been one rudiment that has completely bewildered me but your comment here has literally improved it massively pretty much straight away. Before, I could never get any kind of repetetion going with my Swiss' but I can now by just following your advice. To top it all off, I really haven't had the best start to today but this gave me something to be happy with so thank you, kind internet stranger 😊
@brendanm6921 glad I can help brother. Keep your chin up 👍
You make it look relatively easy.
Awesome..
Thank you so much
Good to know my beginner double stroke mistakes have a name
excellente explication.... Merci
Oooooohhhh waaaa aah aah aahh
I always did them flam right right flam left left 😭😭😂😂
I always thought this was called a flamadiddle
A flamadiddle is a paradiddle with a flam added on the first note. So (l)RLRR or (r)LRLL. These are typically played alternating. A Swiss Army Triplet is a flam followed by two strokes, the first of which is the same hand as the primary note of the flam. So (l)RRL or (r)LLR. These are typically not played alternating.
@@spencergsmith Oh! my mistake your right a paradiddle is not a triple at all!. doesn't Carter Beauford claim to have invented these, I think he called them triple billies? He sure loves to use them. I don't know just a rumor I guess
@@justinkane290 I think you're thinking of hertas. Carter play them all the time.
@@bikinggreg Is there a difference between a Swiss army triplet and a herta?
@@blake.r3602 Yes, a herta is just a RLRL where as the 2nd RL is played half the speed - eg two 16th followed by two 8th (no accenting).