It’s meant to make your ears turn ☺️ they were trying to imitate the sounds of nature when creating the djembe! Really is such a beautiful and captivating sound 🤗 sorry for the year later reply lol.
I like it. Sent it to my bandmates. Hopefully we can cover it and perhaps layer in other percussion or patterns with it as we often do. Great sound on the drum.
Danny Gooyer Yes. This is the rythmic cell o-ss-Bso. o is open. s is slap. B is base. - is void. Note that there is no note on the second beat. So when you practice with your metronome you must clearly hear the metronome tic on that beat. Have fun.
Vaughn Gray: the first tone is on beat 1 (right hand) -> tone mute slap slap The second tone is played right *before* beat 1 (left hand) -> mute bass slap tone
Thanks for sharing. It was fun learning. Note: The best teachers give students complete knowledge of the African djembe drum patterns' origin. If you don't know ask a master djembe drummer (clue: they are usually drumming for African Dance Classes in major cities). I am sure you can find the information. 😁✌🏾
Cool pattern kalani. 👏
Love the way you show the pattern and variation.
I've been making notes while watching many of your videos again and again. Great lessons, master Kalani!
Nevermind the beat, that djembe really pops! I love that sound.
It’s meant to make your ears turn ☺️ they were trying to imitate the sounds of nature when creating the djembe! Really is such a beautiful and captivating sound 🤗 sorry for the year later reply lol.
I sooooo appreciate your breakdown of the rhythm! You are TRULY a Master Drummer.
Love this rhythm 🪘 alot..keep them coming
The overhead cam is much better !! thanks master!
I like it. Sent it to my bandmates. Hopefully we can cover it and perhaps layer in other percussion or patterns with it as we often do. Great sound on the drum.
Love it alot, practicing and got it...🎉
I’m Learning how to play my drum from your channel on UA-cam I’m learning a lot thank you
I love your channel an i`ve learned so much here. Thank you very much Kalani. Greetings from Germany!
Love the overhead Cam Kalani...awesome!!!
Good to know.
Nailed it! Now I need to rehearse rehearse rehearse..
Great lesson thanks
I love your. videos
Amazing
Amazing like always!
I love this! You deliver big!
My brain cant follow the pattern to write it down it comes up on the screen in some videos helps me alot like notes I suck at picking stuff up
Sick microtiming! Nice and in the cracks :)
love this pattern... I try to learn one a week... shigga digga!
Love it
Great. Maybe I missed it. What's it called?
We need you in montreal, and i will improve my english
Tried blending in with him in the last part😂😂
u r awesome
Vraiment intéressant. Je peux jouer quelques rythmes, pas les rapides, j'aime le djembe. Merci.
Hey kalani do you know we're I can buy a djembe that size everywhere I look they only sell small versions of it.
Where are you located? In the US, I would start with Wula Drums or Drum Skull Drums. Also Motherland Music and African Rhythm Traders.
Presenting the rhythm in written form would be helpful
LBaker1061 o-ss-Bso
Yes Sunu
Very nice video sir I have a question how such time it will take to become a average djembe player.
practice, practice, practice
One or two lifetime
YEAAA!!! GET IT
Love the pattern. Try to go slower so we can follow closely. Thank you.
I am confused sometimes, can the last open tone also be the first of this rythm.. To glue it together so to say?
Danny Gooyer Yes. This is the rythmic cell o-ss-Bso. o is open. s is slap. B is base. - is void. Note that there is no note on the second beat. So when you practice with your metronome you must clearly hear the metronome tic on that beat. Have fun.
@@OL9245 At 3:20 Kalani Says he plays 2 open tones, not 1.
Vaughn Gray: the first tone is on beat 1 (right hand) -> tone mute slap slap
The second tone is played right *before* beat 1 (left hand) -> mute bass slap tone
I need to get my djembé tuned first..🤔😭
I am baffled too
I'm totally baffled
Sunu!
Thanks for sharing. It was fun learning. Note: The best teachers give students complete knowledge of the African djembe drum patterns' origin. If you don't know ask a master djembe drummer (clue: they are usually drumming for African Dance Classes in major cities). I am sure you can find the information. 😁✌🏾
Djembe Sounds Like Doumbek
God damn!
come to india and teach me
It is, and has always been the responsibility of the student to go to the teacher.
But as the world is near upside down.... Who knows anymore.
.....
You go too fast. Go slower or give us a written pattern t-t-t-d, etc.
Keep baffling
Криво или мне кажется?