The 8020 Drummer

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Is All Drum Practice Created Equal? (Subscribers Only)

Nate Smith June 7, 2019

I wish somebody had told me about keyword research before I became the number 2 search result for “8020 principle drums”. A keyword with…let me check…ah…zero monthly searches.

I would have named my channel “How to Get Rich Playing Drums”, or “Best Practice Pad Reviews”.

(Sidebar: why does everybody think it’s the gear?)

But, alas, I planted my flag as defender of the 8020 Pareto Principle in music. Truly a tree falling in the woods.

So, it’s come to pass that it’s probably time to own the association.

The catalyst, as it often is, was a YouTube comment.

“Is your channel named after the Pareto Principle? Can you explain the origins?”

And, like a lemming unable to resist a good cliff dive, I took the bait.

What I’m saying is…prepare yourself for a pretty…academic lesson.

But, I’d argue, an important one.

Even early comments on the lesson demonstrate just how far off-the-mark many people’s understanding of practice is.

One guy essentially said “the 80/20 of practice is practice - beyond that it’s mostly academic”.

Another said “I’ve had more success with un-structured practice”, implying that I was somehow advocating rigid practice routines, when, in fact, I’m doing almost the opposite.

I love when the lesson itself is the best rebuttal to the comments on the lesson.

I’ll let you watch the video, and decide for yourself, but the question I try to resolve are:

  • Is there a such thing as “better” and “worse” practice?

  • If “yes”, is the difference between better and worse a matter of minor degrees, like height distribution, or “night and day”, as you see with economics or pea plants?

  • Finally, if there are better and worse things to practice, what are those better things

If you’re a wonk, and truly care about getting better faster, I think you’ll enjoy this one.

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How Good Are You? (Subscribers Only)

Nate Smith May 30, 2019

The story of how the Dunning Kreuger effect appeared on my radar is a circuitous one…

Before I even published the talent lesson, I had written “How to tell how good you are at drums” in an Evernote, along with all the other lessons I want to make this summer.

Sure - I thought maybe it would get clicks.

More importantly, I was fired up enough to have “interesting” things to say about it.

Even then, I’d started getting extremely strong opinions in my comments threads…

…and they almost always lead to YouTube channels with between zero and 2 videos.

Not judging at all. It’s great that these people put themselves-out-there, and I appreciate all constructive critiques.

Still, it was hard to ignore that all of the strongest opinions seemed to come from people with the least direct experience with the subject matter.

Two events brought it all home.

First, the Talent episode went live. And there were literally dozens of extremely strong opinion on the nature/nurture debate…

Second, I was discussing it with a friend with his own YouTube channel, asking if he’d received similar comments, and he said, “oh, definitely. Have you heard of the Dunning Kreuger Effect?”

I had. In passing. Probably on The Fighter and The Kid. But I hadn’t given it much thought.

Turns out, that strong opinion/little experience thing isn’t a coincidence. It’s a proven cognitive bias.

“Now we’re getting somewhere,” I thought.

I remembered my own history with the drums, and how I was probably most arrogant earlier in my drum “career”…

…and how time, and regular opportunities to get “schooled” had bloodied and beaten my ego into somewhat submission.

“I wonder if this is a thing with other drummers?” I thought.

Only one way to find out.

In today’s lesson, I speak about my past failures, Dunning Kreuger, and some practical ways to put ourselves more deeply in touch with how we really sound.

Hope you enjoy:)

1 Comment

Q&A 4 - Cheese Rudiments, What Are a Drumming, and More

Nate Smith May 3, 2019

This week's lesson is a long-overdue Q&A.

I've been subjecting everybody to my ideas week-after-week...

...but, every-so-often, I like to ask you what you'd like me to talk about.

I'll be honest - some of these questions were great jumping-off-points...

...and some were...a little bit silly. (Some were downright weird.)

Among other questions, in this lesson I answer:

-Best ways to set goals when practicing

-How to stop treating drums like a contest

-Do cheese rudiments work on the kit?

-What's the difference between Mohler and Push-Pull?

...and many more.

1 Comment

How to Get Jazz Drum Gigs in 2019 - Subscribers Only

Nate Smith April 26, 2019

If last week's lesson was controversial when I thought it wouldn't be...

...this week's lesson is garnering widespread agreement when I assumed there'd be controversy.

So what's everybody agreeing with? What did I think would be so "controversial"?

As the subject of this email suggests, this week I delve autobiographically into the challenges of Getting Jazz Gigs.

My own story, when it comes to getting gigs, is one of failure with the conventional means breeding success with the unconventional one.

As such, I can look back on my early years with humor and fondness, when, at the time, they were a daily stressor.

Many folks who've followed the channel can probably infer a lot about that story arc...

I'm obviously a jazz drummer.

I'm obviously not as skilled as Eric, Marcus, or Ari...

...and here I am, playing on the internet. Not too many dots to connect 😛

But in the lesson, I try to use my journey as the anchor point to examine some larger phenomena that were happening to the scene as I came up.

I mean - we lived through the death of the music industry as-we-knew-it, and the birth of the internet.

Who's really surprised it was f$%#d up? 

Anyway, I give you This Week's Lesson.

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The 8020 Drummer

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Stop practicing stuff that doesn't work. The 80/20 Drummer is dedicated to cutting through the BS, so you practice Only the important things. Save time, and start getting better.

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