Inspired me to go learn this for myself. Go Steve!
@tejasnair3399Күн бұрын
Phewww
@andrewanayaКүн бұрын
Old Steve vs New Steve
@xxaindxx245Күн бұрын
now i know how breakcore is made
@TheBlindReaperКүн бұрын
Whoa 🤯
@MrBucketofbloodКүн бұрын
Hell yeah, dude.
@chickentaco3363Күн бұрын
W cover subscribed
@artonion420Күн бұрын
👁️👄👁️
@nordbachtelspacherbadenzer4586Күн бұрын
Playing so clean I could use it as a Plate
@badsenseiwuuКүн бұрын
i love this channel
@Joethedrummer2 күн бұрын
Oh p**, I was going to have a go at the other thing but you deleted it. I won't be able to nail this in a month of Sunbdays 😂
@freudianslip25342 күн бұрын
Wow this is a strong motivator to set 20 years aside and learn to drum like this. I can't even imagine nice work man.
@daviddicara9912 күн бұрын
I really dig your analytical breakdown. Its things we sometimes do without thinking but so much enjoyment comes from isolating the ideas and you are fantastic at explaining the concept...Thank you!
@tadhg33 күн бұрын
Bro your knee is over your ankle a touch. Try sitting a foot or so back and you'll have better range of motion. Your technique and control is already gorgeous. Just an observation !!
@tadhg33 күн бұрын
This is lovely. Would be great to have a touch of sheet music
@wc60463 күн бұрын
Great stuff, Steve.
@arsonne4 күн бұрын
This is amazing control of tempo and dynamics right here.
@paradidd4 күн бұрын
Good stuff, thanks for sharing. Thing similar to what I'm working on, a work in progress. Nice playing btw, real clean, strong.
@tejasnair33997 күн бұрын
Oh hell yes to this content
@firstdecade158 күн бұрын
Dope
@sahandrum8 күн бұрын
🙌✨️
@_tonygaeta8 күн бұрын
Nailed it 🥁
@beatrice759910 күн бұрын
Thank you Steve, that is all very interesting and useful. Not sure I understood the paradiddle 3/5/7 accent. Any chance you could add some notation for it or a link to somewhere that expalins in further depth ? Looks like a valuable exercise . . .
@Xx_Artix_xX12 күн бұрын
Amazing bro! By the way, why your mix clipping sometimes?
@jonwardle882212 күн бұрын
UH!
@kerrylawless816313 күн бұрын
Industrial jazz. Cool.
@kerrylawless816313 күн бұрын
Fascinating stuff, loads of valuable contect clearly explained. Looking forward to trying the exercise under a desk, i really get how that could be useful. Thanks for this. Subscribed.
@Jordy-is-niet-mijn-echte-naam14 күн бұрын
3:05 brooooooooo, and keeping that hat for reference is crazy
@josephbacus928115 күн бұрын
I'm Gonna Take My Horse To The Old Town Road 🗣️🔥🔥
@Jisoe2215 күн бұрын
and more in that vein please! awsm
@Jisoe2215 күн бұрын
nice! check out biosphere (ambient n stuff) maybe some covers froms substrata... would be so nice, since you seem to know what ambient (forgotten genre of music) is about. love your stuff.
@Jisoe2215 күн бұрын
i like ur shit. keep goin
@trevjdrums17 күн бұрын
ooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
@Spencergundersenmusic17 күн бұрын
Right at the very end was really really good.
@matthewdeakin993920 күн бұрын
Blimey!
@patrickhagensen357620 күн бұрын
Wow man, I'm impressed. Thank you.
@DditsMas21 күн бұрын
Yes
@AndreasHalvardsson21 күн бұрын
WOW - this is a really good lesson, lots of stuff - thanks man!
@DRUMTRAPp22 күн бұрын
Nice pad , im marching over hear now cheers 🛢️ 🥁
@skiphoffenflaven800421 күн бұрын
*here
@Coastfog22 күн бұрын
Nice exercise! This particularly is an area I have looots of room for improvement in. Your channel is already going up to my favorite drum resources.
@Coastfog22 күн бұрын
Man, coming back to this video a few days later, I gotta say the Stone Method (5:57) is something! Never heard of it, but trying it has instantly switched some neurons in my brain. It's like I suddenly can *actually* differentiate between the different muscle groups around the wrist. I thought I could do that somewhat well before, but it's a difference like night & day, turned the consistency of my doubles up a few notches. Like within a day. Crazy. I think every single drummer should implement this, this should be basic knowledge for beginners. So yeah, thank you quite much for introducing me to this concept!
@nbarabolia22 күн бұрын
i like it🔥👍🏻 Thx
@sammyt55522 күн бұрын
Steve thank you for this. Some serious serious gems in here, nothing charges up my drum journey more than insights like these. Been working on my off hand grip and the “hit your arm” tip alone is a eureka moment. Thank you sir
@itsadrumthing192223 күн бұрын
Very cool concepts. Love the idea of upstrokes starting at different points. Btw, hate to be that guy, he said "ratamacue" but meant "flamacue". Just to quell any confusion. If I had a dollar for every time I thought something and said something else...happens to the best of us. Great video.
@stevelymandrums23 күн бұрын
@@itsadrumthing1922 nice correction. You are correct.
@cyberceil23 күн бұрын
You made sound even more difficult. You just want sell your lessons. You just scared the hell out of young drummers. Not buying your lessons. Drummer or sales man.
@stevelymandrums23 күн бұрын
@@cyberceil i’m proud of my courses. And I’m proud of what I presented here. You don’t have to watch it nor do you have to purchase the videos.
@richspicer781823 күн бұрын
Good stuff!
@koffee333623 күн бұрын
I see the Radiohead and Thom influences. Good share!
@11111phil1111124 күн бұрын
I'm sure it's been asked before but what was the situation? How did this come about and is there a longer version? Secondly, although everyone is focusing on Jimmy....you're such a talented drummer. I enjoyed studying your fills just as much as Jimmy's. This is great.
@stevelymandrums24 күн бұрын
@@11111phil11111 check out jimmy’s interview on Beato
@stevelymandrums24 күн бұрын
@@11111phil11111 and thanks
@nelsneesman871224 күн бұрын
I quit when layed on the floor
@stevelymandrums22 күн бұрын
@@nelsneesman8712 it’s straight up tympani technique…