Thanks to all that have joined my Patreon in the first 24 hrs! You can still join here (plus a special deal running until May 31): www.patreon.com/shawncrowder
@TylerStewardTV4 жыл бұрын
I'm a lefty and I attempted drums a few times as a teen but gave up when everyone was telling me to cross my hands. I smiled when you were discussing the benefits of playing open handed and I might just have to give it another go! I love playing cajon and programming drums it would be a shame to never learn. Thanks Shaun :)
@onesyphorus4 жыл бұрын
I write with my left hand and I was confused why I had to cross hands... well... looks like I'll do thst as well!
@onesyphorus4 жыл бұрын
also we don't cross our legs while playing lol
@camilofuentes70564 жыл бұрын
Im also lefty and the whole hand-crossing thing seems pointles from this perspective
@tobyzapruder43644 жыл бұрын
I play drums and I play crossed but I don’t really have any strong feelings of playing crossed or uncrossed. The part where you said you might want to try again. Definitely do. It’s a lot of fun and it’s a good challenge.
@mojotex3574 жыл бұрын
Dude play what makes you comfortable. They probably almost stopped you from being one of the greats. Buy a cheap kit and tune it real well. You got this!
@ninrey194 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad that somebody finbaly admits that practice can be boring sometimes. I always here that I should relish my time in the shed and yes their are times when I'm loving the exercises, and they are like food for your soul. Or you love the tune your working on and your making good progress. but that common saying really makes me feel guilty sometimes and have thought like," maybe I'm not meant to be a musician." But sometimes it can just be drag and I'm glad that somebody else feels that way.
@code_monkey_steve4 жыл бұрын
I suspect Adam would have an even harder time playing bass left-handed.
@VocasoGK4 жыл бұрын
@@BB.156 or better yet, just rearrange your fingers.
@vaughanxaviermusic4 жыл бұрын
@@VocasoGK have you played bass before? Some people okay a right handed bass left with low strings on the bottom but generally you need a left handed bass
@boblobgobstopper132144 жыл бұрын
Vaughan Xavier he said “rearrange your fingers”, he’s making a joke
@christopheroliver1484 жыл бұрын
@@BB.156 Tell that to Mononeon.
@isaiahedwards81934 жыл бұрын
@@BB.156 You can just string it up backwards. It'll be awkward, but it'll do in a pinch.
@nickmerritt91024 жыл бұрын
Geez, goes to show how well you know the instrument. I’m surprised you didn’t talk more about the pedals though because I feel like that would be the biggest change.
@ShawnCrowder4 жыл бұрын
yeah, that was the hardest part. that and fills!
@nickmerritt91024 жыл бұрын
Shawn Crowder I bet, and keep up the great content. I feel like other than more cooperate sites like drumeo there just isn’t enough content on the drums like this 👍🏻
@kalbaniskickdrum3 жыл бұрын
@@ShawnCrowder my life, as I know it, when I am not on my own kit.
@simondanielssonmusic4 жыл бұрын
I'm not even a drummer but I love your videos! :)
@A_VELO4 жыл бұрын
Same
@ignacioalvarezcorona894 жыл бұрын
same, but as a bass player I love this content for that rhythm component
@saulo43024 жыл бұрын
Yeah, same
@ethanmorrow42414 жыл бұрын
Same
@RCSchult1127554 жыл бұрын
Left hand drummer here. I've always played a left handed kit and still do. I used to play cross handed. For the last 20 years I'v been playing open handed. Conclusion: Whether you're a lefty or righty, open handed does make much more sense. Movement on the kit is much more natural and easier and the whole kit is just so much more accessible.
@andrewlucius97944 жыл бұрын
I've noticed that drummers who started out on piano and are right-handed, they play the kit in a right-handed set up, but play the hi-hats with their left hand. For a right-handed drummer learning piano, the bass and tempo move in the left hand, which is what the right side does on drums. I've noticed since I've been playing piano, my ability to play things left-handed on drums has improved. It's crazy how the brain works and that different instruments bring out both sides of that in our bodies. Love this video!
@NotSilasPipson4 жыл бұрын
That's it man, you've sold me. The New Breed is shipping to my door as we speak, and my open-handed extravaganza begins this evening after work. Thanks for the inspiration!
@qqkk55814 жыл бұрын
Since I was a teenager I've always had 2 drum-sets set up - 1 left handed and another right handed. Then in my late 20's I set up a double bass set with a hi hat mounted to each side of the bass drums. Today (almost 60), I only keep one single bass drum-set set up but I continue to experiment from left to right. I strongly encourage you to continue on with your experimentation - it will definitely improve your abilities. Incidentally, it took me well over a year to master the left handed set - the hi hat is always everyone's biggest obstacle.
@rnm7234 жыл бұрын
Switched to open hand playing and I'm never looking back at all. I stuck to that, cause it expanded my playing. The more I stick to it the more I feel how the left side is catching up with the right side.
@Coastfog2 жыл бұрын
Nothing more humbling than getting way out of your comfort zone on the drums and being shot back to virtually square one in some aspects. But the lessons you learn and rewards you can reap are oh so sweet...
@squeekywheelmc67364 жыл бұрын
Like some others here, I am lefty but originally learned to play righty as a kid as a result of influences from my teachers and doing marching band which forced me to lead righty to match everyone else's sticking. Then in my late 20's I decided to switch to open hand (left hand lead) but never flipped the pedals. That also took a fairly long time and there were lots of things I never really learned to do well that way. I play double pedal too but not very well and never managed to develop my left foot very well. I really liked this video as it is interesting to see someone way beyond my playing level is a true righty flip everything just for the challenge. It was definitely an inspiration although it also reminds me that the one of the main differences between the pros and me is that they practice a lot and I don't. That's life though! Thanks Shawn!
@deanroddey28814 жыл бұрын
I'm just starting, having gotten a kit a few weeks ago. After a couple weeks I made the deliberate decision to go lefty style. I think it's a superior configuration and, if you are just starting out, it doesn't really make that much difference either way, and whichever way you move forward with will become completely natural to you. So I'm going to go that direction. On the guitar (which I've played for many decades) a while back I decided to just go strictly finger oriented on the right hand, and not use a pick. While these types of things may make it a lot harder to play in the local bar band, they will probably tend to help you develop a sound that's more your own.
@RobAbfallDrums2 жыл бұрын
I have been playing lefty with my feet for years brought on my an injury, and I recently purchased some mini 10" Istanbul hats and a remote hi hat pedal and wow! I know what you are talking about.... I suck! I can't play that way but I am going to give it a shot for fun! Thanks for the uplifting video!
@AidanMmusic964 жыл бұрын
Really great stuff Shawn! I've been considering trying the same, or trying the Harry Miree-style completely ambidextrous setup. Currently on a pad with it, as rearranging my kit in the tiny space it's in could be interesting!
@j.d.72084 жыл бұрын
I have being this a long time now so glad some had the resources to share it , arguably the most aggravating/ gratifying drum lessons I ever had and you really explained this very well great job
@MeowfaceMusic4 жыл бұрын
6:49 Yes! I've also melted my brain a few times on a lefty kit, and yeah, some of those resulting grooves are ones I'd never have thought to play back on the righty. Haha, if you hope to stick with it, just set up an entire righty+lefty kit (a righty and lefty kit combine, each sharing the same hi-hat. Half-spin yourself over to the lefty kit mid song without whacking your right shin on the snare 🤪).
@kalbaniskickdrum3 жыл бұрын
Lefty drummer here, checking in after scouring the internet for lefty drumming.Thanks for exploring our side of the drumming universe. I see a HUGE opportunity. I think I should really consider expanding my youtube channel to cover left handed drumming, there is definitely an audience out there.
@Henry-uv9xu4 жыл бұрын
Snare drum sounds incredible!
@Dsullivann4 жыл бұрын
I have a friend who plays lefty, after playing for 15 years it's a real humbling experience to sit on an opposite kit, it's like starting all over again. Kudos for taking up the challenge!
@fishysquidman56894 жыл бұрын
I'm a left handed drummer who's played on a right-handed kit for their whole life (not open-handed). When I started out leading with my right was nearly impossible for me so I just led with my left. After a while that didn't work well for me so I started working on leading with my right. It's been around two years since that and while my left hand is definitely still stronger, leading with my right feels just as if not more natural than leading with my left.
@campbellvonjordan684 жыл бұрын
Hitting the studio with one of my bands soon, but I will definitely be trying this afterward!
@MatheusLeston4 жыл бұрын
Ok, right now, as I'm watching this video, there are 1k thumbs up and 0 thumbs down. NEVER seen that on KZbin! That's pretty accurate, amazing video, man!
@JaySuryavanshiMusic4 жыл бұрын
I am a pianist and I love all your videos, Shawn ! All of your videos teach me a lot even though I don’t play drums! 🙏🏼Thank you! 🙏🏼
@AbsoluteMalarkey4 жыл бұрын
Picked up drums a couple years ago and after watching a vid from Harry Miree, I switched from cross/righty to open/lefty. Since I was new to the instrument, switching between was fairly easy and I got comfortable with the kit set up both ways. Enjoyed the vid as always!
@YuNo2324 жыл бұрын
I'm left-handed and recently started to play drums. First on a regular standard layout and I noticed that I have severe problems on this kind of setup. Right hand for the hi-hat and left hand for the snare was totally fine for me but kicking with the right foot was something my brai couldn't comprehend since I'm a die hard lefty on everything I do. Starting a roll with the right hand was impossible and starting it with left gets my hands in their way eventually when moving from tom to tom... So I decided to rebuild the kit into a left-handed version and oh wow... it feels so much more natural to kick with left and be able to use the left as dominant hand when starting rolls or fills... But there was stll one odd thing. For me, it feels way more natural to play open-handed for unknown reasons so far. I took a drum teacher online for the last 3 months and he always shakes his head about my playstyle but somehow finds it interesting and cool looking. So far it doesn't hold me back on my drum progress and that could be a good sign that, what feels natural to you in the first moment, is the right way to go. And after 3 months of drumming being able to pull of "SOAD - Revenga" and "Genesis - Turn it on again" as the first songs to play is even more impressing to my drum teacher than to myself. Sry about the brag. I just can't believe how natural drumming feels after being a guitarist for almost 20 years.
@rapscallion524 жыл бұрын
It's been on my mind to try this, the biggest reason is seeing the creativity that comes from left handed drummers who play righty kits.
@code_monkey_steve4 жыл бұрын
I strongly recommend getting a cable hi-hat and mounting it just behind the snare, that way you can play open-handed while leading with either hand. I also rearranged my kit so that it's roughly symmetrical, with one of everything for each hand, so I can play left- and right-handed at the same time. Did wonders for my ambidexterity, and lets me use my left hand so much more, now that it's not trapped under my right hand.
@rickmcguiredrums4184 жыл бұрын
Dude major respect for sticking with it for a whole month. I think more set players need to adopt the the drum line concept of “off the left”
@DrumHubTuition4 жыл бұрын
You're a nutter mate, big props for committing to this for a whole month. Super impressive man! 👊
@gibsongk4 жыл бұрын
So inspiring, I found your Japanese channel last December and through it started using Anki, came here to look for any Japanese updates and of course you are still doing insane brain challenges. Keep going.
@SerjBassist2 жыл бұрын
5:42 It's funny, as a natural lefty it also makes more sense to me to play guitar/bass as a righty. My dominant hand takes care of the fretting, which seems a more complex and precise duty than plucking/strumming.
@decemberagents14014 жыл бұрын
That's what I've been doing since I started drums in the 80's, so I'm right-handed, but I've never played right-handed ever. It has two benefits -- it works your weak hand, and it's consistent with other instruments like keyboards where the low pitches are on the left and they ascend rightwards (which means I'm less confused when I sequence drums from a MIDI keyboard). I think Terry Bozzio does the same thing, but I didn't find that out until after I'd already been doing it for awhile.
@joshuasy104 жыл бұрын
A once in a lifetime opportunity
@jedrekantkiewicz4 жыл бұрын
Thought about switching to a lefty kit for a few years now, maybe it is time to finally do it!
@dan20man3 жыл бұрын
Good luck to the drummer who is going to fill in for you in live gigs! Also one way to ensure that they hire you for live gigs... Smart!
@jayjay1drum1skate4 жыл бұрын
Doing the recording leftie was a bold move man! I think I’m going to do something similar but with open handed playing.
@pitchfolkmedia9164 жыл бұрын
You have inspired me to try this now. Years ago I broke my right (favored) hand. I had to learn to do everything with one hand... that clumsy left. After the healing process, I could easily learn and play patterns and styles that had seemed too difficult for me for years. We've all been taken out of our comfort zones in the past couple of months, and this is a great challenge for quarantine.
@bendjamin8084 жыл бұрын
I was just thinking of doing this! Great Video!
@G60syncro4 жыл бұрын
I'm a lefty and I often get to hang out with friend's bands and I get to sit in sometimes to jam with them. So I get some jam time playing reverse and I can say that doing a shuffle was a challenge at first, but it did open up a ton of fill ideas with being forced to play an awkward setup!!
@kevinfrom76224 жыл бұрын
The two drum teachers I've had are both left handed but play regularly. One of them just swapped his cymbals order to have the ride cymbal closer to his left side than right side, like some jazz drummers do with one up, one down. Interesting to watch!
@TheRealZoSo4 жыл бұрын
2:00 the Purdie shuffle! Trying to figure out what you were playing along to and there's SO many things it could be.
@faithisdumb6664 жыл бұрын
I did the same with my Pearl rhthym traveler for a few months at a time.It opens up a whole new world drumming wise
@bartoszdolewski49154 жыл бұрын
I did the same challenge! At the brining of May I just decided that I should play open handed after 13 years of playing the drums casual righty path. I feel pretty confident that I can fully switch to open handed drumming till the end of 2020 and play the "new me" at gigs in 2021 :) But hardest parts for me were the shuffle grooves, ghost notes with right hand and playing various combination of 3 16-th strokes on hi hat with left hand
@joldent53334 жыл бұрын
Your ‘once in a lifetime opportunity’ is my daily reality... great stuff man.
@davidmichaelsen98054 жыл бұрын
Love it.GREAT
@El_Suertero4 жыл бұрын
Bobby Jarzombek who plays open handed told in some interview (drumtalk podcast or something) that it took about 10 years for him to switch completely from cross handed (right hand dominant) position to open handed. Also I'm playing drums a bit myself and was playing open handed from first practice because it's more comfortably and gives me more freedom to run around a kit in different ways (i'm righty at life). Without moving and rearranging the kit, just lowered hi-hat down to snare because there is a lot of space for backswing for right hand to kick snare.
@IgorCecelja4 жыл бұрын
I started my first practice as lefty today and this video pops on my yt home page :) Feels so weird but great to work on left hand
@Apachecreator4 жыл бұрын
Absolutely true. Always keep it musical. I also get bored practicing the technical without melodies behind me. If I have good music to play with I can play for five hours straight without even noticing. I feel like many players are too focused on the technical and it shows when you see the beats and rolls people play. They’re all technical without melodic relevance to the song melodies. This is a cool concept. I’m going to try it.
@mojotex3574 жыл бұрын
Might have to try this when I get my new kit. Old one got stolen and it’s been a good year since I played.
@scorch8554 жыл бұрын
This video could not have come out at a better time for me. I've been staying with my parents for a bit during quarantine so I've only had a practice pad. What I've found in this time is that I'm actually much more comfortable playing lefty, but I had learned righty because that's how the kits I've used were always set up. I'm heading home tomorrow and the first thing I planned to to was rearrange my kit to be lefty, but now I'm considering trying to play open handed a bit first, before I try the full lefty kit. Perhaps I can get the best of both worlds. Thanks for sharing your journey and tips!
@spencerj4 жыл бұрын
I’ve been a left handed Drummer my whole life. It’s nice because it’s given me a convenient reason to avoid sharing my kit with someone if they are a hard hitter and are at risk of damaging my cymbals, snare, or drumheads. Conversely though, it’s also made it impossible for me to feel comfortable at sit down gigs like open mics and jazz sit ins. Knowing I won’t be playing gigs anytime soon, would you recommend I try and switch my kit around?
@BlueCrewSlackers4 жыл бұрын
Spencer Jessee as a lefty who’s used this excuse before, I can say that it’s invaluable to learn to play open handed on a righty kit, just moving the ride cymbal over atop your hats. Look at Carter Beauford and you’ll see what I mean. The only thing that really changes is your bass drum and hihat foot as leading underneath your right hand while going down the toms is the only other real obstacle I faced with trying it. Makes it hugely more easy to just hop on someone else’s kit and only have to move one thing which usually doesn’t annoy them anywhere near as much as suggesting a full resetting of their kit the other way round. Hope this helps 👍🏼
@jhowe55714 жыл бұрын
I'd recommend it, though I have no clout or influence in the music community. But, as a lefty (bass, guitar & drums) it would be valuable for a lefty drummer to practice right handed for the reason you cited. For a drummer, you can't take your drums everywhere and expect to be able to set them up when asked to sit in as a guest at another band's gig. As a lefty bass player, I can do that easily, by plugging my bass into their amp.
@kevinsmit964 жыл бұрын
This is like when you play a video game to 100% completion and get bored with it. So you start from the beginning on Extreme difficulty
@kalbaniskickdrum3 жыл бұрын
or run backwards to the start of a huge level.
@JoseCarlosDominguezMontoya4 жыл бұрын
I´ve tried this exercice recently. Hard, challenging but fun. Great patience dose needed ¡¡
@dortmunddrums98764 жыл бұрын
The question how much longer it would take to learn instruments both left and right would make for a nice video from Adam 😅
@noam2864 жыл бұрын
I did it with the electric guitar, took me 3 times faster to get to the same level the second time. (half a year of playing lefty got me to the same level of 1.5 years of playing righty)
@Henry-uv9xu4 жыл бұрын
I can’t play a right handed piano, only a leftie one.
@noam2864 жыл бұрын
@@Henry-uv9xu didn't know they exist
@dantemorris28744 жыл бұрын
I've been self teaching myself drums since september, and I've just been doing open handed because that's what Gene Hoglan does and he looks so comfortable doing it. Because of him I've always been really interested in it, it just seems free-er and more practical. The first thing that jumps out to me with it (as a right hander,) is hitting the snare with the right hand I get way more attack. Your video has me thinking that it'd be really neat having different muscle memory for each side. Kind of like when you try to write a song on a different instrument because you want to avoid your usual muscle memory choices, but instead you get to stay on your instrument. You could have left side and right side chops and switch whenever you get sick of them or feel stuck.
@patrickfarley80364 жыл бұрын
This is cool! I am lefty and I started out playing as a righty. I come from a very musical family and everyone is righty but me. I'm also the youngest of 6 kids. When I was 7 I got my first real drum kit and of course my dad set it up righty. Why not? Well I played that way for 5 years until my sisters boyfriends band mate and drummer asked if he could mess with my kit and of course I said sure! I was 12, he was 20 and a rock star and taking an interest in me? He'll yeah!😂😂😂 I sat behind my now backwards kit and I played like a m.f. (which is a real jazz term kids!)! I'm 59 now and though I have always chosen to play lefty, I have been forced to play righty when sitting in. The craziest thing is I am severely left footed! I really struggle getting my feet to do what they are supposed to on a righty kit, however, I play great jazz patterns on a righty kit but can't swing a jazz feel to save my life lefty. Even my right hand does way better ride patterns on a righty kit! It's okay though cause I'm not a jazz head. I actually don't like jazz. Dizzy, Miles, Monk, Bird, Parker and the like you can keep it! Some fusion I enjoy playing but bop, and Avant-garde stuff.... I'd rather go to sleep! So being able to jump in on any kit has been a great advantage through the years but I still prefer lefty. Now bass and guitar I can only play righty! So good luck to you on your quest. Im glad i found this video and I hope you fair better than me on your weak side developement! Stay safe! ✌
@PugCuber3 жыл бұрын
I’m lefty. I’m so glad you did this.
@whitest_kyle4 жыл бұрын
2:00 - Grapvine Fires by Death Cab?
@docevans5971 Жыл бұрын
Been doing this myself. I keep my set up right but switch hands on lead. More or less what Carter Beauford does. Ringo's sound was unique being he was left handed on a right handed kit.
@AvianSavara4 жыл бұрын
Funny, I always got a 'drumline'" feel from the way I see your drums set up in Sungazer videos!
@baptistewxpolpodcast33394 жыл бұрын
Now that's dedication!
@setitfree784 жыл бұрын
Your day 13 is maybe the most informative part of this video. We're all going to have that day 13 and finding a way to deal with it is what will further your progression. Amazing work brotha.
@duality4y4 жыл бұрын
i do not play drums but your videos have a lot of stuff and ideas that can be applied to other instruments
@isihernandez97524 жыл бұрын
I've being doing a similar thing for a while now. Not really changing my set to "lefty-settings" (just because I don't want to be constantly changing the setttings, if I ever get to have two kits in the same practice room, I'll probaly try it), but including some "lefty-mode" regularly in my practice time, playing open handed, but also playing my bass drum with my left foot (left side of my double pedal). Concerning my toms, I'm used to lead with both hands anyway, going down or up. After 30+ years playing the conventional cross handed way, I don't think I'll really get used to play comfortably open handed* or in complete "lefty-mode" (maybe some simple stuff, but nothing complicated), but I found that by including this on my regular practice, my independence and my control, as well as my double bass playing have improved hugely. So even if it is just taken as an exercice, I recommend everyone to try it, I think it worths it. * To be more accurate, we all play open handed when we play our ride cymbal or an auxiliary hats set by our dominant side, but you know what I mean. I have indeed an aux hats set and I think that an interesting future investement could be a remote stand for it.
@TheAwfulWaffle954 жыл бұрын
Always love hearing the Purdy Shuffle. Grapevine Fires perhaps?
@boarhead55734 жыл бұрын
Good stuff man! I always find myself loving to play on the Ride as a righty much more, because you can switch to Tom's and stuff. Should consider to this as well!
@uwu-nyaa4 жыл бұрын
FUCK yeah shawn this is that good mainstream clickable shit and then it delivers i love this
@shaggy44zebra4 жыл бұрын
Set up a kit that allows you to do both righty and lefty. Use remote hi hats alongside two bass drums, for instance. Then you can just be a switch-hitter, like Keith Moon.
@ARMYStrongHOOAH174 жыл бұрын
1:33 *dial up sounds in background* 🤣
@skel3370r4 жыл бұрын
so subtle and perfect
@Emma_Z14 жыл бұрын
Truly it's one of the best exercises a drummer can do. Playing open handed and ambidextrous is a game changing
@Emma_Z14 жыл бұрын
As a tip, I would recommend start doing daily and mundane thing with your left hand, it help me a lot
@ILikeWafflz4 жыл бұрын
Matías Pauer I starting doing that too. I haven't noticed a difference yet after more than a year, but I'm still doing it.
@jhung3886official4 жыл бұрын
Im left handed beginner drumer, thank you for this video😊😊😊
@nameloss4 жыл бұрын
i feel like you’d be able to utilize a bill bruford type set up really well given your progress at this! something to consider i guess
@turboallen4 жыл бұрын
I recently suffered an injury to my right leg, so for the next weeks I will be forced to work on both open and left handed drumming. I am having a great load of fun and also improving my non-dominant limbs playing! I recommend trying it out because it will force you to improve on both technique and timing. As an added bonus you get to open up new ways to apply different concepts and ideas without being bound to only your dominant hand and/or leg.
@afrodeusX4 жыл бұрын
I was going to ask a question about a "mirrored/hybrid lefty/righty kit" (idk if there is a proper name), but it was already mentioned. Phil DuBois did it amazingly for Revocation -- sort of, his kit leaned a little bit to the righty side. I think it would be cool to see it around here.
@mattstokes38814 жыл бұрын
I did this years ago. At the time I felt like it improved my balance. Probably wouldn't hurt to do it again!
@tresjordan9824 жыл бұрын
great idea,,,,, independence is key
@leroyeadon3784 жыл бұрын
I've enjoyed this video, and as an ex drummer (retired), I've been learning to play open handed as a challenge.
@crifox164 жыл бұрын
5:13 resonates with me being a lefty playing open handed on a righty kit. i can maybe see the logic of playing cross handed, but i feel like it doesn't hold up against playing open handed other than "it's the way everybody plays". being also an engineer myself (actually much more an engineer than a drummer :v) playing open handed allows me to keep my hats further away from the snare than usual, which reduces hat bleed into the snare mic quite a bit
@OogaB0oga4 жыл бұрын
As a left handed person who has been playing a 'regular' setup for all my life (my weak hand is actually my lead hand), I'm curious to see what forcing myself to play on an inverted kit will do to my playing. Gotta try this. Great video as always, keep it up!
@gnunezmusic4 жыл бұрын
This is great, man. It's funny how I just started today to read through a portion of David Garibaldi's book open handed and watching your process gives me ideas on how to approach open handed playing (or just balancing both sides? Thanks, Shawn!
@tomvesely40084 жыл бұрын
*cries in guitar* I'm not able to do this. Michael Angelo Batio however definitely applied the principle of balancing left and right. Anyhow, awesome playing as always, Shawn.
@DrGray_Drummer4 жыл бұрын
That's some amazing discipline. I lost feeling in my R foot from back surgery, and have wanted to, and was reccomend to learn to play L. Unlike you, i don't last 1/2 hour
@antonhillvall32574 жыл бұрын
I'm a lefty on a right handed kit, and I've been playing for almost 10 years at this point. And in my early years of playing, being self taught, all I did to practice was to just play along to my favourite songs. I've tried playing a lefty kit but I've just always felt more comfortable on a righty kit
@thomaswilder78584 жыл бұрын
I switched to lefty too so I could strengthen my left hand, and get better with independence. The biggest challenge I honestly just the big arm movements. It takes a second to get used to the pedals and my kick is so much weaker, but fills are hard not because of stick control but because my left arm is not used to moving from hihat to floor tom and back.
@JohnSearleFangirl4 жыл бұрын
I bet someone on Reddit somewhere has theorised a hybrid lefty/righty kit, that would be fun to see
@ShawnCrowder4 жыл бұрын
Mike Mangini and Travis Orbin are masters of that!
@JohnSearleFangirl4 жыл бұрын
I think I'll have to check it out
@SGDrummer74 жыл бұрын
Shawn Crowder Bill Bachman I believe had something similar, too. Inspired by marching tenors.
@SL-xy5pn4 жыл бұрын
Also check out Stanley Randolph in his DRUMEO appearance.
@crifox164 жыл бұрын
harry miree plays open handed righty on a lefty kit, check him out plus his vids are absolute gold
@HectorLFalu4 жыл бұрын
I'm a lefty and I actually learned how to play drums that way (crossed hands on the left side). My first drum teacher told me to focus a part of my practice on playing with the right side. I basically put it off the week after he told me (and I'm still going strong lol). In basically in any gig, drum activity, church service in which I play a house kit, I have two choices: 1) Change the kit to a lefty in 2.5 seconds or play open handed. Everytime I play in a kit that isn't my own, I always have to quickly change it to a lefty kit seconds before the beat drops. At this point, my hands are very good for right open handed drumming, but I can barely change the hi-hat foot to a bass drum-centric foot. I've been studying jazz for about 3 years and since my 2 and 4 is stuck in my right foot, mentally changing from the "open and free hi-hat" to the "timekeeping bass drum" is incredibly hard. I've been playing "inverted" drums (or whatever you like to call them) for a decade, and I haven't met a single lefty that plays with a left-side kit like I do, so it kind of makes me a bit nervous when I go to jam sessions and such, so it's great that right-handed drummers are experimenting with these types of ideas.
@SAINTKNICKOLE4 жыл бұрын
I just wanted to say you're not alone in being left-handed drummer, I'm here with you
@PeterCleff4 жыл бұрын
Really good video! Love seeing your process. Killed it! There's a pretty great video by Harry Miree on his method of open handed drumming that really blew my mind.
@evanbelcher4 жыл бұрын
Didn't even know drums had a handedness. Never touched a drumset in my life so I guess I just never considered it. Wish you had delved a little bit into which hand is in charge of what in right vs left-handed playing
@SkeledroMan4 жыл бұрын
mike mangini even has a symmetric kit. chain hi hat in the middle
@tubejtthomps4 жыл бұрын
Most drummers are right handed and in most popular styles traditionally play a steady pulse on cymbals with the right hand and play accents on the snare with the left. A hi hat for a right hander is set up for their left foot so the hands cross over like he talks about. I think like he says early on for drum students there's some pressure to do it this way because it's what everyone else does and there's an argument that the strong hand leading makes the time more consistent, but I think Shawn is arguing that there are advantages to spending time evening out which hand is dominant.
@simongunkel74574 жыл бұрын
The dominant hand usually does timekeeping, either on the hat or the ride. The dominant foot is on the bass drum. So this results in the crossing of hands since you have your hat where your other foot is able to control the pedal.
@DJKuroh4 жыл бұрын
@@simongunkel7457 thats why i switched to keyboard permanently. My dominant hand is right and my dominant foot is left... I never took the time to try to overcome that.
@Tachizuu4 жыл бұрын
@@DJKuroh put hihat on the right, play openhanded. simple :P
@theovergoat4 жыл бұрын
I think the reason right handed drummers cross over on the hi hat is because the hi hat is the time keeper in many common beats, and if your right hand is better than the left, it makes sense in that way... I still agree that it's a good idea to try and exercise both sides, and this coronavirus situation has given many drummers the opportunity to give this a go. I've been practicing my piano playing a lot more because I've been home more, and goddamn, the progress I've made is great!
@douglasbosso35604 жыл бұрын
I seriously injured my right hand in 2012 & relearned drums left hand lead with RF kick & LF hats. It stuck & that's how I play now.
@steviewonder49714 жыл бұрын
Amazing video
@foreignger13722 жыл бұрын
Thanks Bro!!!
@ambroulard4 жыл бұрын
Hey,, Super cool,, I too worked out of the Chester book a long time ago and I’m thinking I’ll pull it out again-- Also playing the kit backwards is something Lenny White worked on,, as I recall he did it for a whole YEAR!!!--- YIPES..
@jerrylehti72304 жыл бұрын
cool video, did you try playing traditional grip with the right hand ? it does work the muscles differently for sure
@VivinAnand4 жыл бұрын
When Shaun playing lefty is better than you could ever play normally...
@megyalilaballad4 жыл бұрын
Really enjoying your chops and background fusion jams (especially the video’s opening jam and end of video chops)! Got a few questions: 1. What are the songs in the video? 2. Where can I find them? 3. Do you have rudiments of the chops you practiced to the music? 4. What books can you recommend to read sheet music?
@ShawnCrowder4 жыл бұрын
hi and thanks. 1. all songs by my band Sungazer. first/last one is "Drunk" 2. everywhere online :) 3. not sure I understand the question, sorry. 4. any book is ok, just read a lot!
@megyalilaballad4 жыл бұрын
Shawn Crowder Thanks for the response, Shawn. Which regard to ‘3’ I meant: do you have or could you write transcriptions/sheet music of the rudiments you used when practicing/chopping-out?
@ShallieDragon4 жыл бұрын
Glad to see you're starting a patreon! That's awesome! Question, though: what was your thought process for deciding when you were ready to start a Patreon? Like, how did you know it was time?
@ozziep1234 жыл бұрын
@Shawn Crowder. So happy I came across this video. I want to make leading lefty my quarantine challenge as well. Do you think it was necessary to go "full lefty" (feet as well) in order to force a deep dive into left lead? Or if my ultimate goal is keep feet righty...should I keep my set up as is and only train open hands?