1000% on this. I got started on Morello's "Table of Time" somewhere in the 80s and will never stop practicing. And over the years, have been adding new things as a simulated "slow accelerando" (eighths, 5:2, triplets, 7:2, 16ths, 9:2, quintuplets, etc) or jumping from subdivisions.
@mbengnkonghotambe96973 күн бұрын
This sounds like Chinese 😂😂 to me please explain further
@peacegroove785415 күн бұрын
There are 2 things that I´ve added to the concept that are game changing. The first is to play the quarter note with your hihat foot and the second one is to SING the quarter note. Obviously the best is to combine both, so the pulse is the main focus. Also is very important to bring in musical form into the exercise, so I´ve tried using a 12 bar blues form and playing a different subdivision every 4 bars. I want my practice to make me a better MUSICIAN, not just a better drummer. Great content! Thanks!
@latentsea14 күн бұрын
More Cowbell !!!
@AngelWest583 күн бұрын
drummers are musicians too!
@peacegroove78542 күн бұрын
@@AngelWest58 Yes we are! But sometimes we get too focused on playing drums and not so much on playing MUSIC. A lot of my students are better drummers than they are musicians, meaning that they have great command of the instrument but lack a deep knowledge of the music they are playing (form, chord changes, melody, lyrics). Having great technique makes you a great drummer, connecting that technique to the music makes you a great musician. Practicing rudiments while singing or humming a blues is one way to build that connection! Being a great drummer does not automatically make you a great musician! Peace!
@AngelWest582 күн бұрын
@@peacegroove7854 word! Im a pianist. i will pass this comment on to my drummer friend. The singing angle is new to me (w drum practice) ...I'm 66.. I've been playing for over 50 years.. About 10 years ago I returned to fundamental practice (scales, Arpeggios ect) and it changed everything. I'm now a veritable beast compared to what i was for most of my career/ life... KEEP GOING kid!
@ralphthomas78686 күн бұрын
This was the first exercise my drum teacher got me doing when I was a kid,,along with double stroke rolls
@pieterw7213 күн бұрын
I do this on double kick all the time in addition to hands. Very very useful.
@svinepelz112 күн бұрын
Really great idea, been practicing this for some days now and already hearing improvements in my playing. Gonna add it to my daily exercises.
@waltmueller885010 күн бұрын
A great exercise. Like what you shared.
@nickrails15 күн бұрын
This is really great. Never done the quints or seps as I just cant get my brain around them, but I go up and down the standard subdivisions with single strokes on the hat keeping a backbeat, whilst playing different figures on the kick. Then I swap lead hands with a diddle, but keep the singles. After a bit I trade between singles and paradiddles swapping lead hands every 8 bars, ensuring that I practice swapping lead hands on the paradiddles. At faster tempos I swap the single 16th trips and 32nd notes for paradiddles and doubles respectively. Just this one exercise could fill my practice time forever - and in comparison to the depth Guiliana is mining, I'm probably putting way too much into it. What I like about it is that because of the backbeat it feels musically relevant and applicable to real world scenarios
@leodrums12 сағат бұрын
Well done! Very helpful
@eddievandongendrums5 күн бұрын
Love this video mate! Great great great stuff and I LOVE the Mark Guliana story! Got some of those as well from other drummers where you are just stunned by the 'simplicity' of the things that are most important.
@pleaseandthankyou416113 күн бұрын
Absolutely fundamental no matter at what level you are. Love it.
@jordansaltmarsh380812 күн бұрын
This is a great video! Thank you, Cole!
@StuartJrBarrett15 күн бұрын
Great lesson! The best lessons are ones that are simplistic (Not easy, but simple in idea).
@kiddynamite393111 күн бұрын
I’ve added a similar subdivision routine to my practices about a year ago, and it’s been a tremendous help. Interesting mic set up. Those mounted toms sound incredible!
@user-hg4vj9tn1l10 күн бұрын
Love Cole's videos! These exercises are also presented on pages 42 and 43 of Joe Morello's Master Studios. Joe calls them the Table of Time. There is also an updated, more difficult version of these exercises on page 71 in Master Studies II. I was a student of Joe's for ten years and cannot emphasize enough how these exercises will improve your time keeping along with expanding your drumming vocabulary. Thanks, Cole!
@thepracticepadchannel15 күн бұрын
Spot on! This is the foundation of everything.
@ronaldcaggiano421414 күн бұрын
Great concept and well explained. This may be the most useful practice concept I will ever implement on my practice routine. Thank You!!
@ColeParamore14 күн бұрын
Thanks for the kind words!
@ba3audiovisualartist6612 күн бұрын
Matt Cameron used this musically (as he's prone to) in an early Skin Yard song called "The Blind Leading The Blind". It's on their first album, a total tour de force showcasing Matt's chops and creativity not too far before Soundgarden, as well as the new Skin Yard 7" "SELECT" box set. Great drummer and great band! Great video as well, Cole! And please continue to talk as much or as little as you care to. Part of the process of learning is knowing when to STF down and STF up. The player that becomes the virtuoso instrumentalist never gets halfway up the mountain of becoming an actual musician because they are doing nothing more than regurgitating hot licks that they don't understand, ultimately just setting off fireworks for the cheap seats. They, as a music practitioner, will never understand or declare what they will and won't do. More importantly, why they pursue music in the first place. Just another shredder talking loud and saying nothing. The most catalytic drum lesson I ever took was with Billy Ward decades back. He never picked up a pair of sticks the whole time. He just discussed ergonomics and concepts and, knowing full well he just kicked my ass, told me to get back with him in a few months after I had time to wrap my head around what he had just said.
@jolyoncox9 күн бұрын
Thanks Cole!
@gastrein1116 күн бұрын
Love it, waiting for the next lesson
@TommyAndHisDrums17 күн бұрын
Very good video. Mike Mangini talks about it doing this with uneven subdivisions 3-19 in his rhythm knowledge books. They are great exercises.
@BeatKasterG9 күн бұрын
Good premise for a series of videos
@channelthepigslove10 күн бұрын
Been doing something similar since I heard Danny Carey play 'The Grudge'
@truestorey315815 күн бұрын
Yes I will take this thank you 💛
@MattHalcyon10 күн бұрын
Really good lesson.
@bigfatpaul175915 күн бұрын
This is like Joe Morello's Table of Time from Master Studies....which i should revisit.
@robertthompson556811 күн бұрын
Wow, I feel like my phone is spying on me. I just started doing this again within the last few weeks. I use University as a mnemonic for 5s and Gina Lolabrigida for 7s. My biggest issue (particularly in odd groupings) is NOT accenting the downbeat. Thanks for the video. Being able to shift through your gears is important.
@ColeParamore10 күн бұрын
Nice! Just for anyone reading your comment just want to clarify that groupings of 5s and 7s are different than the quintuplets and septuplets referenced here.
@AngelWest583 күн бұрын
1st triplets are always a bit rushed.. Great video!
@slingerland6810 күн бұрын
💡wow ! Thank you 🙏
@onesyphorus9 күн бұрын
helps w stone killer too. 8 all the way to 16s. at the start its less abt your hands n more abt melting ur brains sure but - you dont have to change the click up that much as often haha.. Good video man.
@gordgibson665415 күн бұрын
Bang On!
@jonashellborg832016 күн бұрын
Any time exercise is great. The key for me is to really pay attention to the precise distance between the notes. I use more of the Mark G routines, on the surface really basic, but a true 8th note is hard to play. I think humans have a limit around 20ms, great if someone can confirm or deny that.
@ColeParamore16 күн бұрын
Bear in mind that 8th notes are relative to the tempo. 20ms is definitely noticeable. I actually ran an experiment on this channel and found that things started really sounding off at 10ms for me personally.
@MrDarkstar62013 күн бұрын
Very cool. I just started looking at subdivisions a lot more. 32nds are cool. I'm more interested in quintuplets and septuplets. Btw, Mark Guiliana's drum book with the DROP concept (Dynamics, Rate, Orchestration, Phrasing) is worth exploring. A drummer of any style can come out of that much stronger. Last thing: I really liked what you did with the sextuplets. I felt like I saw RLL a few times, and when the kick came in it made it sound groovier.
@ColeParamore13 күн бұрын
Yep, the DROP method was primarily what we focused on.
@boulas11 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@BadMilkhotel12 күн бұрын
Good idea using paramore in your name . that's a 101 on how to hit the algos on youtube
@ColeParamore11 күн бұрын
Thank my parents
@salthedrummer112 күн бұрын
love it thanks
@skinfiddler14 күн бұрын
Do also, the 5's, 7's, 9's, 10's etc.
@ColeParamore14 күн бұрын
Yep! Those are addressed here.
@kylefranklin540912 күн бұрын
SUBDIVISIONS...in the high school halls, in the shopping malls, conform or be cast out!
@ColeParamore12 күн бұрын
I got more than a few looks working on these in the high school halls lol.
@AndreasHalvardsson16 күн бұрын
Nice!
@lobbyrobby8 күн бұрын
I haven't really tried 1/8 notes triplets much. When I did I found it really difficult to play over a 1/8 or 1/4 note click.
@luiszuluaga657516 күн бұрын
This is massive. MASSIVE! 😀👉🏼🥁🤷🏻♂️
@beckbeat5 күн бұрын
Great explanation! I graduated from a music conservatory over twenty years ago, and one of my teachers introduced me to a similar exercise. I still practice it to rhis day. He called it The Mother. 😂 Seems to be very similar to what you’re breaking down here. Great work, great channel! #subscribed kzbin.info/www/bejne/aqO3Y4p7o9GphpIfeature=shared
@nokia-gm8gv13 күн бұрын
nice
@elliottcovert37968 күн бұрын
Drumming at its core is nothing but subdividing. Everything else you’ll ever learn is simply an application of subdividing.
@OCDrummer7414 күн бұрын
@coleparamore Thank you for sharing this, as its something I introduce all my students to when they are ready. It is so vital, and your video explains it well and gives extra vote of confidence that I’m teaching something valuable my drum students. You’re doing great on your videos, well done and helpful!
@gerardotenopala397013 күн бұрын
Nice snare sound. How did you tune it without the help of mufflers? How did you get it?
@ColeParamore12 күн бұрын
Thanks! It's always a little different, but I do have a video on this channel on how I set up snares that should help. It also doesn't hurt that this is one of my newest snares, a Brady that sound absolutely killer.
@AngelWest583 күн бұрын
just like major scales
@thepluggy117 күн бұрын
I will do eet
@williehamilton153316 күн бұрын
Who won the dial tune snare?🥁
@ColeParamore16 күн бұрын
Daynethedrummer!
@manosliapakes708615 күн бұрын
😮🎉❤
@jimfarey11 күн бұрын
Step 1-10, take lessons with/listen to Mark Guiliana. Got it. Step 11, realise this knowledge is almost 100 years old and it's all we're ever doing anyway. Step 100: realise you don't have to play on grids, but they're useful tools.