if you're thinking of trying open handedness, and you start liking it, lower your hihat! now that you don't have to crossover, it's ergonomically much better to have your snare and hihat at the same height and spaced a little farther apart when your arms are open.
@matthewgarcia73764 жыл бұрын
Recording engineers will hate you tho. Too much hat bleed to. Your snare
@famitory4 жыл бұрын
@@matthewgarcia7376 move your hihat over to the left as well. there's no longer any need for it to be super-close to your snare
@famitory4 жыл бұрын
also, recording engineers will hate you no matter what. your cross stick is opposite so now they have to move the snare mic. your ride's on the left so they have to deal with that.
@matthewgarcia73764 жыл бұрын
@@famitory actually what I'm eluding to is the harry miree setup, if you move your ride and hat to the same side your snare would be boomy (cause no bleed). I dunno jack shit about drums and economy of motion but I do know a lot about recording lol.
@famitory4 жыл бұрын
@@matthewgarcia7376 I also record my drums but I don't really mind because I have an absurdly dense kit (something like 30 pieces) so all of the different bleeds sort of merge together into what sounds like a pleasant spring reverb
@noahdentonmusic4 жыл бұрын
My teacher Thomas Pridgen has told me to start setting up my drum kit openhanded lol, it's not comfortable at first, but it's worth it!
@brendonhester3314 жыл бұрын
Like... the Thomas pridgen?
@NotSilasPipson4 жыл бұрын
@@brendonhester331 One of the many various Thomas Pridgens of the universe. Maybe it's like a Rick and Morty situation.
@krioni86sa4 жыл бұрын
My teacher Vinnie Colaiuta spanked my ass the moment he saw me set my drums openhanded. he said that he will kill my parents
@Henry-uv9xu4 жыл бұрын
Chrioni Sta Ana 😭😭😭😂😂
@rolllimbo9734 жыл бұрын
Buy Marco Minnemann’s book “extreme independence” you’ll have all 4 limbs be able to do whatever you want and you don’t even have to focus on learning open handed it literally just comes to you when you learn independence
@llamamall36534 жыл бұрын
I'm a rightie playing on a standard right-handed kit, and I became open-hand "on accident" a few years ago after I practiced playing left-handed in order to improve my balance. Definitely improved my dynamic range!
@flamegamingx47173 жыл бұрын
I personally hit the hi hat with my left hand for some reason.
@dave18124 жыл бұрын
I started playing Open Handed after i first saw Simon Phillips Live. Never looked back after that. Really helped my playing
@cheezruff4 жыл бұрын
I've been playing drums for 50 years. About 15-20 yrs into it, I began adding open handed practice, mostly rock beats, inspired by Simon Phillips. I was also building jazz, fusion, and funk, but only working on those styles righty. As time went by more open handed abilities (such as ghosting and busier ride patterns) developed. Fast forward to today, my cross-handed righty is rusty and my open handed is not at advanced levels yet. My takeaway is that both lefty and righty need ongoing maintenance and development.
@CheshireCatFun Жыл бұрын
Well, if you don't have one already, get a twin hi-hat set-up, with an identical hi-hat on an x-hat floating above the floor tom right under the ride cymbal. Also consider, about 80(something)% of drumming is open, like spang-a-langing on the ride, tom rhythms, or 16th note hi-hat rhythms with snare shots on the two and four. There's really only one difference, and that's uncrossing the arms when playing snare and hi-hat. Ironically on that last point, play that 16th note groove on the hi-hat and it's "right-handed" but drop out the hi-hat 16ths with the right hand leaving what are hi-hat 8th notes on the left hand, and suddenly it's considered "left-handed". Not only that, but this whole idea of "weak hands" and "strong hands", "leading hands" and so on, you never see that with guitar players or bass players. Look at Randy Rhoads, Steve Vai, Eddie Van Halen, Les Claypool, Geddy Lee, or Billy Sheehan. Which of their hands are their weak hands or their lead hands? Incidentally, an easy way to add the locked hi-hat on the right is to add a Gibraltar floor tom leg mount on the side opposite you of your most forward floor tom (or only floor tom if you have a four or five piece) and mount the x-hat rod in the leg mount, so that the locked hats can float just an inch or so above the floor tom. (Use the clamp that comes with the x-hat for something else.) Easy-peasy and it fits right in with the set. It just literally opens things wide open.
@JUL-Nomad-Soul7 ай бұрын
Started as lefty and was tired of turning around the drums for jams so taught myself open handed best thing ever
@rchlclr4 жыл бұрын
As a guitarist who only plays drums occasionally, I cross my hands because my right hand is used to subdividing and I want that on the hi-hat. But of course that's because I don't have time to take drums more seriously, and I only play as a substitute when the real drummers aren't around
@Novotny724 жыл бұрын
that's an interesting point which would also stand for keyboard players too; maybe that was also a factor in the evolution.
@mechasartre36944 жыл бұрын
I play keys and I had never thought about this, I was wondering why crossing hands made more immediate sense to me on drums.
@joebustos64135 ай бұрын
Splitting the brain will help you as a guitar player. Moving from fret hand to pick hand in intricate subdivisions. Open hand drumming will open up so much more in creation. Cross hand one sided playing focus is holding back your potential about 50 percent or more. .
@bartoszdolewski49154 жыл бұрын
Due to COVID-19 situation goings-on on and lacks of live gigs, I dedicated myself to switched to open handed over in 2020 (but just the hi-hat) Wish me luck
@lajeanette334 жыл бұрын
I wish you success and enjoiement of the process!
@kennybarnes23754 жыл бұрын
Wish you well. Learn to be patient, though. It takes time for it to feel good and natural.
@bartoszdolewski49153 жыл бұрын
@Amber McDanel Hi! Thanks for checking in :) I already recorded several tracks and played a couple of shows in September/October 2020 after switch to open handed drumming. So far it's just great. My left hand is way stronger and finally I improved my French grip for left hand. I have more fun playing the drums in general, it's like open handed drumming was the missing piece to make me happy. Hard things: playing really quiet ghost notes with my right hand is a challange for me. Even when I lead with my left head I still think about right hand playing the offbeats rather than focusing on my leading hand. However I don't think I'll ever change that since I'm a right handed person and played "classical" way for 13 years.
@judesudbury39673 жыл бұрын
Did you also switch the position of your ride, or do you switch back to the right hand?
@57precision3 жыл бұрын
@@bartoszdolewski4915 I am trying to do the same thing, playing open handed on a traditional kit with the hi hat and rack tom close to the snare. Having difficulty figuring out where to put my cross stick, there's no more room with the hats positioned lower now, do you have any tips?
@Drumhead101004 жыл бұрын
Another benefit of learning open-handed is if you get injured, you can still play one-handed way more effectively. I hurt my wrist and was able to do a music theatre gig 70-80% left-handed or one-handed because I spent time on developing open-handed playing. I only had to switch to right-handed mode for big fills, and on a right-handed kit, this made way more sense than leading with the left hand into a fill. The reason for having new vocabulary with tom arrangement is interesting too but it reminds me of a Timpanist's setup. I've always wondered what a Timpanist's reasons are for crossing over. They seem to have a reason for doing it in phrases rather than changing stickings. They could arrange stickings to play it open-handed, but at certain speeds that probably would be difficult getting from one drum to another. It also makes me think of earlier jazz drummers doing cross over phrases on toms, and makes me wonder if there are phrases there that we miss out on by only playing open-handed on toms rather than working on cross over techniques as well. For me I think the best is to use parts of both techniques. I'd imagine a whole new world of vocabulary would open up by doing cross over tom playing on a Mangini style kit, as we've seen that happen with open-handed/standard kit players like Billy Cobham and Simon Phillips. Watching Sput play grooves with Snarky Puppy is interesting too, because he seems to switch between crossed and open handedness just for the sake of changing it, or maybe that's where he is with learning open-handed playing. I'd love to see a comparison of drummers learning transcriptions from a standard kit, on a Mangini or Bill Bruford style kit, and also learning transcriptions from a Mangini or Bruford kit on a standard drum kit.
@pur3pker1314 жыл бұрын
As a person who has played a lot of timpani in my life, crossing over is mainly for 2 things; sound quality and ease of motion. Its generally not advised to do double strokes on the timpani because you need a lot of rebound to get the characteristic sound. Doubles will often mute the heads and lead to sounds you dont want. For ease of motion, imagine you are play 4 notes down 4 drums, from highest to lowest say, F D B G. Doing doubles would, first of all be an inward sweep and an outward sweep, but also the playing zone of the bottom 2 drums are ridiculously far apart and getting both correct at speed would be extremely difficult. Instead you alternate your hands and cross over. Its still not easy, but you have a much better chance of hitting the correct playing zones and getting the correct sound. Timpani is hard...
@ezramancini14914 жыл бұрын
From what I've heard, the reason Sput started playing open handed was to spur his creativity and make him think differently.
@theobaldsjacob4 жыл бұрын
@@ezramancini1491 Nah i think he injured his right hand and had to learn how to play lefty in the mean-time.
@Drumhead101004 жыл бұрын
@@pur3pker131 Thank's for the input! I never was never taught proper Timpani playing in high school so I never understood the lack of sticking variation. It's tough but it's fun as hell
@wolfumz11 ай бұрын
I just started learning to play open handed. I'm a new drummer, less than 2 years playing. I actually really like it, and it wasn't as hard as I thought it was going to be. I still switch back and forth, but I think I'm going to stick with open handed drumming going forward. If you're thinking about it, give it a shot. It took me a few weeks before I had most of my basic grooves down, and maube three months before I was comfortable. It's really stimulating, musically and mentally, it opens up new ideas. If you can clear the hump early on, it's worth it. I had a weird thing happen lately, too. Maybe someone else can relate: if I learn a really challenging groove (like, I'm copying Louis Cole or something, a groove that takes me many practice sessions and many hours ), if I learned it open handed first, I found that I _also_ play it crossed, without much practice. Like, whatever my brain was doing to force my hands to play this open handed, it automatically translated back to playing crossed. But that doesnt really work the other way around. If I learn a groove crossed, it's usually easier for me to learn it... but when I switch to open, it feels a lot more like I am starting from scratch, it takes a lot of struggling to get up and going. So that's a weird thing Ive been noticing lately: its much easier for me to move from open to crossed... than from crossed to open.
@ILikeWafflz5 ай бұрын
4:53 I'm glad to hear this as I hit my hats on the lighter side because I find it plain difficult to hit them heavily.
@cjbralph4 жыл бұрын
Well, this has totally made me rethink what I teach and why. Definitely been going with the 'this is the way it's done' approach - but maybe that needs to change.
@xyzyzx12534 жыл бұрын
Good lesson for all of life too!
@treehorn363 жыл бұрын
Shawn, I've been a huge fan of yours ever since I first heard Sungazer. I just want to tell you that I've been teaching my friends to hi-hat with their left hand and it's been going great! I'm super appreciative of all the work that goes into your videos and how you've paved my path for this facet of music. You're the G.O.A.T. and a huge inspiration
@erickcuevas38884 жыл бұрын
This video has been exactly what I’ve been looking for as a lefty, so helpful and judgment free, and inspired me to finally pick up the drums after debating whether or not “it’s worth the time” ended up getting a rudiment pad to make sure both sides are solid before trying open handed on a kit.
@robertkees6048 Жыл бұрын
I'm a lefty human but a righty drummer, don't quite know how that happened, guess I just emulated what I saw which was right handed setups. 40 plus years I've been playing righty with one bass. Recently I added a ride for my left and took out the second bass pedal that's been in the case for a like a decade. Believe it or not I found down on his luck drummer and bought his almost new DW9000 double pedal complete for $220, but never used the second pedal. So now I'm riding with my left hand, and working on double bass patterns etc. It's amazing how those two things can reinvigorate ones practice habits. I guess my right ride hand will always be more articulate, but playing lefty ride, brings totally different results, even when I try to mimic one to the other. It's a blast to be able to just switch, and the HH is set up perfectly for either open or crossed playing, it's very versatile. It's really amazing to have this much fun with new directions on the drums, just more fuel to power the passion. Playing drums is like getting to go on the rollercoaster as many times as you like with no lines.
@drumsettheater4 жыл бұрын
Great analysis! I've been slowly working on open handed playing (just uncrossing the hands but with the kit set up in a typical way).
@mr.person5554 жыл бұрын
Hey there, as one of those drummers that started "in a cave and never saw a drummer" before I started playing, I am right handed but play left hand lead open handed on a right hand kit with my ride on the left. I think there is another reason why the time hand should be on your dominant hand - despite years of favoring my left hand, my right hand still ends up being stronger even on drums. Take a technique like moeller or push pull, both of which I use all the time on the hi hat or ride. When practicing on the pad, I will give both hands equal training, but on the kit my left hand uses these techniques much more so it would be expected that my left hand would develop beyond my right hand. Despite this, my left hand cannot go as fast as my right, however I don't have the coordination to play ghost notes or fills if I use my right hand instead, so I end up needing to change what I play if I can't reach the target hand speed on a faster beat. Of course a drummer of your level that has put in many many years of dedicated practice likely has a much higher cap on that top speed for both hands to the point where it likely isn't an issue, but I'm speaking more as the average drummer since most people considering this will likely be more playing drums as a hobby that may gig from time to time. As for lefty lead on a righty kit, this also leads to some issues with moving across the toms on many common fills, like 2 or 4 hits on each tom. Lefty lead means that I need to cross over my right hand after it hits when moving to the next drum and I often end up clicking sticks or worse, hitting my hand (ouch!). I'll do some phrasing tricks to get around this, like phrasing 5 4 4 3 instead of 4 4 4 4 but still putting the accent on the beat, or just playing different fills, but there are times where the simple 4 on each is what I want and it becomes difficult. "reverse" fills are easier though where I start on the floor tom and go up, but again those aren't always the "right" fill for the part. Great video, I'm glad I found this, just wanted to share my opinions as an open-handed drummer that partly wishes I just made the switch when I realized I was "wrong" 4 months into playing as the habit is much more difficult to break 14 years later as an adult with much less time to practice (and the time I do have I want to just play or record)
@JVR108934 жыл бұрын
Left handed drummer here. Here's my experience. I started playing drums about ten years ago, just jumping on drum sets when they were around (I'm a bass player first so any drum set I would play on would be someone else's after band practice was done). Obviously they were all right handed sets, and I was able to grasp playing pretty easily except for two major things: my right foot was pathetic and I struggled to coordinate alternate sticked drum patterns (anything where the sticking was rlrl like a disco beat or a basic drum fill). Eventually I was able to get the alternating sticking down but I could never get truly comfortable with my right foot. When I finally came into enough money to get a cheap drum set, I knew that I had to set it up lefty and reteach myself how to play...or so I thought. Turns out that I was able to play left handed almost immediately, as I just had to apply my already developed skills to my dominant hand. I've gotten a little better with my right foot as well due to me learning more complex double kick drum patterns, and I can now more or less play on any drum kit I may come across, although my right foot is still nowhere near my left. I do think that there is something to be said for how you feel the music though. Even though I had started playing righty first, playing left handed felt immediately more comfortable to me. I play bass/guitar right handed, but I do everything else in life with my left hand, so I guess my reliance on my left hand made the switch on drums easier.
@Poisonjam74 жыл бұрын
The simplest solution is to just use a cable hi-hat. There’s really no disadvantage to using one over a normal HH. You can still control it with the left foot and you can put it almost anywhere you want. The modern drum kit needs to evolve away from placing the hats on the left, as it serves no purpose. Just like traditional grip has no purpose being used on a drum kit. It was invented to meet a specific need which no longer exists, unless you’re playing a civil war era drum slung to your side.
@clearestapricotpencil41254 жыл бұрын
The disadvantage is the additional cost, which is substantial for many people
@PenguinMcDuck4 жыл бұрын
Cable hi-hat won't change the fact that at times you still need to play two-handed on the hi-hat. If the hi-hat is on your right side, you'll need to lead a two-handed sixteenth note groove with your left hand. Cable hi-hat basically just screwed you up there. What you can do is have two hi-hats. It's actually quite nice, of course there is the issue with cost, setup etc.
@unoPlox4 жыл бұрын
@@PenguinMcDuck or play paradiddles, so the backbeat on the snare is on your left hand. That may be a bit more work for faster tempos but learning paradiddles (or other rudiments for displaced notes on the snare) is almost a must nowadays as it opens a whole new world n drumming.
@JVR108934 жыл бұрын
@@PenguinMcDuck Having two hi hats is the way to go. I have my main hats in the traditional setup, and my second set of hats over my floor toms. I keep those closed so I don't have to use a drop clutch to play double bass with closed hats, and use the main set for the more hi hat orientated grooves, with the option to play open or close handed.
@davidyang12074 жыл бұрын
I completely agree with everything you say, disregarding the cost of the stand. I do love to play traditional grip every once in a while though, it just feels so ... right ... playing certain genres.
@notvince33984 жыл бұрын
I’m left handed but when I first started drumming I played on a right handed setup and just started playing open hand naturally. I never even realized it was different until I started talking to other drummers
@brandondodd90452 жыл бұрын
I did the same exact thing
@JoveCana5 күн бұрын
I had the *exact* same experience. Left hand dominant, but right foot dominant. I played on other people's kits (naturally std right hand kits), and I had zero idea that "open hand" was even a thing until someone asked me about it. And THEN, I was even a bit self conscious about what felt totally natural to me. I even thought maybe I didn't learn in the right way somehow?? I actually had to learn cross handed. Now I can play decently cross handed, but nowhere near the dynamics or power as open handed.
@billmint81224 жыл бұрын
Dude, huge props for using the Sonic drowing music at 11:06! hahaha
@skel3370r4 жыл бұрын
Anxiety as soon as I hear it XD
@MaddDrEw4 жыл бұрын
def keeping up with our channel now. dude, you're great.
@narocoon4 жыл бұрын
I really think that playing open handed sometimes helps playing clean, because we get used to play constantly on the left hand and more syncopated/ghost notes/accents etc with the right hand. I do think this is a way to get rid of a certain amount of "dirtiness/unvoluntary flams (between kick and hands) when we get back to our crossover comfort zone.
@londonxrainn4 жыл бұрын
I started playing drums at 1 and played open handed as a child as it felt better to me. But as I grew older, people pretty much forced me into playing crossed and I have ever since. I'm 17 now and trying to get back into open handed playing
@therealmicha12434 жыл бұрын
Harry Miree, the dude himself, has a crazy drumkit! The theory behind it is connected to not wanting to cross hands and have everything on the right, while still leading with the right foot. Its really amazing actually :)
@theopinson38514 жыл бұрын
Sean Reinert (RIP) was the master of incorporating his hihat foot with double bass patterns (heel+toe). I could never figure out how he did it until I realized he led his double bass patterns with his left foot. 😮
@inanarchywetrust3 жыл бұрын
I am left handed and have my kit set up as lefty, BUT, I use a cable hi-hat, and I have it placed on my bass drum top hole, where the toms should go, so that I can play open handed. It was a journey really, because as most people do, I started drumming with my arms crossed, but always struggled with it as my left hand (hi-hat) was always getting in the way of my right hand (snare), especially whe I wanted to hit hard and be loud. At some point I decided to experiment with the kit set-up. I played on a righty set-up open-handed, but my left foot was struggling so much on the hi-hat (maybe hard to believe but my right foot was doing much better on the bass drum). So I surfed the net in search of tips specifically on this subject, and here on youtube I found the "5 tips for drumming open handed" video by Harry Miree, and I got really excited. I bought a cable hihat and a double pedal and tried his tips, and I thought "that's it, that's what I was searching for!". But soon I realized that playing the kick on the slave pedal of a double pedal is just not the same as playing the pedal placed on the bass drum. It's much more unresponsive and slow, and you just can't play the same things with the same amount of effort. So I started to think, and ultimately came with the idea of the hi-hat in the bass drum hole, switching again to a lefty set-up. Now, there is a down side with this set up, and that's that you can't really play two-handed beats on it as it's too far for it to be practical. But I came up with a solution to that too, and it's simply... to use a standard hi-hat stand on the usual position! Anyway, I talked too much. Oh, and by the way, I'm not a real drummer. My first instrument was an acoustic guitar, when I was 10 years old I think, but never took lessons, then at age 18 I bought a bass, and with that I went to a music school for 2 years. I only started playing drums (occasionally) at age 26 when I was working on a sound engineering school; because I was the one that was closing the school in the evening, I'd lock the entrance and go in the studio and play for hours, but not everyday.
@philenns67974 жыл бұрын
A well thought video presentation Shawn - thank you. I'm left handed and play a right handed kit. For snare drums - To my left I have a piccolo snare and immediately in front a full size snare ... hi hat is in between; A standard set up with the piccolo tossed into the setup. I find playing the piccolo with traditional (or matched) grip and the full size snare open handed makes sense.
@mobiuslau4 жыл бұрын
This video is really inspiring for me. Recently I've been writing some 'grooves' which would require a momentary transition from cross to open to play it comfortably and your video really inspired me to go ahead and practice open handedness more seriously Once I have my drumkit ready here. I think it's totally worth it for me regardless of how long it would take to be ready to play a live-set fully open handed. I think once I start practicing this, I'll obtain skills that would benifit my playing a lot regardless of whether I play crosshanded, open handed, right handed or left handed, and it's not like I suddenly won't be able to play the drumkit at all once I start practicing this.
@shipitsoneo4 жыл бұрын
After playing drums for five years, I became really frustrated with my weaker (left) limbs game, and, after watching some Yoni Madar, I completely switched my set around, and began to play cross-handed lefty on a lefty drums. After 3 months now, my left foot is decently close to my right foot, but I still struggle with playing the ride with my left hand, meaning it is far from what I can do with my right hand. I found a great joy in the process, because suddenly I began to better understand why I do some things the way I do and when I do them with my right limbs, which really opened my eyes on many of my flaws, both in execution and thinking, that I couldn't possibly notice before. Now, 5 years is sure not a lot, but it is not too little imo, and I would really recommend switching both feet and hands if you around that time in your playing. I found it truly ground breaking for me, and it didn't take too much more work, as it was only really painful for a month or so. Maybe playing cross-handed is an overkill, I just think it looks slick, and decided to take the challenge, but I'm convinced that switching your leading limbs around is among the best things you can do in a long run, if you have time for that
@jangobango28474 жыл бұрын
TLDR
@steevf4 жыл бұрын
This video had vindicated me. :) I had been questioning the hi-hat placement for 30 years and was told to get over it because that's the way it is so I gave up drumming.
@floralfire4 жыл бұрын
I’m so glad you mentioned Travis Orbin he’s such an amazing underrated drummer
@spoonermcgee4 жыл бұрын
Absolutely, he is sooooo good!
@LiberMedia_Podcast4 жыл бұрын
Good video, thanks!
@AWrenNamedRen3 жыл бұрын
im a drummer, playing fir about 9 years at this point. i play open handed on a right handed kit. recently i did the opposite of what you are talking about (left handed on high hat), where i learned to play open handed on a left handed kit (right on high hat) and switched pedals. this was a great choice for my progression in drums, and really developed my right hand and my left foot.
@martysanchez38904 жыл бұрын
Great video Shawn, I’m shown my students some open handed stuff but now i think I’ll have them do it more!
@Otso_66N11 ай бұрын
Few years ago I decided to go the Bill Bruford route and use a centered hihat setup, with only two toms on the sides (12 to my left and 16" ft to the right, plus some eventual octoban and popcorn snare flavor options on the outside). It is not an easy switch in terms of distribution and tom melodic vocabulary, but the center hat allows for so much ergonomic cymbal placements that I could not really play a standard drum kit with such ease now. Left or right hand on the hats is very easy and the snare/hihat movements are very natural for both hands. It makes a nice double-layer drumkits with heads at hip level and cymbals at shoulder/elbow height, very satisfying and good-looking at the price of ditching the ol' tom descent fill ! Stuff like Heikki Malmberg's kit was also an option, but I am not a fan of having large and heavy toms on rack attachments, plus it raises all cymbals quite a bit.
@simonsayssimonplays2 жыл бұрын
Great thoughts and perspectives!
@coltonclement4 жыл бұрын
Well I’m sold. I am planning to learn drums in the future and I’m learning open on a righty kit and learning to switch what hand is on the snare.
@DC_docTR4 жыл бұрын
I’m a (R) handed drummer. I’ve always wanted to set my kit up like a (L) with a (L) handed double-bass pedal, remote hi-hat with the pedal next to the 1° bass drum pedal to be played with my (L) foot and use the 2°/double-bass pedal with my (R) foot as I would normally. I’d keep my 14” floor tom in the proper position, but place the 16” to the side of the snare.
@marek.p4 жыл бұрын
Yeah, this is pretty much exactly what Harry Miree does
@jonathonstewart14364 жыл бұрын
I’m very interested in this kind of setup, and will likely test it in the future, but I wonder how this affects the flow for metal styles of play where blast beats and fast Tom rolls are the most important
@DC_docTR4 жыл бұрын
Then I’m definitely gonna have to check him out. Thanks! 👍
@crifox164 жыл бұрын
ha! lefty playing open handed on a righty kit here, it's funny to see a video on this very subject. i play with my ride on the left so i always ride with my left hand, the only cymbal i have on my right is my second crash, so the only time i actually cross hands is to hit the snare and the 2nd crash together. just recently while i couldn't play my drums (they're in my band's rehearsal space and you know... 'rona) i thought about learning to perform that hit open handed. after a couple rehearsals i'm fairly confident to say that it's probably gonna take me less time than i expected, the hardest thing so far is getting the rimshots with my left as clean as with my right like i usually do. will keep you updated :D
@argerm57 Жыл бұрын
For oldsters like me, who have been playing cross-handed for 50+ years, it's probably of limited benefit to switch to open-handed playing. I do some of it just to be a little more flexible when playing certain things. But for anyone starting out, why not play open handed, or ambidextrously? I am somewhat surprised when I see younger monster players who don't take advantage of this ability. From a purely ergonomics standpoint, start playing open-handed or ambidextrously. I think you will benefit tremendously.
@MattAngiono4 жыл бұрын
Excellent advice! I've arrived at pretty much the same place in perspective.... I'm left handed, but played on right handed sets my whole life... about a decade ago, I decided to try adding open handed playing, just as you've shown. There are some other benefits I've experienced as well from this process.... Learning as a lefty did give me better awareness with the left hand for ghost notes and such.... And it certainly made learning open easier then, despite being locked in with my right for so long. I also added a double bass pedal, and positioned it so that I can play the high hat with it, which leads to some cool patterns. I've also added a closed high hat on the right under the ride sometimes, to make fast open handed patterns (that led with the right), which helped build independence with the left hand. I think my favorite benefit of all this is the freedom of switching, as I still play with a lot of crossing over.... It leads to interesting new patterns quite often.... I also like to train my left foot by playing bass patterns with it, whenever I drum on the steering wheel jamming out.... old habits .... Anyway, great video, I enjoyed it for sure
@MattAngiono4 жыл бұрын
Forgot to add that I put an extra floor Tom on the left of the snare... this helps with the open playing patterns for sure
@miketween85284 жыл бұрын
After playing crossover fro 10 years...I switched after watching a Simon Phillips video. He made it look so easy and it looks pretty cool! I did notice right away (the first day) that it made the toms and cymbals easier to get to. If you can just keep time on the hi hat you can do some great things with your right hand. But since my left hand is dumb and my left foot is dummer than the my left hand...I have been playing open handed for The last 20 years... but I still struggle with playing smoothly! I say learn it! It will change the way you see and play the kit! Great topic and Great video man! Thank you!
@sethparks44914 жыл бұрын
since the release of your last video i switched my whole kit to lefty lead. i am so glad i did because i wanted to strengthen my left hand and gain better coordination, bout of which are still happening. i am excited to switch the kit back righty lead and see if it was truly worth it.
@peterszeligiewicz7239 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for a very informative video . I am 61 years old and have been playing a left handed set up since I was 15 . Knowing what I know now ,I would strongly recommend any left handed beginners start learning open hand on a right hand kit . Living in a right handed world it will save you a lot of aggravation down the track .
@Untoldanimations4 жыл бұрын
Last week I showed up to my friend's house to watch his band practising. Their drummer didn't show up and so they just got me to try drums for the first time. He told me to cross my hands but as a lefty I subconsciously switched to playing open handed. Anything else felt wrong. Good to know that this made sense and wasn't just a bad beginner habit I'd have to unlearn
@onesyphorus4 жыл бұрын
After seeing your other video I started doing it. Playing on the rim of the snare with my right hand did feel weird but I got a little used to it.
@puppytrainer43364 жыл бұрын
There is an ADVANTAGE in being able to start and stop with complete freedom from either side. Drummers aren't just doing it to be trendy, it is pushing the art further. If you have been playing awhile you will know you have a dominant side and a weak side. A leading role and a following role. If only one side knows 'leading' then your other side is stuck 'following'. Your weak side 'depends' on your strong side to start you off on patterns and that is limiting. Also if you wanted to start a pattern somewhere midway through (not on the 1) then you can do that if your weak side knows how to take the lead! :) I didn't even talk about dynamics but it's hugely useful there too.
@LuksFrikiMaster4 жыл бұрын
I LOVE YOUR VIDEOSSS!!!!! YOU ARE SOO COOOOOOL
@diegovillarreal99914 жыл бұрын
I am a lefty that has been playing drums Fully lefty (reverse of the traditional set up) for over 6 ish years. I'll like to say i've gotten fairly good and have played in studios orchestras, jazz bands, paid gigs, for tips, for food (at like weddings and other similar venues) etc. All though those 6 years I have gone through the agonizing pain of switching the kit from left to right and then back after. i am now currently trying to learn drums the traditional way open handed and for me this requires me to switch my feet NOT my hands. I must say that switching feet is way harder than hands as your feet do vastly different things. i am about 2 months ish and it isn't as hard as i thought. weirdly the hardest style i have come across was "disco" and all the other related beats. this required the off-beat open hi-hat vibe and is way harder to re-learn for me then learning it in the first place. I also noticed for me that building power in my NEW bass drum foot (right) was much easier to develop then turning my old strong bass drum foot (left) into a much more relaxed role. These were just my experiences, I am far from being comfortable playing payed gigs righty however i have noticed that my general co-ordination has vastly improved while playing fully lefty especially when soloing as I have much more options open due to my new strong high hat foot and my better controlled bass drum.
@crispaul273 ай бұрын
Dude thanks for sharing this. I'm starting this journey of converting to open handed and I'm worried about that right foot. Been playing lefty for 20+ years.
@lajeanette334 жыл бұрын
I have the same goal as you and have the same trouble you mentionned but never have i played on a lefty drums. But after seeing the first video i’m really considering it! But i have to say i don’t consider it extra work but more like a skill set. Like some learn double bass other don’t bother and learn something else. It more a question of goals. What do you want to accomplish first? Great serie on a not so dived-in subject. I really love your style of essai/lesson!
@GhostGuitars4 жыл бұрын
excellent stuff mate. I have often wondered why more drummers dont play open handed
@nrauschermusic4 жыл бұрын
In the same boat Shawn! Working drummer, learned right hand lead, watched Harry Miree, said, "dude, that is weird, dude", and started practicing hatting with the right hand. Quite a journey!
@TrossOfTheAlba9 ай бұрын
Super helpful.
@pjdahmen3 жыл бұрын
Great tutorial
@hillie474 жыл бұрын
Respond to any non-drummer/musician asking why it would be so difficult to switch with: "Try wiping your behind with your other hand" :) You get so incredibly used to doing things a certain way that it requires quite a bit of effort to change. But this video is very good Shawn, my compliments! Definitely makes sense to try open handed.
@josephharvey17624 жыл бұрын
This comes at the perfect time for me! I've been drumming righty for about 5 years, and I just switched to a lefty setup two weeks ago. My left foot is actually dominant, and I was struggling with any kind of speed with my right foot on the kick pedal. So now I play a lefty kit open handed, with my right hand on the hihat and ride, which are both on the right! This has been incredibly easy to get used to and playing open handed just makes so much sense! Plus my kick is already as strong or stronger as it used to be when I used my right foot. I'm lucky that this works for me with almost no additional effort!
@greganderson30963 жыл бұрын
Great video. You're vocal mic is EQd super bass heavy.
@Skeware5 ай бұрын
5:28 I don't remember specifically how or why but i remember vividly in the 90s in my teens first time i played drums I instinctively crossed my arms. For context, I also remember my first try was Aneurism by Nirvana, with my friend on guitar. We were both susrprised for how quickly I got the hang of it and could almost play the entire song on the first couple tries. BTW, my friend was really good at guitar, learned early because his dad was a musician, and we sneaked into their "studio" garage to play with their instruments.
@bfkgod4 жыл бұрын
Taking everything into account (practicality, open handed advantages, etc) it seems like the most optimal setup is to only make 2 changes to the standard right-handed kit playing setup: 1. Uncross your hands, play the hi-hats with left hand. 2. Move the Ride cymbal to the left, above the hi-hats. You now have permanent left handed groove vocabulary with the hats and ride, and your right hand is free to go all over the place on the kit. You can still play at any drumkit in the world, as long as you can move the Ride cymbal to the left.
@jonathonstewart14364 жыл бұрын
I think that the cable hat setup is better because 1. There’s a MUCH smaller learning curve (which I understand may sound lazy, but with cable hats being around 95% as clean as regular hats, there’s really no reason to not follow this approach and just work on left hand lead separately), and 2. It allows infinity more positioning than a standard hi hat, which is only useful to a degree certainly, but it allows you to bring everything in closer to you which is a goal of many drummers. Feel free to criticize these points, I’m open to discussion!
@bfkgod4 жыл бұрын
@@jonathonstewart1436 Yeah, I won't disagree with that! Cable hats are great because you can position them wherever you want. The reason I leaned towards my method (simply uncrossing hands and moving ride cymbal) is that it allows you to perform on a standard drum kit anywhere in the world without having to add custom pieces like a cable hi-hat. But, if that doesn't matter to you, then of course a custom setup is definitely better. In fact, my favorite setup of any kit I've ever seen is Travis Orbin's ambidextrous setup. Also, I'm just personally not familiar with cable hats, so I can't really judge them until I try them out some day. Definitely something to keep in mind!
@CCMDrummer Жыл бұрын
I am a right handed drummer with a right handed set up who learned how to ride the HH with the left hand as opposed to the right. I have been playing this way for 28 years now and all the practice and training it took to be able to play this way was well worth the effort.
@FernsDrummer4 жыл бұрын
Watched the whole video thoroughly. Enjoyed it 👏🏻🙏🏼
@rnm7234 жыл бұрын
I was fed up playing right hand lead with crossed sticking. Switched to open hand playing without any "inspiration" from certain drummers. Anyone reading this: I never looked back. It opened a whole new world of vocabulary and skill set such as left hand lead and overall better ability to play more creatively. Its so much more fun moving from left to right and vice versa on the kit. Strong recommendation !
@malcolmjohnstoneinstructorITB3 жыл бұрын
I played drums for a few years in the early 2000s always as a lefty. I am getting back to drums but decided to try using a righty set up and play open handed. In the past I played lots of jam nights and practiced at studios were I had to changed drum settings as lefty and then back again to righty and I want to avoid that in the future. Surprinsingly I feel I have a better balance control in hte righty position. My right foot is working quite well. My left one is a bit more complicated when I try to work on opening the hi hat. Some things feels terrible to turn around but others are doing better than expected. Only had 2 days with the new set up. Let´s see how it goes.
@trevorfrancis31753 жыл бұрын
I’m left-handed who learned to play guitar right-handed. When I formed a band in high school I bought a drum kit so we could practice at my house. I taught myself to play open handed because it felt comfortable. I still play and ended up playing in bands for 15+ years this way. I lead with my left hand, and I feel it’s always slowed down my transitions from drum to drum for sure. I do like the freedom and articulation I have with right hand snare hits. I’ve tried going back and learning right handed but it was tough and I couldn’t stick with it, just doesn’t feel natural. I’ve being playing guitar right handed and having a weak picking hand has always been my weakness. Play what is comfortable for YOU.
@batave23834 жыл бұрын
Hey, thanks for this video. I started out drumming just a few weeks back (played piano and guitar before), but as a lefty in basically everything I couldn't figure out why the right-handed set-up just wasn't feeling right. I've spent the last few hours practicing with a right-handed set up just with open HH and it feels great. Especially with the hh a bit lower like someone else pointed out in the comments. Also, love the vids and the sungazer stuff. Keep it up!
@SlowRiderDucati3 жыл бұрын
Great analysis, on a scale of 10 this was an 11 in terms of usable and actionable recommendations.
@matthewgalicia11014 жыл бұрын
lol. All those faces you made while reacting to yourself are gold.
@alejandrobustos22682 жыл бұрын
A simple solution is to use a wired remote hi hat attached to the right of the kit and the pedal to the left, in the usual way of the hi hat stand location, that way you avoid crossing your arms and naturally feeling the drumming and You will save a lot of practice time to match your limbs to that of an ambidextrous. .
@harrymears16234 жыл бұрын
SUPERB VIDEO.
@MathRTD4 жыл бұрын
I will give my two cents here. I'm left handed and because of that I've been playing open handed since I started playing drums and I'm glad i learned it that way, tbh nowadays I can't even cross my arms without feeling awkward and bumping one into the other. As Shawn already stated, it's more effort but it isn't double the effort. I find that the main benefits are the fact that I'm not limited to the right side of the kit when doing hi-hat grooves and that you feel extra confident when the song asks you to change your leading part from the right side of the kit to the left side of the kit. Add another floor tom to your left side and you are gold.
@MattAngiono4 жыл бұрын
Excellent point about the floor Tom... I'm lefty too, but was taught righty.... Eventually learned open, now I try to combine both... Not sure it would benefit you all that much now though
@beurksman4 жыл бұрын
I'm a guitarist mainly, but i have been drumming for fun for quite a few years now, too. I usually cross over for grooves, because it feels like right hand picking, but I learned to play blast beats open handed. It's great for training every limb equally and also for endurance. I have also learned to lead with both hands when doing fills just for the ergonomics of hitting the snare and any cymbal at once on the 1.
@schild1234 жыл бұрын
Please include the sound of your short drum videos :) Love your drummingg
@IsimplyWill4 жыл бұрын
Left drummer who learned on a righty kit: I grew up with just hats, snare and bass which made it super easy to just lead with the left. I had a phase of about 5 years or so where I wasnt playing but i was always tapping along to music in the car which left my left foot doing the bass work while playing on the seats open handed with my sticks. By the time I got back to a normal 5 piece my right footwork was horrible and it took about 2 years to get completely comfortable doing it again and playing cross over was just rough. Since then i still play traditional right handed but I notice I have interesting voicing options if i happen to accidentally switch back.
@Servando6abe4 жыл бұрын
SII!! estamos en el futuro, la disposicion simetrica del instrumento nos puede permitir tocar al 200%, gracias por compartir shawn.
@01201301401301224 жыл бұрын
IMO the coolest thing about open-handed playing is that now you have more voices to play with in the context of some groove in a way which is NATURAL; I believe this tremendously affects your musicality as a drummer in the long run
@MrBeatcreep4 жыл бұрын
If i try hitting the hihat with my left hand it looks like Peter Griffin trying to sit on a chair.
@ofdrumsandchords4 жыл бұрын
Well, being able to play the same things on the ride and on the hi-hat is a very good reason. If you tried to play both ways, you see the kind of work that requires. Instead, you can learn music, study harmony, play the piano. That will improve your drumming. I play some rythms with the left hand on the hi-hat, cascaras for salsa for example. But I often use sixteenths with two sticks on the hi-hat, and I need it to keep all my means compatible. So, mainly righty.
@christianmoran13894 жыл бұрын
Another great video Shawn - 'I would love to do these studies by the way' sounds like a PhD thesis proposal! It's such a key contemporary subject to explore as most drummers don't have any gigs to prepare for lately. I'm gonna commit to teaching future beginner drum students ambidextrous open handed, maybe gather some more anecdotal evidence on those time expenditure percentages (I totally agree with your percentage guesstimates).
@ShawnCrowder4 жыл бұрын
Thanks Christian. Yeah, I'd be curious to know how your students do - keep me posted!
@krioni86sa4 жыл бұрын
Not really.
@krioni86sa4 жыл бұрын
He's weak.
@krioni86sa4 жыл бұрын
And has long hair
@nicolacilli61834 жыл бұрын
I play like this because Billy Cobham!Billy played lefty in 1959 when he was a kid...! Lenny White too
@adamhurt82434 жыл бұрын
As I started learning drums I started learning on a right handed kit, but instinctively played open hand. After a while I switched to a lefty kit because it felt more natural but I continued to play open handed. Honestly being able to play both ways is very beneficial, it allows you to build up limb independence and come up with many new ideas. I definitely turn heads as a lefty that also plays open handed, a lot of people ask me “why don’t you just play a right handed kit not open handed” but it’s more that i always hit with my left hand first on fills and such. Open handed allows more freedom with fills, in defiantly a fan.
@Caynug4 жыл бұрын
Open hand playing makes so much more sense man
@keircooper3 жыл бұрын
Love this video! I've always played open handed (and have only played drums everyone now and then, over a 20 year period - as an extra to my main guitar practice), but have found when using the floor tom as you might do the hats, is one hella stretch (that really needs that ambidexterity to accommodate). Not claiming any real wisdom here, but haven't yet seen that mentioned, maybe i need to scroll down a bit further.
@khrashingphantom96323 жыл бұрын
Okay I think I may have been ice skating up hill. I played drums for roughly 12 years. I was 100% self taught and played almost exclusively alone. I didn't tell people I played at all because when I did I got picked on (especially by other musicians/drummers in particular) a lot. I played an electric drum kit (I lived in apartments so a "real" kit was completely out of the question. Lol), left handed, open handed, on a right handed set up according to what I've learned here. Lol. Long story short I'm thinking of picking drumming up again, and your video has given me the boost I needed to really go for it again. I was pretty young when I got picked on and it really bummed me out and made me feel really alone, but I do regret stopping because of it. Thanks for posting this and showing there's a variety of ways to play and that's okay. I'm still not a "real" drummer because I still play an electric kit (still live in an apartment. Lol), but my brother learned how to play guitar so at least I have someone to play with now. ☺. Thanks again.
@jimpikles4 жыл бұрын
I appreciate you didn't want to come across as a Righty telling Leftys to fall in line, but you're absolutely right about Leftys being better off learning on a right handed kit. I learnt left handed guitar as a kid, because my teacher insisted I should (since i write Lefty), and I've regretted it ever since. I hate that I can't play other peoples guitars. It sucks! When I started learning drums a couple years ago there was no doubt in my mind I was going to play a normal Righty kit.
@sadawson Жыл бұрын
the only thing that will make you a better drummer is PRACTICE. There are no tricks or gimmicks to make you a better drummer other than PRACTICE, PRACTICE, PRACTICE ! ! ! oh and then more PRACTICE ! ! !
@pietzsche4 жыл бұрын
Travis Orbin is worth checking out on this, plays a symmetrical kit and swaps lead limbs constantly it's pretty cool
@Drummermedic.3 жыл бұрын
i tried playing left hand lead(with minimal sucess) back in highschool when i went through a carter beuford phase. i got very frustrated at how i was having to take a step back at a time when i only wanted to be moving forward(and both my ego and most of my interactions with others was directly tied to my musical prowess). eventually i just got a cable hat and ran left and right side hats for a long time. i'd play around with left hand lead grooves every now and then or at jam sessions where i was playing more simple grooves. about 5 years ago i got horrendous tendonitis and had to learn to do everything with my left hand. ultimately this caused tendonitis on my left side and i bounced back and forth from limb to limb untill i got mostly recovered. the only way i could keep playing drums at all during the worst of it was left hand lead. it helped a bit that the last few years i have been practicing on a bizzaro kit that i designed as a challenge project with a budy of mine which has my belled ride on the left. now that i have more or less recovered from the tendonitis i am doubling down on practicing left hand lead and about to redesign my kit again. i figured if i don't focus on ergonomics and body mechanics now i won't make it into old age and still be able to play. I also have focused heavily on playing with a polyrthmic approach over the years at the detriment to linear grooves, so i am working more on linear grooves with my left side.
@roguerecordmusic4 ай бұрын
i am currently switching right now. Mangini and Harry are two big influences on this switch... and i just turned 50 lol. From the moment i was Mike play i knew instantly how his kit worked... it just made sense. In the last few years i have gotten a Pearl cabled hi hat. I out it on my right side and was just playing it off and on while still crossing over my hands for the main hat.... BECAUSE THAT'S HOW WE HAVE ALWASY DONE IT! HAHAH. This past May I too Mik's Master Class at Sweetwater and he just unlocked something in my brain. Combine that with Harry I was like ok I'm doing this. Before getting my remote hat i had a closed Pearl x hat that was on my right. So i thought why not take that closed X hat and out it on my left and take away the standard hi-hat stand (that will go home for practice). At this moment my operable hat is the cabled hat on my right. The kits is also a mirror image kinda like Mike and Harry's combined. If i get stuck i have a closed X hat on my left for the "normal stuff" but using it to primarily play opened handed and not worry about the foot for on the left hat for now (i'd like a second remote hat... but time and money so that will come down the road) so i play open left for groves on the left and the "hat pedal" work will be done on the right side. My ride is on my right for now as well. Old dongs can learn new tricks... we just take longer lol. plus, it's fun. the kit feels fresh and new. Thanke for the video!
@Wolfiecolada4 жыл бұрын
i'm gonna say we cross because most people are right side dominate. right foot is stronger and is used more as is the same with the right hand. it just lands in those places, left foot controls high hats, they need less strength. most of the time, high hats get a lot more use than the snare drum and other drums in today's common music. it's just easier.
@morten14 жыл бұрын
I'm gonna try having the hihat in FRONT of the snare. With a remote foot pedal. The hat height set very low and slightly overlapping the snare for better ergonomics. But then I'm free to play the hat with either hand. That can also make a lot of crazy grooves possible or easier :)
@sadge35943 жыл бұрын
I have my hihat more behind the snare so my arms dont cross over much, but I like the idea of rearranging the kit so I can easily play hihat, crash and ride in one group. If I switch from electric to acoustic in the future Im definitely considering this
@ToxicTerrance4 жыл бұрын
2 high-hat life.
@harrymears16234 жыл бұрын
@Mac Ton What do you mean by this?
@reidgowan26704 жыл бұрын
Harry Mears Peepo Happy’s PFP. I don’t know why Mac felt the need to bring it up on a drum comment
@Merlincat0074 жыл бұрын
@@reidgowan2670 Probably because he has fascist tendencies. He has a Punisher logo as his PFP which fascists love for some reason lol
@user-jr3xx2hh4d4 жыл бұрын
@Mac Ton calm down you snowflake
@calebfudrums4 жыл бұрын
Bi-hat
@NeekoFreeman4 жыл бұрын
This is interesting. I'm a beginner. When I first started playing, I crossed over a lot. It just felt natural but I think I'm going to try open-handed.
@chrisevanz4 жыл бұрын
I looked at brain lateralisation (esp. the Broca's and Wernicke's areas) as part of my postgrad work and there is quite a large difference between left and right hand ‘roles’. You’re right, of course, that you can train yourself to do most things (I also researched 10 weeks of ‘lefty’ playing after 30 years of ‘righty’). I found that the biggest difference was in jazz playing and a swapped trad grip. I found the main benefit to a left/right ‘leas’ was the ability to improve ‘reach’ on a large drumset.
@joselancas46374 жыл бұрын
I'm a problem. To start with I am 62. I was born left-handed, and my first teacher forced me to be right-handed. I played in fanfare for 7 years, 4 years playing bass drum with my right hand and 3 years playing a snare drum with a start on my left hand. Today I am learning the rudiments of the drums and I will try the right handed kit and open hands. I can easily write with both hands, but I can only kick with my left foot. It is difficult to define what most applies to me, but your video gave me the following idea: I will do what my instinct indicates, and try to be ambidextrous.
@kirjian4 жыл бұрын
I'm a lefty who's played this way for years but only a year ago started practicing seriously, I'd say I'm still a beginner (I've a couple videos on my channel). Switching to a righty kit is painful but it's the optimal choice. Hope I can end up in Shawn's dataset for research :)
@emmey88654 жыл бұрын
as a right handed person that plays on a lefty kit i can agree with pretty much all points you made. One thing that really surprised me is how nice it is to play the kick with your dominant foot (being right hand/left foot dominant is really annoying for things. Open handed drumming is pretty much the only exception i came across so far)
@inkeye14 жыл бұрын
I started playing full lefty when I picked up the drums. Then I started getting problems in my left foot as Home Steinweiss did with his right. So I switched my kit to a righty set up and have gone open-handed. I am still learning to get around the kit this way. I didn't realize how many drummers were actually open-handed.
@flamegamingx47173 жыл бұрын
I can only hit the Hi hat well with my left hand, Cannot find any other video with anybody who does/tries that. (I am right-handed, but not for drumming??) thanks for the video!