It's a decent way to establish moderate independence with limbs, but buying a small practice pad, decent sticks and using a metronome is the ideal way to go. Speakin as someone who started drumming because of rock band lol
Its easiestly the best way to learn. Its consistent training for the basics of following a groove, drumrolls and timing. But the best part is the vast variety of different techniques youll be forced to use in order to nail sections. Youll need to use problem solving to clear certain sections and then learn the proper way to play a series of notes. You get an immediate sense of progression with it charting your notes hit and missed. You can go into traning mode and slow things down to figure out hard sections and build up speed. Plus its just insanely fun to play. That being said in order to get as much out of it youll need the dlc songs. Thats when the variety of techniques open up drastically.
@@kreatyboyWould you have done all of that had you not played rock band though? Paradiddling is great when you have the passion to do it. Not so much when you're learning singles and doubles.
would you say this is a good tool to learn, or at least a way to get started in the drumming world? keeping a tempo.. playing fills, etc
It's a decent way to establish moderate independence with limbs, but buying a small practice pad, decent sticks and using a metronome is the ideal way to go.
Speakin as someone who started drumming because of rock band lol
Its easiestly the best way to learn. Its consistent training for the basics of following a groove, drumrolls and timing. But the best part is the vast variety of different techniques youll be forced to use in order to nail sections. Youll need to use problem solving to clear certain sections and then learn the proper way to play a series of notes. You get an immediate sense of progression with it charting your notes hit and missed. You can go into traning mode and slow things down to figure out hard sections and build up speed. Plus its just insanely fun to play. That being said in order to get as much out of it youll need the dlc songs. Thats when the variety of techniques open up drastically.
I would say no. Just get a nice Donner Electronic Drumkit. They work great and are compact and are very good for the money.
Tempo and limb movement. If you can't get passed medium/hard on Rock Band, don't buy a drum kit just yet.
@@kreatyboyWould you have done all of that had you not played rock band though? Paradiddling is great when you have the passion to do it. Not so much when you're learning singles and doubles.