Rudiments?
Rudiments concentrate on smoothly executing rhythmical patterns of
varying complexity and challenge with strict timing. The point of doing
them is that your hand, arm and brain will recall the movement and acquire
'muscle memory'. [misnomer acknowledged]
Any
player of any instrument will rely on developing this in fine Tuning their
playing. The 'memory' is only acquired through repetition and is therefore best
achieved in a methodic and consistent manner. For most drum styles these types
of exercises reflect the every day rhythmical language hence the title
'rudiments'. You will find that you are doing many of these in your playing
already. The rudiments given here are largely drawn from snare drumming with up
and down replacing left and right. They are consistent with the way that many
forms of drumming are learned. Here are the official 26 snare rudiments
although there are hundreds of variations
Striking the drum
For the
purpose of practise, these exercises are given for the bottom end of the Tipper
only, i.e. they do not include the top end triplet. Where triplets are indicated
they are to be executed through hand speed using the bottom end only.
Progressing players of the top end style will find these useful in developing
their style and in understanding what they hear other players are
doing.
During practise, the player should strive to make unaccented strokes
to be of equal sound and volume, accents should also be consistent in sound and
volume.
Notation
The
notation of the strokes is very straightforward. Accents are given in some
examples however during practise you should try to work with accenting each
stroke in turn.
Practise strategy
- Slow practise =
fast progress
- Practising builds
stamina (& develops calusses)
- Practise
Rudiments, forwards, backwards, upside down, Inside Out and any other varistion
you can conceive of
- Try to practise to
a regular schedule - 10 minutes twice a day is better than 2 hrs in one weekly
session.
- Spend the first
few minutes warming up with single strokes and reviewing the last rudiments you
practised.
- A metronome is a very useful tool
to use when practising, it is very difficult to keep strict tempo as the
metronome will demonstrate.
- Make one stroke
per metronome beat to start off with. (thanks Craig :)
- The KEY to making
the most rapid progress is that the player should practise slowly but
with attention to each stroke being executed cleanly and with strict
timing.
- When the
player can execute the rudiment flawlessly at a given tempo 20 times in a row
then s/he can increase the tempo by 5bpm
|
|
Users' Comments  |
|
Average user rating
|
|
|