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Two Tricks to Play Better Solos

Nate Smith November 1, 2015

Nate Wood likes to compare practice to building a clay sculpture, and I got my first taste of what he means the last 3 weeks. In this lesson, I’ll give you a short version of the lesson I taught in the Asia clinics last month. I couldn’t have done this lesson a month ago, and I wouldn’t be able to do it again.

Anyway - Nate Wood. When you practice, he muses, it’s like adding a piece to a clay sculpture. It’s soft, so you can shape it. That’s practice. Then you need to fire it. That’s gigging, or playing in front of an audience.

My clinic run went predictably: the first clinic, in Hong Kong, started off rough as I was finding my stage legs. That sent me into a near-panic, causing me to steal away for early-morning practice sessions in Bangkok between speakers and masterminds at my business conference, and rework the presentation from the start. That paid off. Somehow, in front of nearly 35 people, including two of Thailand’s best drummers, I pulled it off.

By the time I got to Taipei, I could “jump around” within my prepared material. My sculpture had been fired. Two days later, back in Kaohsiung, I turned on the cameras and did it for the channel. That’s this lesson.

SEE IT HERE!

And for the comment thread this week, should I go to PASIC? It’s expensive and sudden, but...sunlight, and Mark. And John. Oooh choices. (Maybe I should wait for NAMM. Is that more my peeps’ pace?)

 

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How to Steal From Max Roach

Nate Smith October 25, 2015

Three weeks ago, before my Asia trip began, I put out the call on Instagram: what should I make my next jazz lesson about. Responses ran the gamut, from comping at fast tempos to...coordination. And I’m sorry to say this lesson is about none of those.

But I believe it will satisfy you, because it answers the spirit of many of the questions I get about jazz drumming: “if I’ve never played legit jazz drums before, where do I begin? And what’s authentic?”

Well, it doesn’t get much more authentic than Mr. Roach. Anyway, the lick I cover in this lesson was inspired by Max, but I’ve heard Philly Joe and Jimmy Cobb play it as well. As well they should: it’s just a combination of two extremely simple rudiments. Which is sort of my point: jazz isn’t necessarily a whole different vocabulary. It’s familiar things, just in a slightly different context.

In this lesson, I expand on the ways Max used this lick, then I show you how I would use it in “modern” playing. (Though I’m sure there are those who will say “Max was modern!” and in one very important sense they’re right.)

Anyway, you’re probably here for the transcription.

GIT IT!!

And for the comment thread this week, another “selfish” one - what’s your favorite thing to do on a long flight, and what do you most look forward to when visiting New York? (I’m going to need both in two short days;) (You can also comment about drums or the lesson;)

 

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What I Really Think About Hand Technique

Nate Smith October 18, 2015

It’s been a few weeks since I waded headlong into a controversy, so I figured “what the hey?”

Maybe even more than foot technique, hand technique is the subject of debate, orthodoxies, and sacred cows. Fingers or wrists? French or German? Bounced or articulated?

At various stages in my life I’ve studied all of those approaches, and the technique I use now differs from all of them in two respects. First, it’s not a fixed approach, but rather an adaptive one. It can look like French grip with a thumb-index-finger fulcrum at times. It can look like German grip with the fulcrum in the back fingers at others. Second, it’s not a left-brain, top-down approach, but rather a backward-justification of what “feels right”.

In this video I cover the primary things a good technique is supposed to do for you and 3-dimensional spectrum of possibilities techniques can fall into. Then I share the one secret that’s responsible for most of my “success” taming the hand-technique beast.

And for the comment thread this week, I’m again inviting drama. Have you had a hand technique issue you’ve solved. How?

 

10 Comments

JP Bouvet, Purdie Shuffles, and Hertas

Nate Smith October 12, 2015

Whoever says I only cover famous drummers, and I that should do more lessons about how to play like yourself, is flattering me unnecessarily. I’m waaaaaaay too lazy to transcribe a new drum solo every week. Thus, most of the “non-famous-drummer” lessons have to be about just that.

Besides, I still want the core message of my channel to be “you can sound like a better version of yourself by borrowing/stealing from your heroes, then learning a superior Operating System to get their...vibe...into yours. Quite often, after I study a drummer to make a lesson about him/her, there are a few weeks of extra stuff he/she inspires, and not to make a lesson about that would be selling you guys short.

So, while this lesson isn’t directly transcribed from JP Bouvet, it is inspired by him. Two weeks ago, when I filmed this, I had just learned that indeed I’d have the privilege of performing for a room of enthusiastic drummers in Thailand, and was in a wild-eyed panic now that I had to figure out something to talk about. As such I binge watched a bunch of Real drum clinicians, and, quite frankly, JP stood out because he was the best.

If you’re worried, however, that this week’s lesson will “spoil the surprise”, don’t. After getting inspiration from JP, I took a different direction, exploring two seemingly unrelated subjects (though you’ll see that they’re actually quite closely related;)

I WANT MINE!

And for the comment thread this week, I’m opening a Pandora’s Box, so Be Honest, but Be Nice;) Is there a subject you feel I’ve covered so much it’s like “alRIGHT already with the…”? Is there one that you’re just praying I’ll get to, only to be cruelly disappointed each week? (That Rat Bastard. Never again. NEVER again…”) ;) Let me know!

 

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The 8020 Drummer

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