How to improve your rhythm

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  • Опубліковано 30 кві 2017
  • Drastically improve your timing and rhythmic feel by tapping into your natural ability to speak language, all without the aid of a metronome. Science is on your side!
    CLICKBAITY MISMATCH NEGATIVITY STUDY
    mentalfloss.com/article/64955/...
    SNOWBALL THE COCKATOO STUDY
    www.cogs.indiana.edu/spackled/...
    Original study on beat deafness
    www.mcgill.ca/spl/files/spl/p...
    Follow up study
    rstb.royalsocietypublishing.or...
    SUPPORT ME ON PATREON:
    / adamneely
    Follow me on the interwebs:
    / adamneely
    / its_adamneely
    Peace,
    Adam
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,1 тис.

  • @martinkrauser4029
    @martinkrauser4029 7 років тому +3708

    this is a scam, the guy that adam is talking to is just adam in black and white but standing in another spot!

  • @legoblox01
    @legoblox01 6 років тому +1279

    > By counting while you play
    All wind instruments just died a little inside

    • @ch0rkie
      @ch0rkie 6 років тому +92

      And everyone who sings and plays simultaneously

    • @Andrei.Christop
      @Andrei.Christop 5 років тому +27

      actually you can vocalize sounds while playing wind instruments but you cannot say words

    • @mollylane4346
      @mollylane4346 5 років тому +8

      and vocalists

    • @themysteriousdude757
      @themysteriousdude757 5 років тому +23

      Why is everybody saying how this is difficult for woodwinds as if brass just doesn’t exist no more

    • @adrianguev1294
      @adrianguev1294 4 роки тому +4

      Vibrato the the count

  • @icosahedron3408
    @icosahedron3408 7 років тому +1500

    My band director says that he had a freshman student (percussionist) with absolutely terrible rhythm. Even entrances on upbeats were tricky for them. But the next year, they came back to band with much greater ability, along with an amazing sense of rhythm. When my director asked the kid how they were able to improve so much, the kid said, "Well, it became a lot easier when I tried counting to 4 while I played."

    • @ZombieLove
      @ZombieLove 5 років тому +2

      Ufking unfee

    • @anapaulafarano3070
      @anapaulafarano3070 5 років тому +5

      bahAHA oh man

    • @vitamin9165
      @vitamin9165 4 роки тому +100

      yeah honestly as a drummer sometimes I forget to count, lemme tell you you need to count

    • @kozhikkaalan
      @kozhikkaalan 4 роки тому +30

      Holy shit, your political correctness made it really hard for me understand whether you were talking about one student or a bunch of students at first

    • @sandpaperduvet1455
      @sandpaperduvet1455 3 роки тому +42

      @@kozhikkaalan imgur.com/v9tUVOf Gee wow, this must've been really tough on you

  • @PlayTheMind
    @PlayTheMind 7 років тому +1510

    Adam: "Were you *rushing* or were you *dragging*?"
    Also Adam: "I-I don't know."

    • @adamozzy5698
      @adamozzy5698 7 років тому +120

      PlayTheMind
      Also Adam: Start counting
      Adam: 5 6 7-
      Also Adam: IN 4 DAMMIT!

    • @onixtheone
      @onixtheone 7 років тому +65

      PlayTheMind "Oh my dear God. Are you one of those single tear people? Do I look like a double fucking rainbow to you?"

    • @claudiaventura1644
      @claudiaventura1644 7 років тому +25

      "Not quite my tempo"

    • @Footballar09
      @Footballar09 7 років тому +5

      PlayTheMind idk but you better get the heck out of there cause that's a Russian dragon

    • @alexzamora5285
      @alexzamora5285 6 років тому

      PlayTheMind lol

  • @Corvid
    @Corvid 2 роки тому +80

    When I was training as a paramedic my instructors were always confused as to how I managed to maintain such a relentlessly precise rhythm of 110/minute chest compressions... even under the stress of real resuscitation. I never got on with the tempo of "Staying Alive"... I used the morbidly appropriately titled Rammstein song Ich Tu Dir Weh (literally translated as "I hurt you"), the first song I ever mastered playing as a brand new guitarist by sheer brute force. Very fitting, given that textbook CPR fractures the ribs from the sternum almost immediately, resulting in an extremely painful recovery for the tiny percentage of cardiac arrest patients who regain some form of consciousness. Three people survived to hospital discharge during my 4 year career, with me literally miming the guitar rhythm in my head... wonderful non musical application for good rhythm!
    (From a technical perspective, the heart needs a fairly precise tempo of chest compressions to allow the upper chambers of the heart to passively fill with the maximum amount of blood, for the most efficient artificial circulation of blood. Certainly worked OK for a few lucky people :D Ich tu dir weeeeeh! Tut mich nicht leid!) Perhaps it was more the aggressive resucsitation... I hated the "Nah mate, don't bother trying too hard, no one survives cardiac arrest" mentality of some oldshool paras. Fuck that. 50 year old heart attack? I don't care how many thousand pounds the air ambulance costs to turn out... the words "What the fuck happened... why does my chest hurt" are worth every second, and every hour of hard guitar practice :D

  • @jjajaz
    @jjajaz 7 років тому +456

    My drum/percussion teacher had this thing where he'd think of a weird phrase (i.e. "the maths department stole my mug, oh what a shame") and then come up with a fairly complex rhythm which fit with the words. It's incredible how much easier it made learning long rhythmic parts

    • @variousthings6470
      @variousthings6470 7 років тому +55

      That technique works for simple rhythms, too. For the London 2012 Olympics opening ceremony, they had to teach several hundred volunteers, most with no previous drumming experience, to play the same beat. To help teach them the rhythms, they used some memorable phrases like "play the drum - so your mum - can see - you on TV".
      The BBC documentary about the production process is on UA-cam, but the site will probably eat this comment if I try to link to it. Just search for "One Night in 2012 - An Imagine Special" and skip to about the 30min mark.

    • @thefakedeal
      @thefakedeal 7 років тому +24

      jjajaz this is a widely used technique in indian classical music . idk about western classical music tho. Ben Levin made a video about it.

    • @encroachingchaos6208
      @encroachingchaos6208 7 років тому +12

      Samir Shrestha It's referred to as Konakol and uses different syllables according to whether from North or South India

    • @sizasman
      @sizasman 7 років тому +7

      jjajaz On that note, you should check out David Dockery's YT channel. He has a couple of videos where he syncs some ridiculously complex drum rhythms with movie/tv dialogs.

    • @MattMusicianX
      @MattMusicianX 7 років тому +5

      Thanks for mentioning! I never heard of David Dockery. Also check out Dan Weiss doing the same thing to tv dialog and hip hop lyrics on his channel =D

  • @JonI-vc5mm
    @JonI-vc5mm 7 років тому +1076

    TFW you play a wind instrument so you can't count out loud and play at the same time

    • @tobiasobsen1287
      @tobiasobsen1287 7 років тому +126

      Count with multiphonics and sing while playing at the same time, should be ez. /s

    • @breadmoneyarchival
      @breadmoneyarchival 7 років тому +125

      >Multiphonics
      >easy
      pick one.

    • @tobiasobsen1287
      @tobiasobsen1287 7 років тому +60

      oh, I am deeply sorry that my obvious irony AND the marker for sarcasm (the /s) weren't enough to make clear that it wasn't meant serious :D

    • @JoshDanielGuitar
      @JoshDanielGuitar 7 років тому +41

      Tap with your foot! That is how I keep rhythm when I practice guitar.

    • @BigDaddyWes
      @BigDaddyWes 7 років тому +22

      Although tapping your foot or making some bodily movement can help you keep time, if your mouth is available to, count out loud. Involving your voice helps you internalize and make neural connections. Tapping your foot isn't something you need to think about in order to do. Counting requires more focus. If nothing else, think the numbers, but actually speaking them is infinitely better for your practice.

  • @tobiasobsen1287
    @tobiasobsen1287 7 років тому +345

    using your a pic of yours to picture "humans" may be the most basic, yet best joke I have ever witnessed in such subtleness

    • @shudigga5246
      @shudigga5246 7 років тому +23

      Tobias Obsen He is a human right?.....right?!0.0

    • @TheJuicyTangerine
      @TheJuicyTangerine 7 років тому +71

      That's exactly what a robot would want you to think

    • @MysticKoolAidMan
      @MysticKoolAidMan 6 років тому +5

      Tobias Obsen especially given the Hebrew origins of his name (humanity)

  • @rajin95
    @rajin95 7 років тому +431

    The notes Galileo sung were the lick right?

    • @AdamNeely
      @AdamNeely  7 років тому +376

      all star

    • @kevinvandenberg5548
      @kevinvandenberg5548 7 років тому +15

      I love you even more right now

    • @rbbBeast
      @rbbBeast 5 років тому +6

      I see a little silhouetto of a man...

    • @AndewMole
      @AndewMole 5 років тому +2

      i got you to 200 likes.

    • @anabsurdkitten623
      @anabsurdkitten623 3 роки тому +2

      @@rbbBeast Scaramouche, scaramouche, will you do the fandango?

  • @MusicisWin
    @MusicisWin 7 років тому +1375

    There's no end like low end.

    • @allenhudson7988
      @allenhudson7988 7 років тому +22

      Music is Win Tyler, you and Adam need to do a collaboration!

    • @ejipuh
      @ejipuh 7 років тому +6

      Music is Win BASS

    • @OEpistimon
      @OEpistimon 7 років тому

      Music is Win Hi Tyler!

    • @ldahui
      @ldahui 7 років тому

      I was just watching one of your videos haha

    • @ronzonirafael
      @ronzonirafael 7 років тому +2

      Bass is win too

  • @matthewsheehan1589
    @matthewsheehan1589 6 років тому +83

    The papyrus font for the "meditation" was hysterical. I love all your little humorous nuances, Easter eggs and inside jokes. Its really great when coming back and rewatching videos I notice things I haven't in the past. Your internet speak is on point

  • @Charlyfromthenuclearcity
    @Charlyfromthenuclearcity 7 років тому +69

    "Who knew practice was actually work ?! Oh my gooood."

  • @SonicXRage
    @SonicXRage 4 роки тому +31

    6:50 Friends and relatives wonder why I never dance at parties even when they so kindly insist. Little do they know, I'm actually protecting them from myself.

  • @pontuserickson89
    @pontuserickson89 7 років тому +78

    Notification from Adam Neely: the day is saved

  • @WritingOnGames
    @WritingOnGames 7 років тому +44

    This is quickly becoming my favourite channel. Reignited a love of theory in me and has actually got me *studying* my craft again. So yeah, thanks!

  • @paurullan
    @paurullan 7 років тому +48

    The timing of this video is impeccable! I have been focusing on my piano rhythm and have become so frustrated I was going to ask this for a Q&A. Thank you!

  • @OscarBedford
    @OscarBedford 7 років тому +114

    Hi Adam! Great clip, as usual! I just wanted to touch upon Patel’s ‘vocal learning’ theory, which you reference around minute 4:00. This is a highly enticing theory which has its roots in the field of music cognition, particularly in the realm of beat processing. Yet, as with every theory, it must be taken with a pinch of salt. As you aptly point out in the video, the theory revolves around the ability to vocalize complex sounds, which is shared by a select number of animal species, including humans. In essence, Patel focuses on the fact that all animals capable of entraining their body movements to an external rhythmic source also seem to be capable of learning and reproducing complex vocal patterns from their peers, and to use these patterns in a communicative and adaptive way. This convergence would seem to point to a causal, perhaps even evolutionary, link between these two seemingly disparate abilities.
    However, in a more recent paper by Pattel himself (2014), the author cautions the reader by explaining that the ability to synchronize to a beat has also been verified in sea lions, which are animals that do not happen to express complex vocalizations, nor vocal learning. This does not necessarily mean, however, that the theory is irrevocably flawed or incorrect. In fact, Patel goes on to explain that, although sea lions do not exhibit vocal learning characteristics, the other members of the sea lion’s evolutionary lineage (namely seals) do express this ability. Thus, it is possible that sea lions inherited the brain structures needed for vocal learning and beat processing but only expressed the latter, due to particular evolutionary constraints affecting this species alone. If this turned out to be true, the ‘vocal learning’ theory would remain intact.
    A radically different but plausible explanation would be that these two abilities are typically expressed concomitantly, but are in fact functionally and evolutionarily independent from each other, which would explain why sea lions exhibit one but not the other. If this second explanation turned out to be true, the ‘vocal learning’ theory would be in jeopardy. In any case, we will never know for certain unless we peek into the sea lion’s brain and ultimately compare it to the brain of other vocalizers (and beat tappers!). For now we can neither prove nor disprove Patel’s theory and, thus, must wait for more evidence to come our way.
    I hope you found this information interesting! Here’s a link to Aniruddh D. Patel’s 2014 paper, titled 'The Evolutionary Biology of Musical Rhythm: Was Darwin Wrong?':
    journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371/journal.pbio.1001821

    • @johnlamb7309
      @johnlamb7309 4 роки тому +2

      Forget ALL of that noise and read up in Music Therapy journals. There's a massive amount of research on how music affects the brain and body already existing. This isn't where Patel is coming from - he's a cog scientist and even tried repeat/improve research whether people were "beat deaf" (spoiler: they don't exist)
      Rhythm isn't a thing, it isn't a noun and subdivisions don't really exist. I mean, they do on the page, but that's just how we write out the directions. Rhythm is fundamentally harmonic in nature, and subdivisions aren't divisions at all, but multiples. You wouldn't say that G is a subdivision of C. Anyway, I could type alllll day but I gotta get back to work.

    • @johnbuell8035
      @johnbuell8035 4 роки тому +2

      john lamb you left the party a bit too early. You stated what rhythm is not ( a noun), but you didn’t really define what it is. Tell me more about this concept of rhythm. And what is the ‘spoiler alert’ test which demonstrated that there are no ‘beat deaf’ people?

    • @Exploshi
      @Exploshi 4 роки тому +2

      Lots of typing here

    • @frankiejohnson2702
      @frankiejohnson2702 3 роки тому +1

      Wasnt Darwin's theory of evolution proven to be fraudulent

    • @Bob13454
      @Bob13454 2 роки тому

      @@frankiejohnson2702 Is this a joke?

  • @IferMasterofFire
    @IferMasterofFire 7 років тому +116

    And now I'm practising counting unmetronomically, just because I can.

    • @AdamNeely
      @AdamNeely  7 років тому +213

      +Ivo van der Hoeven it's not hard to count unmetronomically, just count like guitarists play.

    • @ejipuh
      @ejipuh 7 років тому +10

      Adam Neely :O Burn.

    • @nashj.3238
      @nashj.3238 7 років тому

      Jeff Berlin thinks you won't ever need a metronome in the first place, so why the hell not.

    • @sarasiliquini5533
      @sarasiliquini5533 4 роки тому

      Adam Neely Wouldn’t it be better to, as you play, count out loud WITH a metronome going?

  • @awall1831
    @awall1831 3 роки тому +2

    Holy crap! I have been playing guitar for 8 years now and singing for longer. And for almost all of that time I have struggled with rhythm. Tons of people have told me to count before, but I always over think it and try to MAKE my counting rhythmic, causing my counting to be off. But, the way you explained how we naturally count in rhythm, made a lightbulb go off. I just picked up my guitar and started counting how I would naturally, and I have never been more in rhythm in my life. THANK YOU!

  • @DimiKaye
    @DimiKaye 7 років тому +60

    "AdAaaam Neelyyyyy's Count LesoooOooons!" Another interesting video mate, sweet :)

  • @OboeJDub
    @OboeJDub 7 років тому +10

    As a wind player, I can't count out loud, but we do subdivide continuously in our minds, always. My teacher had an exercise for training our subdividing chops to make it more natural, consistent, and effortless, so that our artistic brain can go elsewhere without sacrificing rhythmic integrity.
    The exercise is to clap sixteenth notes (with a metronome on slow quarters) while speaking fluidly, out of rhythm (or in different rhythm, perhaps). Basically, holding a conversation without letting your clapping rhythm falter. As you get better at this, your ability to subdivide while playing improves.
    This is the inverse of what you are proposing - we are not taking advantage of the innate rhythm of speech. Maybe we could flip the exercise over, and subdivide out loud with the voice while doing something arrhythmic with the hands - writing, doodling, playdough, or something.

  • @Fopenplop
    @Fopenplop 7 років тому +62

    spoiler: its the same thing your music teacher tells you

    • @surveil3548
      @surveil3548 6 років тому +6

      Fopenplop He is a music teacher, after all.

  • @crimfan
    @crimfan 7 років тому +2

    I'm glad you've returned to having the intro song!
    Anyway, I very much agree that vocalization really helps. I know that working on singing has really helped my ear but it's also made my improvisation a lot stronger in terms of feel and time, too.

  • @maxbasilone3026
    @maxbasilone3026 7 років тому +4

    Now I'm not a cognitive scientist or a music teacher. I actually study language and play music and I'm doing research on aesthetics and neuroscience. It's great when findings like the ones you shared can be such eye openers for different disciplines. This was really helpful, Adam. Thanks so much. My brother and I really enjoy your videos.

  • @darkt00th2
    @darkt00th2 7 років тому +6

    EXACTLY the thing I have been looking for! Thanks Adam!!! You rule!

  • @MrChong-sc2gk
    @MrChong-sc2gk 6 років тому +6

    "violin players even more-so." I fucking love you Adam

  • @EtainMcCloud
    @EtainMcCloud 6 років тому

    I have been binging your videos. This one is my favorite. I am inspired to pick up clarinet again and to keep trying with ukulele. I played clarinet all through middle School and high school, but didn't keep it up because I didn't think I was very good. I am in my early thirties now and wanting to connect with something that would make my dad proud. He's the sort of guy who can't read music but can literally play anything on anything. I think that this is something I can do between practice and way you explain things. Thank you so much for offering your insight. It is valuble and did not come easy. It's obvious that you have put in a great deal of work and passion to get where you are. Thank you.

  • @ant123ps3
    @ant123ps3 7 років тому

    This channel has been the best discovery in a while, even for someone like me who has minimal music knowledge (basic stuff from teaching myself how to play the drums). I just love the way you presents your videos and the stuff you expose is so damm interesting. Keep it up!

  • @danieljacobsonmusic
    @danieljacobsonmusic 6 років тому +3

    Brilliant! I always teach my students to count out loud and play, this explains on a much deeper level WHY this works, thank you Adam!

  • @RodneyOSRS
    @RodneyOSRS 7 років тому +75

    I like how he just assumes his average viewer has more confidence than a cockatoo

    • @aylbdrmadison1051
      @aylbdrmadison1051 5 років тому +15

      They are rather cocky.
      For such little peckers.

    • @swine13
      @swine13 4 роки тому +2

      And another word used to describe the cockatoo that I've not seen here yet is:
      Asshole.

  • @RemyTrahant
    @RemyTrahant 3 роки тому

    That counting while playing the Journey song exercise is so helpful! Thanks, Adam!

  • @Gab25485
    @Gab25485 6 років тому

    Dude, you totally made my day, keep making videos forever, please.

  • @DavidDiMuzio
    @DavidDiMuzio 4 роки тому +33

    Wow! This is one of the best music education videos I've ever seen. Mind blown! I will definitely start implementing counting out loud into my metronome practice. Thank you 💜💜💜💜

  • @GiovaniGatto
    @GiovaniGatto 7 років тому +6

    cognitive scientist here. as of the Matthew subject, my suggestion is somewhere between lack of contextualised learning and/or lack of sensorial integration (which is surprisingly important in learning beyond stimulus pairing). I suggest you take a look. Keep up the good work!

  • @MrMapacheco
    @MrMapacheco 7 років тому

    The perfect combination between passion, information and entertaintment. One of youtube's finest channels

  • @seattlevkk
    @seattlevkk 4 роки тому +1

    I love this video because I’ve always felt my rhythm sucks and this speaks to tapping into an inner awareness we aren’t aware of but possess.

  • @matsomo
    @matsomo 7 років тому +15

    Who needs rhythm with dance moves like that

  • @MakeSomething
    @MakeSomething 7 років тому +26

    this was brilliant! Thanks!

  • @alanhuffbass
    @alanhuffbass 7 років тому +1

    Thanks, Adam, for putting out a public video explaining exactly what I try to explain to every person that tells me they have no "talent" for music. Been two years since I've been working with music education and I got to that conclusion by watching how people learn and what difficulties they have and how to solve them without saying "MUSIC COMES FROM THE SOUL" nor "REPEAT THIS EXERCISE UNTIL YOU GET IT"
    Even the ruler analogy is pretty basic to show what rythm really is.
    I think every music educator should work by standards like this, being "down to earth, objective world" oriented.

  • @Cryptocurrent1
    @Cryptocurrent1 7 років тому

    Adam, great video as always. This is my all time favorite UA-cam channel!

  • @timothyrice1621
    @timothyrice1621 7 років тому +15

    "Now I'm not a cognitive scientist, but I am a music teacher" lol let there be memes

  • @CD-rt8wj
    @CD-rt8wj 7 років тому +5

    Loved the ruler analogy. One of the best things my band teacher ever told us was that constant subdivision isn't just helpful for playing fast passages. It's also the only way that you will come in on time after a rest or change on time after a held note. Thinking about that helps me so much when I play, and I think that ruler analogy illustrates it really well. Thanks man keep it up!

  • @ashleyblack3941
    @ashleyblack3941 6 років тому

    Adam is brilliant, can't get enough, real teacher, real integrity, thank you Adam you are genuinely helping people. BASS!

  • @NicklasNylander87
    @NicklasNylander87 6 років тому

    Been dancing around this channel for awhile. This was spot on for me, gives me hope for getting better rythm, SUBSCRIBED.

  • @joekessell92
    @joekessell92 6 років тому +6

    Hi Adam, interesting idea.
    Q+A question: I've heard you mention a few times that you found rhythm especially challenging as a beginner/intermediate player and that you had to work really hard to correct it.
    As a bass player who also struggles with this I was wondering if you could elaborate on how you overcame it? Is it just down to metronome exercises and practicing? Or was it changing your mindset and approach to rhythm that made the real difference (like the concept featured in this video)?
    I'd be grateful if you could also speak on how your weakness with rhythm affected your ability to play professionally with others? In other words how accurate is a bass players rhythm generally expected to be? Is there any margin for error or are you likely to loose your gig to someone else who has it down completely?

  • @epiczeven6378
    @epiczeven6378 7 років тому +45

    *it don't mean a thing if it ain't got that swing* ;)

  • @AkshayKumar-sd1mx
    @AkshayKumar-sd1mx 4 роки тому +2

    My music teacher actually told me to count myself without using a metronome to improve timing,I didn't really pay much attention now I can't wait to try it out.Thanks Adam

  • @tonysouter8095
    @tonysouter8095 5 років тому

    Love that painting above the fireplace!

  • @isramint
    @isramint 3 роки тому +4

    Adam: count while you play
    Me: a sax player
    *Credits start rolling*

  • @alfonso5026
    @alfonso5026 6 років тому +11

    *counting backwards with adam neely*

  • @Dom_Hubsub
    @Dom_Hubsub 7 років тому +2

    This is a crazy useful exercise. Thanks for sharing it Adam!

  • @cristinahawke
    @cristinahawke 7 років тому

    I love this! I've been counting out loud to help with playing the drums, and I never noticed that it helps me play with a steady beat, but now that I think about it, it totally does. What a great tip!

  • @Chanur2394
    @Chanur2394 7 років тому +8

    Can you do a video about what you've learned from Carnatic music and/or other non-Eurocentric music? Just any cool history facts or pieces developed outside our standard thinking that might inspire? Not all of us can take a Berklee class on the subject but you must have learned a lot of interesting things.

  • @sorrysir3133
    @sorrysir3133 6 років тому +13

    Counting to 4 - With Adam Neely

  • @onceuponasynth
    @onceuponasynth 7 років тому +1

    Thanks Adam! This is a timely video as I was just looking for ways to improve my rhythm.

  • @irvinsanpedro6825
    @irvinsanpedro6825 7 років тому

    I'm so happy when adam neely releases a video.

  • @craigstephenson7676
    @craigstephenson7676 4 роки тому +4

    adam: count while playing
    wind players and singers: aww man

  • @ktezri
    @ktezri 7 років тому +16

    Hey Ad (if I may)
    Great video. The all-too-quick Shatner reference - can you say more about 23rd-century speech cadence and its impact on rhythmic competence?
    Thanks,
    Ez (if you like)

  • @dennisgarryowen8885
    @dennisgarryowen8885 6 років тому

    I think I would love to have the opportunity to spend a few days going through your book collection. I don't have any education in music, but I watch your videos and pick up valuable information that is quite helpful. Having the ability to simplify complex concepts AND provide examples outside of the focused target of thought is rare, and you are really, really good at it.
    Thanks for all the videos. As I am just starting my musical journey I think I have found someone is confident (Competence breeds confidence IMO.) enough speak of music without having to figure out ways to conceal inadequate knowledge and experience. Great job!

  • @megame9564
    @megame9564 5 років тому

    That last statement sums it up perfectly. Thank you.

  • @krisztiannagy3261
    @krisztiannagy3261 7 років тому +43

    Could you make a video in which you dance to different pieces of music? 😅😅😅

  • @13TeK11
    @13TeK11 7 років тому +16

    ye counting while you play just changes everything, once you get used to count in 4/4 try goin odd 5/4, 7/8 etc, or mixing it playing grooves with triplets in it

  • @josephfilipow
    @josephfilipow 5 років тому +1

    The concept you touch on at 5:20 is gold! This is how I approach “independence “

  • @electricwally
    @electricwally 5 років тому

    Awesome video lesson Adam. Job well done! Understanding how language relates to counting beats and subdivisions in music is the key to developing great melodic solos. Thank you.

  • @jackpepperpwb
    @jackpepperpwb 7 років тому +156

    Camels are natures camels.

    • @martyg8137
      @martyg8137 7 років тому +3

      xD

    • @johnbuell8035
      @johnbuell8035 4 роки тому

      Jack Pepper - thanks Jack.

    • @swine13
      @swine13 4 роки тому

      And they fill their humps with water - nature's fruit juice. 😊

  • @BillDeWitt
    @BillDeWitt 7 років тому +52

    I'm wondering about the ear's ability to divide notes into time periods. Notes less than 100 hertz have much fewer divisors than notes in the range of lead guitars and violins. Therefore we need bass notes to be more regular so that they harmonize in our audio memory. High notes, on the other hand, can be just about anywhere in the beat and find a vibrational match with previous note placements. I hope you get what I'm saying. It's like how our brain remembers the first note in a scale and requires the last note to match it, even though it's been seconds since you played it. If you could see my hands right now I'm completely demonstrating this in the air.

    • @johnbuell8035
      @johnbuell8035 4 роки тому +1

      Shame the hands aren’t visible - that would clear it right up

  • @Lobzikman
    @Lobzikman 7 років тому

    That will be a tremendous help at my teaching practice, thank you Adam!!

  • @PhilipBennett1993
    @PhilipBennett1993 7 років тому

    Excellent video as always. Really well communicated and delivered. Keep up the top rate work!

  • @kitcutting
    @kitcutting 6 років тому +12

    "Meditation" with Adam Neely
    "Counting Backwards" with Adam Neely
    Hahahah.

  • @feliperojas-doomride
    @feliperojas-doomride 6 років тому +8

    My band used to have a drummer who just couldn't count to four, it was so frustrating. He could never keep a 4/4, always used fills that dragged over to 5/4 and never even noticed it. The funny thing is that people who didn't knew him thought that he was such a technical player because he went through so many different rythms XD

  • @krautcomputing891
    @krautcomputing891 7 років тому +1

    Dear Adam, this is pretty amazing. I was able to iron out small mistakes in certain grooves that bugged me for quite some time that I did not know how to practice any better before. Now, if you had something like this for intonation, too, that would be rad!

  • @kl808
    @kl808 7 років тому +18

    Hi Adam, you seem to reference academic studies quite often in your videos. I was wondering if there were any academic music journals you would recommend subscribing to?

    • @kainreaverz
      @kainreaverz 7 років тому +3

      Material para un q+a

    • @robertthegreek
      @robertthegreek 7 років тому +3

      Or books you might recommend? I'm currently reading "Music, the Brain, and Ecstasy" by Robert Jourdain. I've also read "The World in Six Songs" by Daniel Levitin and "Music and The Mind" by Anthony Storr. I think these books line up pretty well with what you've talked about. Do you have any other suggestions, Adam?

  • @Scratch_Gobo
    @Scratch_Gobo 6 років тому +3

    1:59 HAD ME FOOLED OMG

  • @IOxyrinchus
    @IOxyrinchus 6 років тому +2

    I love this UA-cam channel, Adam goes into every hypothesis and theory about certain (mostly complex) areas of music and it's extremely fascinating and insightful, this channel is like the Vsauce of music, btw Adam got some sick dance moves

  • @RubenGarcia-kc3op
    @RubenGarcia-kc3op 7 років тому

    I am believer, I watched one of your videos about counting few years back, and gosh! it really got me into the correct rhythm when playing in assemble, now these days I don't need to count that much, it's much easier now !!! Thanks

  • @chicktapus463
    @chicktapus463 7 років тому +620

    How to improve your rhythm: don't be a classical musician.
    Right, Adam?

    • @chicktapus463
      @chicktapus463 7 років тому +92

      is just joke

    • @kjarrij
      @kjarrij 7 років тому +48

      Not at all true, playing Mozart requires you to be extremely rythmic, as well as Bach and others from classical/barroque period. Romatic period however, is a whole other story.

    • @chicktapus463
      @chicktapus463 7 років тому +138

      is just joke

    • @Ziggerath
      @Ziggerath 7 років тому +4

      glenn gould would say otherwise...

    • @KiwiUkulele
      @KiwiUkulele 7 років тому +13

      this method of counting as your playing is literally what every classical musician learns. :)

  • @AaronLevyDrums
    @AaronLevyDrums 7 років тому +13

    Christ I lost it when you showed the image of William Shatner LOL

  • @JohannesWiberg
    @JohannesWiberg 7 років тому

    Dayum. As always, insightful, useful, and entertaining.

  • @irfanchooify
    @irfanchooify 6 років тому

    great to hear you talk about classical guitar.

  • @vladocvijetinovic
    @vladocvijetinovic 4 роки тому +12

    Galileo: there's gotta be a better way to measure time than humming freaking songs all the time
    *invents pendulum*

  • @chicktapus463
    @chicktapus463 7 років тому +10

    Hey, Adam, I love your lessons, but I don't really play a lot of jazz and I worry that all the music theory is only really applicable if I were to play jazz or classical music, which I largely don't play.
    Does advanced music theory really have a place in other genres?
    Am I right in thinking this or am I being ignorant?
    Sorry for my bad English by the way, it's my first language

    • @The_Kevinist
      @The_Kevinist 7 років тому +4

      Music theory is just a rational attempt at mapping the fundamental components that actually make up music... Yes advanced theory has it's place in every genre(even in pop), it's just a matter of combining knowledge, experience and practice
      Most people will end up trying hard to label your music just because you incorporated technical aspects that are proper to certain other genres
      That's why there's combined genres like Jazz funk, blues rock, fusion metal, etc... Just for the sake of referencing the symbiosis between both dominant characteristics merging together

  • @joshlgrant
    @joshlgrant 7 років тому

    This was very cool and useful! I liked the theme and video-length, very applicable and not too long!

  • @bob_blob
    @bob_blob 7 років тому

    that painting on your wall on the left is pretty amazing !

  • @EvilDragon666
    @EvilDragon666 7 років тому +3

    Captain Kirk reference nearly had me choking to death... :D

  • @Viterkim
    @Viterkim 7 років тому +5

    is there a full version of the outro song?

    • @ABCD27814
      @ABCD27814 7 років тому +3

      It's called Sungazer Sequence Start (Sungazer is a band Adam has with Shawn Crowder). Search for it on UA-cam and you should find it :)

    • @BAwesomeDesign
      @BAwesomeDesign 7 років тому +1

      And the intro, for completeness sake? Love it too

  • @rtwilson145
    @rtwilson145 7 років тому

    That's so awesome! I was just thinking how much I suck at rhythm and suddenly, as if by magic, this Adam Neely video appears. Thanks Adam!

  • @jeffbarnes1102
    @jeffbarnes1102 4 роки тому +1

    Great video. Amazing how much time and effort you put into your production...

  • @slickgreen2813
    @slickgreen2813 7 років тому +9

    Christ i cant even keep up with seven nation army. I tried the counting thing but i still couldnt get it after 30 mins. Should i trade my instruments for a triangle?

    • @ananda_miaoyin
      @ananda_miaoyin 6 років тому +2

      and now everybody knows about it....from the Queen of England to the hounds of Hell.

    • @joshvadas5500
      @joshvadas5500 4 роки тому

      Playing a triangle *well* requires as much focus as other percussion instruments. To make the most poignant statement, it must be played at precisely the right time. Not to mention having to count the 53 bars of rest leading up to that moment...

  • @micahsnyder7299
    @micahsnyder7299 7 років тому +3

    Could you do an analysis on the rhythm in Meshuggha's music? Particularly in 'New Millennium Cyanide Christ' and 'Bleed'

    • @juanborjas6416
      @juanborjas6416 7 років тому

      K r e e Just a bunch of polymeters based on 4/4. Look at muyaki's videos on polymeters.

    • @alexanderpurkis3508
      @alexanderpurkis3508 7 років тому

      The way they use rythmic patterns isn't "just a bunch of polymeters based on 4/4".

  • @christiant.8834
    @christiant.8834 6 років тому

    This content is top qualiity. Thank you Adam.

  • @richardbloemenkamp8532
    @richardbloemenkamp8532 5 років тому +2

    I tapped my foot while Adam was talking and I found that Adam's talking stay very well in sync the whole time.

  • @freeradicalpanda
    @freeradicalpanda 7 років тому +9

    But isn't our rhythm feel linked to our heart rate as well? I mean most people consider a regular old 4/4 rhythm around 70-95 bpm as "normal", while 120 bpm would be considered fast, and 40 bpm slow. A normal (ie. non-pathological) heart rate would be from 50-100 bpm with the average being around 60 bpm. The normal, steady R-R interval on an ECG also makes the heartbeats tick along like a, slightly unreliable, metronome, giving an innate time feel. There must be a link right?

  • @Unknowngamer1138
    @Unknowngamer1138 7 років тому +6

    So this is anecdotal as hell and only tangentially related to the video itself, but a former coworker of mine trained his bearded dragon to bob his head in time with metal tracks. Maybe domestication in general can make animals more able to perceive rhythm.

    • @petal_cult
      @petal_cult 5 років тому

      idk about the _science™_ of it but that's pretty cool

  • @Morbidt123
    @Morbidt123 7 років тому

    How did you know I needed that video? 🙀 (preparing for the upcoming entrance exams, last year they told me I need to work on my rhythm amongst other things, and the exam is happening by the end of this month, again) thank you.

    • @Morbidt123
      @Morbidt123 7 років тому

      Hey Adam, thanks for all the great content, and sorry that at the moment I'm unable to support the channel on Patreon... I try this but I'm still rushing/dragging... (I've made an exercise metronome that clicks on 2&4, and every twelfth bar or eleventh&twelfth bars, would go silent) I find myself "landing" wrong and not on the click (after the silenced bars)
      Know peace ✌️

  • @reganxmas
    @reganxmas 6 років тому +1

    What a fantastic video!! As a teacher of music and dance, this is an issue that I deal with daily.
    So many people believe the false reality that they have no rhythm. Fact is that there is nothing in the known universe which does not duplicate some form of rhythm. Deep stuff.
    Any way, this really struck a chord for me ;-)

  • @naseonhyeong
    @naseonhyeong 7 років тому +3

    hellooooooooooooooooooooooooooo

  • @BeeBwakka
    @BeeBwakka 7 років тому +4

    the Niel Ciecierega reference lol

  • @artyomca
    @artyomca 6 років тому

    Great video! I like the way you explain the rhythm mechanics. I also liked your video on ¨how to speak in odd signatures¨. Keep on doing more videos!

  • @justinthomas4442
    @justinthomas4442 3 роки тому

    Excellent excellent video and info!! Really helped me understand the internal rhythm to the actual count and then connect the two. Thanks again man! Very helpful!

  • @jonas8588
    @jonas8588 6 років тому +3

    My native language (czech) is in my opinion more useful for counting than english. Let me prove:
    Czech language (CZ) and English language (EN) have both words for numbers for feeling quarters/fourths,
    EN - one, two, three, four
    CZ - raz, dva, tři, čtyř (čtyř and raz are shortened forms of jedna and čtyři)
    Ok... Good enough for fourths but what about eights? English doesn't have useful (or I have never heard of) words for counting it.
    CZ - (counting eights) prv-ní, dru-há, tře-tí, čtvr-tá... Czech language is generaly richer in vocabulary.
    Well, in fact it's not that different, it's just one interesting thing in my language. Greetings. :D

    • @JeithKarrett
      @JeithKarrett 5 років тому

      I'm Swedish and for the most part I prefer English but counting just feels waaay better in my native language.

    • @chikakumask4693
      @chikakumask4693 5 років тому

      Its called
      "And"

    • @chikakumask4693
      @chikakumask4693 5 років тому

      Which is superior due to consistency