Save your seat in the first-ever 30-Day Jazz starting October 28th. 🔗: www.drumeo.com/30-day-jazz
@redsed1565Ай бұрын
This is drumming ❤
@Freebird949Ай бұрын
Love it…yes progressive jazz, I love west African drumming too, like djembe/ dun dun drumming with, balafon and talking drum. The origin of drumming today, along with some eastern percussion influences and ideas combined of the times evolved up till now, it’s pretty interesting rich/ deep and sacred, drummer here btw….
@Jeffreya348Ай бұрын
Great teaser
@grantzimmerman2734Ай бұрын
That sounds great and I think I'll do something like this eventually, but I'd probably be more geeked for a 30 day class of Just theory. I'd love him to put that out, too.
@morganneher8643Ай бұрын
You can learn all of Progressive Independence and you will have merely put on your boots at the base of the Mount Everest that is playing jazz lol.
@roadglideАй бұрын
Glass half empty or half full. Perspective.
@EMCproductionsАй бұрын
Video 153 of commenting until Drumeo makes a "Best Rudimental Drummer of the Year" award category
@redsed1565Ай бұрын
Love Jazzman😊
@aaronvicente5028Ай бұрын
*YES*
@OrangeDrinkMusicАй бұрын
unnecessarily HYPE trailer! RIP to the dude who never saw his friends and family again but became the greatest jazz drummer to be heard on that one particular record. 😅
@HenkJanDrumsАй бұрын
This is great!
@pedrums1989Ай бұрын
Amazing!!!
@zimianiАй бұрын
Que vídeo bão!
@nightcrawleroriginalАй бұрын
Personally, Jazz aint my gig but thanks just the same.😊 Tribal all the way baby. 🥁 😅
@redsed1565Ай бұрын
Peter Criss was the best jazz drummer. Listen to Detroit Rock City people ❤
@inoboy3974Ай бұрын
Thanks for the video, very inspiring
@eduardojavierrodriguezespa8694Ай бұрын
I love to see Brandon Scott Ads
@Freebird949Ай бұрын
Mark mondesir is one of the best jazz drummers/ drummers to do it in my opinion…
@markysumm72Ай бұрын
Yeah I saw him play with Courtney Pine. MM is amazing.
@Freebird949Ай бұрын
very nice, time out of time experience I’m sure!
@Freebird949Ай бұрын
I saw him with John McLaughlin and the 4th dimension/ Gary Husband in St. Louis Missouri
@BrandonToewsАй бұрын
So stoked for this!🎉
@xMissForchunАй бұрын
All I had to do was wear a scarf!
@mentatificationАй бұрын
Oh... That scarf guy again
@IN-tm8mwАй бұрын
Dang, i've always wanted to do something like this but i need to finish the path i started on before this.
@ArenHillАй бұрын
Maybe the path you're on is leading you to this path? If it feels right, go for it.
@benjaminprietopАй бұрын
ya like jazz?
@matthewkeesler1871Ай бұрын
Man if I didn't have this insane dental bill I'd get the subscription. I need this in my life. Jazz is soo hard compared to my rock root. Ive been trying to self teach, but this stuff is so foreign to me
@ilikepotato977Ай бұрын
Jazz
@End_Illegal_Apartheid_israhellАй бұрын
jazzy
@Alfredolunafoto1Ай бұрын
Interesting
@noureddinramdani829Ай бұрын
Not quit my tempo
@sfckrbecАй бұрын
Lost art. In big band the drummer had three jobs, keep the groove, compliment the bass time, and kick the band in. As a horn player I loved getting a good kick in. Most drummers don't even know anymore about kicking in. If anyone ever listened to the old Johnny Carson Tonight Show Band, the intro was the same every night. Ed Saughnessey, every night dropped two bombs that brought the band in, it was simple and it was genius. I'm sure if any of the horn players are still alive and they heard the BA-BAP they would know where to come in. The feel comes with time and practice, working with the bass player comes with trust, but being able to consistently kick us horn players in is a lost art.