Advanced bodhrán Rudiments & exercises Paul Marshall ©2005
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The
Paradiddle is a very common rudiment but is one that is difficult to execute
smoothly.With the exception of accented strokes sounding louder, it should sound
like eight strokes of even pace and strength.
The
version shown below commences with a downstroke, however you must also try
reversing it, starting with an upstroke or consider starting at any point in the
pattern.
Recommended tempii
90bpm -
Starting
120bpm -
progressing
240bpm+
- Professional or freak
The
double paradiddle is a version where the sticking is reversed every 6 beats.
It's fun
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Paradiddle-diddles (courtesy of Steve Brown)
Adapted from
the flam paradiddle-diddle, here is the bodhráni version. It's a little more
difficult because it mixes quarter and eighth notes.
The
paradiddle diddle is an extension of the paradiddle family. Here if I use the
pattern for striking practise it becomes a 6 beat jig pattern
I hadn't
gotten around to including this one yet until prompted by fellow bodhránii list
member and bones champion Steven Brown. Thanks Steve.
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The
following two triplet exercises are a bit of a 'head twist' but are very useful
in top end playing.
you may
choose to combine the two 4 beat patterns into an 8 beat pattern. To avoid three
contiguous strokes of the same type you may omit the final stroke
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Ruffs
are included in the advanced section because of the rested beats. This means
that the execution of the rudiment is 'discrete' i.e. doesn't flow immediately
into the next one. The difference between version 1 and version 2 is simply that
the up and down strokes are reversed. You should be equally accurate and fluid
with each version. You should work though accenting each beat.

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