Every drummer needs to hear this

  Рет қаралды 253,472

Louie Palmer

Louie Palmer

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 359
@Sliyder
@Sliyder 9 ай бұрын
I never leave comments but I needed to say that out of the hundreds of videos I've watched this has been the most helpful in building my confidence and understanding of how to work around the drum kit. I always get stuck when I just want to freestyle but I sat down at my kit after this video and just used the snare and hi hat to try this out. Literally overnight i've found the confidence to play around the entire kit using toms and all, still at a slow 80bpm but I can't believe how much this has changed my drumming. Not only that but it helped me pick up the intricacies of HOW I was playing, noticing how loud or quietly my sticking was. Absolute life changer, thank you!
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 8 ай бұрын
Thanks!! So glad you found it helpful!
@ipguyman108
@ipguyman108 6 ай бұрын
@@louiepalmerdrums Answer: Bill Ward……………….
@_Alex_F
@_Alex_F 10 ай бұрын
It's no coincidence that so many people ask you to talk about flow. Even compared with giants like Vinnie and Gadd you're (in my opinion) among the best when it comes to flow, clarity, vocabulary and phrasing orchestration. Also, you're one of the best at putting your approach into words, which is no small feat by itself. You really have a quality for decoding and breaking down your drumming in a way that is understandable by newbies and veterans alike. Your students are very lucky! 🙌💥
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 10 ай бұрын
Thanks!! Appreciate it!
@dominikdudek16
@dominikdudek16 10 ай бұрын
I totally agree. I'm amazed by your drumming and especially by your sound. What kit and snare are you playing? Cheers from Poland
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 10 ай бұрын
@@dominikdudek16 thanks! Drums are Pearl Masters Maple Gum with Evans G2’s. Cymbals all Meinl Byzance. Snare is WTS Steve Pruitt signature model.
@badhabits25
@badhabits25 10 ай бұрын
Okay, I'll do it. How do I sign up?
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 10 ай бұрын
@@badhabits25 just go to playbetterdrums.com!
@keyboardkenny5986
@keyboardkenny5986 9 ай бұрын
instant subscription. took drum lessons for over 13 years. this took me back to my glory days of sitting on the kit and just letting my brain get into that flow state. definitely makes me wanna hop back on the kit. thanks a lot louie
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 9 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@Bemenhorst
@Bemenhorst Ай бұрын
Do it! I went back to practicing after not really playing for a few years and it was like meeting a lost friend.
@WilleH1
@WilleH1 Ай бұрын
@@Bemenhorst I found this video perfectly when I just found myself in a rut I couldnt get out of. Just felt like I wasnt progressing for many months. Instantly got improvements!
@simalakasatsimaganda
@simalakasatsimaganda 2 ай бұрын
Yes!!! Very good observations here. When I had drum students in the past, we *always* began soloing from the first lesson. It teaches you immediatlely about active expression. You don't have to wonder what in the heck you're learning and why if this is explained up-front.
@klayvonisme
@klayvonisme 10 ай бұрын
Just found your channel. Very nice! I appreciate your “simple done well” approach. Much, or even all, of what you said here really resonates with me. I played for a church worship group for 23 years, yet I don’t know much of anything. I’ve always simply played from the heart and somehow, I’m overwhelmed but how many people are truly blessed by what they hear. There was a gentleman in our congregation who played first chair trombone in the Chicago Symphony Orchestra for something like, 45 years. He was in his mid 90s. He approached me one day, put his hands firmly on my shoulders, and said, “kid, you got it!” I’ll always remember that as my greatest affirmation!! We became friends and he shared so many great stories, and was a great encouragement to me! Anyway, your teaching also affirms my ability/gift, and mentality that I put into the music that I love to play along with. I think of dynamics, tools in the tool box, complimenting the music, keeping the instrument flavorful, colorful. Playing to the room, accenting rhythms, and leaving room for melodies. Filling holes, and leaving empty spaces. I love that , even though I don’t know what I’m doing, people are seriously enjoying it and expressing a feeling of joy through the way I play. It’s truly a gift that God has given me, as I’ve never had a lesson in my life. Truly a gift! Thank you for your instructions, and thank you for letting me share!! Bless you friend!!
@angtxsun4460
@angtxsun4460 2 ай бұрын
Playing a huge variety of music from disco to r&b and jazz to anthems and hymns, they stretch us. Each type helps with flow, one genre informs another and allows the vibe to carry you through. I can’t help but improvise songs I’ve played for decades, and make them my own in many ways. That is why playing the drums is so fun, the expression beyond the mechanics of sheet music and rudiments.
@boomerguy9935
@boomerguy9935 9 ай бұрын
The very first time I played in public as a kid in the 60's in a garage band, I was amazed at the POWER that I had when I watched the dancers. I don't mean "power" in the normal sense, but in the responsibility I had in providing the heartbeat for the dances. If the drummer stops, the dancing stops. This was exciting and scary at the same time. From that, I realized how important keeping time was. I didn't take this lightly and I started taking my drumming seriously because there was responsibility attached. I started taking lessons in professional jazz drumming and I haven't stopped learning since. No, the drummer doesn't have to worry about harmony, notes, chords, keys or anything the other musicians have to worry about. But, if the drummer fails, he/she pulls everyone else down and causes them to fail. "With great power, comes great responsibility."
@WeAreColorOfWater
@WeAreColorOfWater 10 ай бұрын
Great video! Great teacher! When he used the word improvising, he addressed a concept that few players of any instrument seem to grasp effectively. Even though I’ve been playing for decades, I know I’m not the world’s greatest membranophonist. As a child, I recoiled at the notion of learning every rudiment, or merely being a time keeper. I did solo quite a bit back in the day, and received accolades, but became bored playing other people’s music. Clocks, clicks, metronomes, and drum machines all have their places. And most music would flounder without them. As far as style goes, what so many people with drum sets do is to try and mimic players whom they emulate, with no idea that each of us has a unique voice in the musical conversation if we can let go of any fear, and trust instinct and the creative process, and put in the work to express themselves. Few there are who can just sit down and pull off magnificently phrased fills, and perfectly timed dynamics without dedicated hard work. Mastery requires sacrifice and patience. Most of the great and famous jazz musicians I’ve had a chance to thank for their contribution to my life before and after shows, have all answered two questions similarly. 1.) what makes good music? Answer: Music that leaves space for silence and room to breathe. That is to say NOT a cacophonous wall of noise with limited frequency range or dynamic subtlety. 2.) What makes a truly great musician? Answer: Great musicians are even better LISTENERS. Being able to hear the other players individually, and how the sound in the room reaches out and touches you, then adding tasteful accompaniment is key to successful improvisational interaction musically. Adding only what the piece requires to move forward effectively is key. The “less is more” concept seems to apply well in this approach. Making music is as close to godliness as I’ve yet to experience, and I encourage anyone to find their own tone and approach to really find the sweet spot that is waiting for those who dare to be different. Play from the heart not the head, and you’ll be amazed what you can do.
@Frank1979Zappa
@Frank1979Zappa 10 ай бұрын
Who are you and what do/did you do? Those were very touching words, even wise, I dare say. They come from a lot of experience, I guess.
@WeAreColorOfWater
@WeAreColorOfWater 10 ай бұрын
Music with no preconceived restrictions or parameters. Inspired on the spot, in real time. None of us knows what will be played, or how it will sound before we begin. Being “in the moment and present” is as good a descriptor of the technique as any.
@mchaggis622
@mchaggis622 9 ай бұрын
So.. where’s YOUR channel? 😉
@danielbe6698
@danielbe6698 Ай бұрын
You have a fantastic way of articulaing a lot of great concepts verbally, and translate that to the kit so smoothly. I look forward to more of your great lessons!
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums Ай бұрын
Thanks! Check out playbetterdrums.com for hundreds of lessons!
@joelcarrier2088
@joelcarrier2088 10 ай бұрын
I love this lesson and reminder. I’ve been a professional gigging drummer for 30 years and I currently struggle with this. It’s definitely a mindset that needs to shift. I never thought grooves and fills were two of the same. Thank you. Love your channel.
@jilliantan3590
@jilliantan3590 9 ай бұрын
this was just mindblowing. thank you for simplifying the cheem cheem things into something so understandable & simple! the best playing isn't one that is complicated, but one that builds on the basics. namely: - singles on snare - moving singles across toms - adding doubles to singles, & then across toms - being flexible in the way we play (be it sticking, directions across parts of the drums, or timing) with rhythm + dynamics at the back of our minds while we learn how to express ourselves more comfortably through the drums great video!
@theparkerstory9637
@theparkerstory9637 3 ай бұрын
This is incredible. Thanks so much, I learned so many new vocabulary terms to help express what I’m looking to hear in the songs I write. Your flow is so good. I’m gonna try that flipped stick in the left too when I’m doing fills and stuff. Awesome stuff! ❤
@ronsissons8994
@ronsissons8994 10 ай бұрын
This has been on my mind the last week. Joined a new band and went to see them with their current drummer. He did a small solo and I freaked as I may be asked to do it. I can play in the pocket and do basic fills, but am petrified of having to do a solo. Thanks for this.
@timhusted6698
@timhusted6698 10 ай бұрын
Takes practice dude. Whatever the song is, listen to the accents then start putting the solo together in bars of 2 or 4 depending on length. I usually keep the rhythm for a bar, adding in other accents, then go to Tom's in a different pattern for 2 bars, getting quieter, then snare crescendo, adding cymbal crash accents for 2 bars, stop on one and count the band back in. Took me about a month to get comfortable. Once you get the structure down, you won't have to think about it and can add your own flavor to be each solo.
@LeadingEdgeFitness1
@LeadingEdgeFitness1 9 ай бұрын
@@timhusted6698 Mate I've asked two online drum instructors the same question and got the same answer. Do you get pissed off when you put a drum lesson on line and someone comes up in the comments section with "here's what I do.....I start on the crash, then slowly build on the snare blah blah blah" It pisses em off when they have a channel explaining their teachings and the keywboard warriors hijack the comments with a "better way." Get your own channel they say. Now before you hook into me - put yourself in their shoes - if its your channel with a lesson you're proud of and the comments are all the experts undermining YOU, how would you feel??
@humblehombre9904
@humblehombre9904 9 ай бұрын
@@LeadingEdgeFitness1I think this guy was just helping out a dude who had some hesitations. I don’t think your speech was necessary. Actually pretty rude, man.
@LeadingEdgeFitness1
@LeadingEdgeFitness1 9 ай бұрын
@@humblehombre9904 Well he should get his own channel to dish out advice, not someone else's. Read what I said, drum instructor's I have asked said it pisses em off.
@DC-94
@DC-94 5 ай бұрын
@@LeadingEdgeFitness1 I think those drum teachers need to quit if they can’t handle other people helping someone else out regarding solos or just anything drum related. It’s cool to share ideas and opinions about anything drum related. It’s 100% a them problem.
@garyleegomez8670
@garyleegomez8670 21 күн бұрын
Thank you Louie. You opened up new avenues and concepts to explore. I now have a new objective to achieve. Thanks again. well done sir, well done!
@Michael-xw4er
@Michael-xw4er 3 ай бұрын
Another very imformative and useful video. Love your passion for the drums and your willingness to share yours skills with other drummers. Keep them coming Louis!
@SoundAloneband
@SoundAloneband 9 ай бұрын
Heh. When you play that smooth I see why the question comes up a lot. Dude is smooth as hell.
@gmc1966
@gmc1966 9 ай бұрын
Drummers who specialize in solos are a rare breed actually. Its a niche' that not every drummer has (speaking from my own experiences as well) just because u can nail down a deep pocket groove ,doesn't necessarily mean u can laterally move into a solo section and keep the same feel going. Its definitely a different animal. I suck at solos and really appreciate the info in this video lesson
@flynnlizzy5469
@flynnlizzy5469 2 ай бұрын
These have to be the BEST SOUNDING drums I've ever heard, wow !
@nilsb717
@nilsb717 9 ай бұрын
My teacher tought me to start to go around the drums and start with quarters, so long until it gets boring, because then the creativity starts. Do some stuff, then add 8ths, do the same, create something new, and after this you can add 16ths... Another thing were a 16 th rudiment. Play 16th notes, Beginn with only emphasizing 1234, then only all e´s, then only all "and", the all d´s. After the last D, you will start again at 1. I think it´s a good practice to get an overview about emphasizing, control, and the counting in general.
@mogglie
@mogglie 10 ай бұрын
I tend to gravitated to the smaller drum channels. They are not so perfect and professional. It’s more raw drumming and I enjoy that.
@russtarley9648
@russtarley9648 10 ай бұрын
Beautiful Louie!!! ... I've made a bunch of my students watch this, hits the spot, and reiterates all that is important ... plus watching you play is an inspiration to all up-and-coming drummers!!
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 10 ай бұрын
Thanks Russ!
@zman5970
@zman5970 10 ай бұрын
I love the way you kind of snap your left wrist..i play drums some but im a bass player but i am definitely going to try this approach because i get bored w/ bass after 50 years!! Thanks for sharing!😊
@ernestmorellsr7929
@ernestmorellsr7929 10 ай бұрын
Man, I agree with you 100 % I am 75 years old, I started playing in 1963, and I never learned to read notes, but I never really played for anyone famous. The flow is one thing I know very little about. When I see veteran drummers these days, man I feel so misplaced and sad about not learning to read notes. I really hope I can get someone to help me get back in shape and teach me how to flow and play fills with confidence. I don't even know how I sound or what's my sound .
@adambradley3284
@adambradley3284 8 ай бұрын
That's awesome. After a lifetime of playing gigs then retiring for family and a "real job" etc, a few of us around the 60 year old mark have started jammin' again and its so good. There is no such thing as being too old to play, but there is such a thing as being too dead. Love your work Ernest. If you happen to be in Melbourne Australia, were lookin' for a drummer.
@ernestmorellsr7929
@ernestmorellsr7929 8 ай бұрын
@adambradley3284 : Big thanks, Bradley, but man, I am not leaving Brooklyn anytime soon, I agree with you that you never get too old to play , and also to know what my capability.
@christinefilas9392
@christinefilas9392 3 ай бұрын
Who cares?! You're still playing drums that's all that matters
@kkerrjr
@kkerrjr 10 ай бұрын
I quit drumming when he started playing at 16:26 Hmph!!! Kidding, awesome fills. They rocked and I learned a lot.
@wilkinsnl
@wilkinsnl 9 ай бұрын
The maple/gum Pearl shells are just beautiful sounding. Cool lesson, I’ll check out more of your stuff.
@23ograin53
@23ograin53 8 ай бұрын
Very good point made regarding playing notes deliberately, this exercise is fantastic for that purpose.
@GaryWilliams-c1h
@GaryWilliams-c1h 5 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for sharing your expertise in the kit it's all about creativity and excite the people with your playing.
@MisanthropicAngler
@MisanthropicAngler 10 ай бұрын
The 3’s, 5’s, 7’s lesson, combined with RLLK is where it’s at. Your videos and these two concepts is what opened it all up for me. That and dynamics. Best online lessons available, fellow drummers. Seriously.
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 10 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@johnwaller5386
@johnwaller5386 9 ай бұрын
great helpful info. a lot of ECM release drummers have that vocabulary. jack dejohnette is one of my favorites. this will definitely help me. i am currently with a keyboard, guitarist and vocalist-rapper spontaneous singer. we do - spontaneous worship- . best description. we never know what we are going to do. ever. set up, pray and go. sometimes for 2 hours straight. we float time, there are grooves, and i pull earlier drum "beats" i have heard. plus, early lessons have us in bossa nova, samba even messed with a tango direction. and then stuff just comes to me, and that is where we go. i do understand the the drummer is the leader in the group, learned that early on. it has helped my playing, freedom to say something. i 110% agree with the freeze on solos or when attention is turned to the drums. btw, i am 67 now and have played in many types of styles, high school and college concert bands and jazz bands, pick up bands, but mostly with friends i see eye to eye on and we have deep friendships. i recently bought a double BD pedal and a remote hi hat and am learning to play "backwards" that best is the friendships to play with great players who are serious and stellar personas.. very great info. really enjoyed it and learned quite a bit. i really love your freedom on playing. it is where i want to end up.
@Hunter_Drummer
@Hunter_Drummer 9 ай бұрын
I studied psychology and was particularly interested in sport and performance psychology. ‘Flow’ is such a salient concept. I love dropping into flow. Music is one beautiful vehicle for getting into the “flow” of life/the universe.
@dmmurray9422
@dmmurray9422 9 ай бұрын
A great perspective on playing outside the "playing time vs. playing fills" thinking. So many of us were locked into that realm until we realized it really is all the same. The influence of Gadd, Weckyl, Caliauta, Chambers, and the like is evident all over this video. It really does create a flow and continuity so often missing. Thanks, I will be back
@pytnf
@pytnf 7 ай бұрын
thank you. that was just what i needed to know at this point in my drum development. i have been struggling with this for a while now and probably wasting time learning the wrong things. having never really spent a lot of time exploring just singles on the snare drum, when i tried it for the first time it was a massive reality check. awesome information thank you again
@littlegoatstudionavarre3845
@littlegoatstudionavarre3845 2 ай бұрын
Its really good in all aspects. His drumming craft is likely very very good. His being comfortable in his explanations of your 'feel' and being able to use the drum/cymbal voices confidently on your kit is a real take away. People of all crafts need understand that mindset... benchmark that. I'm gonna stop in now and then or betterment of my craft and also motivation.... I'm only 68.5 and still have much more to learn...🎶🎶🎶
@downtown4028
@downtown4028 7 ай бұрын
If you are a drummer... you first have to be a good listener. My favorite drummers; save the late great Peart, all have small kits. To me, the best talents in drumming can always take a 4 piece kit and nail it. Improvisation comes naturally from practice of combination in drumming. All the best and blessings...
@selassiedimera1087
@selassiedimera1087 8 ай бұрын
Awesome… the facilitating and examples are on point.
@manofculture8666
@manofculture8666 10 ай бұрын
Awesome stuff man 🔥💯 One thing I'd also add that really helped me out a lot with vocabulary was (weirdly enough) playing the drums without music. When there's no music, it give me a chance to really hear what I'm doing, note for note, with every accent and ghost note. Really helped me be more intentional on the kit when playing with a band, because I knew what everything was going to sound like before I even played it.
@Humhab
@Humhab 10 ай бұрын
Fantastic video! I'm going to practice this right now. I started out as an American drum corps and I can play a lot of rudiments and I do use them around the kit but nothing sounds cleaner than singles with varying accents. Thanks for the video!
@danstephensen9032
@danstephensen9032 9 ай бұрын
I’m feeling those intricately nuanced Snare wires doing their provocative magic in the underlying texture. Understated, yet significantly vital in the context. Twitchy satisfaction, mature and Vibey!! Must duplicate this confidence in creating an infectious groove.
@nickrails
@nickrails 8 ай бұрын
As someone who has been playing for decades, but isnt particularly good, this is brilliant. The concept of musical mileage by going deep and excelling with some basic stickings and musical fundamentals is (for me, as a very player) kind of revolutionary. Initially I had a bit of an egoic reaction to some of the things you were saying, but within a few seconds I was thinking 'yep, I dont really do that and haven't worked on that anywhere near enough' Subscribed!
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 8 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it!
3 ай бұрын
I'm Dave Weckl and I approve this flow.
@spunkito3
@spunkito3 7 ай бұрын
Musicians talk to each other! They give each other energy and creativity.
@DEVUNK88
@DEVUNK88 6 ай бұрын
When i first played drums 15 years ago i was a pocket drummer, keep the groove, throw in some fills, bring the dynamics up and down, kept it simple. All i could play was rock and blues. Everything else was hard, i havent played in 15 years, and if i were to start again i would definitely learn rudiments, get better at counting, learn different time signatures, and styles. Way beyond what i was capable of before. Id be a better student of music and feeling the genres and understanding how to play them
@maskedbeachbum
@maskedbeachbum 9 ай бұрын
16:35 is some of the best drumming I’ve ever heard.
@thecoconutgum
@thecoconutgum 9 ай бұрын
lol watch dave weckl play the chicken or chromazone
@rbuonfiglio
@rbuonfiglio 9 ай бұрын
Excellent video! And it’s SO GOOD to see someone playing traditional grip! I’ve used both, but mostly traditional, and so many online drum videos use match only. Thanks ever so much!!!
@jeffpishdrums
@jeffpishdrums 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for this Louie! Really great stuff! One of the best talks I've heard you give! Dig it!
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 10 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@FedeSimone
@FedeSimone 4 ай бұрын
Hoy el algoritmo me ayudó y éste video hizo que me vuelva a sentar a estudiar bateria. Gran fuente de inspiración, gracias amigo!
@ericmenu2847
@ericmenu2847 9 ай бұрын
Bonjour . I don´t understand all, but i ear .Great . Bravo . Merci beaucoup Eric
@rochluongo8018
@rochluongo8018 5 ай бұрын
It's amazing you're saying all this I've been fired from so many bands for doing it. They don't even know what trading four is. Now I just play with a keyboard player and he can do everything I never know what's coming and it's so much fun. Thank you for all yours acknowledge that you share on here you're a great player very smooth I love it.
@seanb2108
@seanb2108 5 ай бұрын
Sounds like they were too bad to be able to do trade offs😂
@joshuagharis9017
@joshuagharis9017 9 ай бұрын
Nice. And the sound, incredibly voluminous 😊
@Yaury1
@Yaury1 9 ай бұрын
this is one of the best drum lessons I have ever saw on youtube. thanks Louie
@fabiomastellaro
@fabiomastellaro 10 ай бұрын
congratulations for the sound of the drums... but also for everything else, well done
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 10 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@sipzter357
@sipzter357 10 ай бұрын
Love this lesson, just love it. Thank you for sharing this!!
@Doc2rjae07
@Doc2rjae07 2 ай бұрын
Great lesson 💪🏾🙏🏾
@delablobbo
@delablobbo 10 ай бұрын
Wonderful stuff. You're a fine player, with no bs. This is a guy to follow, youngsters.
@robbiehookins1527
@robbiehookins1527 9 ай бұрын
The best lesson i've seen in a long time. Thanks for sharing your wisdom and experience.
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 9 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@fweddyfwintsone4491
@fweddyfwintsone4491 10 ай бұрын
1:46- Not if you're doing it right. Every instrument has it's challenges to achieve expert level. As a drummer, I was easily able to pick up a bass guitar and "hack" out a tune, but that doesn't make me a Victor Wooten. Both you and I can list dozens of drummers that can do things that are ridiculously complex. That said, I really appreciate all your video lessons and amazing playing.
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 10 ай бұрын
I didn't say there weren't complex levels/aspects to drums; obviously that's not what I meant. At the most basic level of playing a song, everyone else has strict harmony and melody to follow - we don't. If we have knowledge of music theory does it help? Yes. That's a whole other topic. Drummers have more freedom and often less to be strictly tied to so there's no excuse for not being fluent in these note rates.
@JayJackson-hb7ks
@JayJackson-hb7ks 9 ай бұрын
I used to play from Stick Control. Same concept. Very nice!
@billystar1306
@billystar1306 9 ай бұрын
Very good ideas and suggestions and very good analysis of the improvisational approach which for me is having practiced many many things and then let them come out when you're improvising and respond to the moment musically trying to have a coherence as every moment defines the next. I'm a teacher too. Great sounding drums and tuning by the way. I adored your toms. Greetings from Greece. 🙂
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 8 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@edmondnowicki1397
@edmondnowicki1397 10 ай бұрын
Thank God your out there, you remind me of a guy who was my first mentor his name was Frank Miceli. He played with dynamics and filled me with a joy and wonder for playing drums! There are so many drummers who aren't playing with dynamics! I think your truly great,. Your friend,Fast Eddie Edno!
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 10 ай бұрын
thanks!
@jean-pierrethouin2404
@jean-pierrethouin2404 10 ай бұрын
Great Explanation.... I rarely hear drummers talk about these things. I am talking about things that you will NOT find in a music book! John Riley would say " take a simple idea and expand on it". Having that H/H on the 1/4 note really tightens up your time. Tx. for the Motivation J.p.
@groovebag61
@groovebag61 5 ай бұрын
Great presentation!
@i_am_jtharris
@i_am_jtharris 9 ай бұрын
Excellent advice! Vocabulary is everything to expression!
@kevingaffney5365
@kevingaffney5365 5 ай бұрын
Very informative, it’s not that I don’t have my feel when I perform or just practice it’s really my inability to read & write myself. To know what what to play after listening so repeatedly covering a song that it’s exhausting and moreover that with set lists of 60-90 covers I just can’t keep up unless I do the best I can by charting out the song by intro to vs1-2 to chorus to bridge to etc etc. So if I could transcribe efficiently it would be the “Keys to Freedom”. Thank you so much for the epiphany.
@markgriskey
@markgriskey 9 ай бұрын
Thanks for this video. I studied with some great teachers, but none of them really addressed this key issue… I myself became comfortable with fills and solos relatively early on but needed to shore up my metronomic “lay down the groove” skills. I remember realizing that at some point, I was literally able to play everything I thought of in “real time” so basically I was singing the phrase in my head and my hands and feet executed it! Having that breakthrough was pivotal, but I still needed to get my chops together with the consistency of the groove. I pissed of a couple bass players during this time in my development, but I also befriended a few others because they were into this concept of “phasing” and also trying to break out of their bass player mode where they need to play the root on every downbeat etc. :) unfortunately I gave up playing drums for many years because of my new career as an orchestral composer :) but I’m back to my roots now:) drumming is one instrument that has infinite possibilities in terms of Timbre Tone … obviously Rhythm:). Where I hit the cymbal has such a huge impact. ! Great lesson.
@bodhi9464
@bodhi9464 6 ай бұрын
Thank you mate. Much appreciated ~ always learning 🥁🎶🇦🇺
@michaelclarke925
@michaelclarke925 10 ай бұрын
Great advice I've been out of drumming before COVID hit and the last 15 yrs I've looked after kids I'm self tort but got in and played anything and my groove playing got interesting ghost notes accents, colour I'm back in doing a tafe course and maybe use some of you loops too work on . Thanks Louie awsome .
@grishmann1man441
@grishmann1man441 6 ай бұрын
Everything noted..ill be expanding dynamics over time in the function band I work in thanku
@andrew007s
@andrew007s 8 ай бұрын
Very interesting. I want to learn more about improving flow.
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 8 ай бұрын
Check out my online school - playbetterdrums.com!
@lcarlos4972
@lcarlos4972 2 ай бұрын
excellent lesson
@malcolmlarri8236
@malcolmlarri8236 10 ай бұрын
you are an absolute master of FLOW ! it's the word i most associate with your playing style
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 10 ай бұрын
thanks!
@SteveFields-tm9je
@SteveFields-tm9je 6 ай бұрын
Great sticking, thanks.
@immerherbst4230
@immerherbst4230 10 ай бұрын
I t think that's the most helpful online lesson I ve ever seen. Thanks a lot for sharing this!
@signalsTedBroughey
@signalsTedBroughey 10 ай бұрын
What a an articulate and INTELLIGENT approach to drumming both physically and mentally. I had the privilege to study with the great Alan Dawson. Years later after I graduated from his rudimentary ritual and technical stuff, he shared his secret: when you're on the spot to solo, just sing the tune to yourself and go for it. Everything will be fine. Thanks Louie, for your inspiration and GREAT PLAYING! Ted Broughey
@Jenss_
@Jenss_ 2 ай бұрын
Beautifully said.
@webber977
@webber977 8 ай бұрын
Great to listen too a master of his instrument
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 8 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@adammtroutman
@adammtroutman 10 ай бұрын
Really good lesson. I have more thoughts but I’ll keep them to myself to incubate
@fabianwilliams6933
@fabianwilliams6933 9 ай бұрын
Love this lesson and it is a big help !!!
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 8 ай бұрын
Great!
@anthonyr98
@anthonyr98 10 ай бұрын
Good talk Louie. Zero fear and let it flow. The new studio is looking gorgeous btw!
@mattmarkus4868
@mattmarkus4868 10 ай бұрын
I really appreciate the wisdom of your lesson here and it finds me at the right time. There are so many online drum schools these days it's almost options overload. Thinking of giving this one a shot though. Your message is thoughtful and articulate and inspiring, as is your playing.
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 10 ай бұрын
Thanks! Hope to see you in the school!
@MonacoRocha
@MonacoRocha 10 ай бұрын
You Sound GREAT Brother !! Real Smooth Great FEEL.. !!!
@renardvert
@renardvert 10 ай бұрын
Loved the content and the message as usual. Good job Louie!!
@EvanLikesDrums
@EvanLikesDrums 10 ай бұрын
It's amazing how what you played at 13.10 is exactly my playing right now!! Loads to take from this video. Thanks!
@Johannes7707
@Johannes7707 10 ай бұрын
Even for an old drummer like me this is good practice. Your drums sound fab ny the way! Keep doing what you‘re doing! Thanks
@john_duncan
@john_duncan 9 ай бұрын
My drummer is amazing at coming up with beats that emphasize the feel of a song.
@DominiqueTero
@DominiqueTero 10 ай бұрын
Palmer is the best thank you for this sir ❤
@philatkinson3955
@philatkinson3955 10 ай бұрын
My first time here. You are master communicator. I learned so much watching this video. I am returning.
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 10 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@MBdrummer3288
@MBdrummer3288 10 ай бұрын
Man, your kit sounds AMAZING! LOVE that snare sound. Wish my snare sounded like that! Excellent playing too. Very nice.
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 10 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@jacksonstenger
@jacksonstenger 9 ай бұрын
I like this philosophy a lot, and it applies just as well to guitarists and other kinds of musicians, thanks for sharing the wisdom
@andymaby461
@andymaby461 9 ай бұрын
Great language..! Inspirational.. thank you!
@allenmanna2151
@allenmanna2151 7 ай бұрын
👍. rarely do I ever see a good informative drum video.. most just talk & don't say anything.. this was a good video. I actually got something from it. 👍
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 7 ай бұрын
Great!
@CatsAndDogsDoingFunnyThings
@CatsAndDogsDoingFunnyThings 10 ай бұрын
New drummer here. You are so understandable! I will be spending more time here. Thanks!
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 10 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@mawuyramasiam9034
@mawuyramasiam9034 9 ай бұрын
Exquisite clarity
@percussion2112
@percussion2112 10 ай бұрын
Great video with easy to understand information!
@BennyKaye-jj5bd
@BennyKaye-jj5bd 10 ай бұрын
You are such a great teacher, man. Changing the way I look at drums every time.
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 10 ай бұрын
Thanks!!
@ignaciomontalenti9620
@ignaciomontalenti9620 5 ай бұрын
Maestro! muchas gracias
@sauzeeee
@sauzeeee 10 ай бұрын
i really needed to hear this , i've been stuck in the "straight groove player" mentality for far too long now. thanks so much for the video.
@ferggriffindrums
@ferggriffindrums 10 ай бұрын
Absolutely fantastic lesson, Louie. 👏
@louiepalmerdrums
@louiepalmerdrums 10 ай бұрын
Thanks! 😃
@beansoup190
@beansoup190 9 ай бұрын
Great stuff! I love this!😊
@rochluongo8018
@rochluongo8018 5 ай бұрын
Exactly plan these cover groups doing the same thing every night is brutal. After I make party rich in Canada and he gave me backstage passes I've been totally practicing. Keep up the good work Louie you're a list of that symbol setup.
@GSA_Drums
@GSA_Drums 10 ай бұрын
Great advice and Lesson!love it! Will definitely pull this into my playing! Greets from Germany
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