
JAZZ DRUM LICK No. 3
Hey Drummers,
Welcome to this video blog which demonstrates a jazz drum lick that you can throw into your jazz drumming. It’s a short, simple pattern that will hopefully inspire some new ideas that you can use to improve your drumming, thus becoming a better drummer, and a better all round human being, which in turn makes the world a better place to be!
Watch the video below and download the FREE sheet music HERE. Check out past blogs such as the JAZZ LICK NO. 1, and the JAZZ LICK NO.2. If you are new to jazz drumming, you might also like to watch the BASIC JAZZ PATTERN.
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Hey Drummers,
Welcome to this lesson looking at a great funk drum fill. If you love drummers like David Garribaldi, Clyde Stubblefield, Jabo Starks, or Zigaboo Modeliste, to name but a few, then this kind of drum fill will help give you the ideas that really work in that funk context.
Short, sharp, clean notes, with those nice staccato accents are so effective and funky and that is what this drum fill is based upon.
Download the sheet music HERE and check out the video lesson below.
Have fun and I hope you find the fill useful.
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Hey Drummers,
Welcome to this Seven Days drum lesson. Here we are looking at the drum beat on the classic Sting track ‘Seven Days’. This great song enjoys the masterful drumming of Vinnie Colaiuta and his clever groove in 5 that uses hi-hats accents to help thge listener feel the song more naturally than many other tracks in this time signature.
Download the sheet music HERE and watch the video below for a full explanantion of the groove.
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Hey Drummers,
I wanted to share this story which demonstrates the healing powers of drums and rhythm. This information is reproduced with the kind permission of Robert L. Friedman who wrote the book The healing power of the drum and runs the website www.drumming-event.com as well as www.stress-solutions.com. If interested in this aspect of drumming, visit his sites to find out more.
‘Dr. Connie Tomaino, DA, MT-BC, shares some of her work with Parkinson’s patients and rhythm.
“I once worked with a young person with Parkinson’s disease who had trouble initiating movement. I explored different rhythm patterns with him. We then made a cassette of different kinds of African drumming that he seemed to find very stimulating and helped him get moving. Anytime he had to walk across a street, whereas in the past he may freeze, he would put on his headphones and listen to African rhythms to get to the other side without freezing in the middle of rush hour traffic. We know that rhythmic cueing works because we have seen it clinically. The underlying mechanisms of how it works is what we are trying to understand better. Freezing in Parkinson’s disease is when the person can’t initiate movement and literally stops in his or her place. No matter how much he or she tries, he or she can’t move. It seems as if the person’s will has been removed. Even though the anticipation and desire is there, the patient’s body doesn’t respond to the signal.
“A man who was in our short-term rehabilitation program had a stroke, and he had a left side hemiparesis which means he wasn’t paralyzed, but he did lose sensation in the left side of the body. He was in our physical rehabilitation program and was going to be discharged to the community, but he was still shuffling his left leg and literally dragging it. His physical therapist felt he wouldn’t be safe walking outside without supervision. The optimal goal for him was to walk independently with a cane. They asked me if there was something we could recommend with music to help him feel his body so he could sway and lift his left side to get a sensation of lifting the leg even though he had limited feeling. I asked his physical therapist to measure his safe walking speed which was the same rhythm as one of Nat King Cole’s songs, “Walking My Baby Back Home.” I asked him a couple of times a week to walk comfortably to the song, but what he did was interesting. Instead of just walking to it, he did shuffle steps, moving backwards and forwards, almost as if he were dancing.
“He said he felt like, in listening to the music, he needed to move more, telling me he hasn’t danced since he was a kid. It appeared as if the memory of dancing was still there, and the body wanted to move that way.
“In less than two months he was able to lift his leg on the beat, absolutely coordinated in time. In fact, at the end of two months, he actually got the sensation back again so he could again feel the floor. Some might say this is normal recovery, but our guess is that because he was using his leg differently, activating a muscle memory for dancing, there was indication that there is a different motor schemata in the brain for different muscle activity. When you walk you use one, when you dance you use another since it incorporates tempo. Perhaps that kicked in. This is hypothetical. We know clinically that this ability exists. We are trying to prove it scientifically. In this case, the rhythm was more important than the melody, since it was the rhythm at the tempo at which he could walk that initiated the change. The melody helped him sing the song himself and helped him to self-integrate those rhythms.”
Drumming and Paralysis Arthur Hull, a well-known drum circle facilitator, describes an experience involving a woman who used drumming to regain motor function after she was paralyzed.
“I did a program in Mill Valley in a hospital once, and a lady came up to me and told me this story: She had been involved in an accident that paralyzed her. The doctors gave her almost no hope of regaining any movement in her body from her waist down and told her that she had to acknowledge this limitation and live with it. She decided not to. She had upper body movement, and she started playing doumbeks, talking drums and bongos. Because she was a dancer, she didn’t think she could live if she couldn’t move her legs. She started imagining and moving her body from her prone position, any movement she could manage while she played the drum with her upper torso. She called it “micro muscle movement dancing.” Slowly but surely, larger and larger movements occurred to the point that she could wiggle her toes, then move her body, until finally she could sit in a chair and play larger drums. After four years of constant drumming and dancing in this way, she became a dancer again, though now she is a drumming dancer or a dancing drummer depending on her mood. She now has full movement of her body, and she is graceful and beautiful.”
The Drum-So Powerful, Yet So SimpleI can honestly say that I never bring drums and people together without several people coming up to me afterwards, expressing wonder, excitement, and even euphoria. The credit belongs to the drum, the magical, sacred drum, which has the extraordinary power to touch something deep and powerful within all. It awakens an aspect of ourselves that lies dormant until it hears an ancient calling through the rhythms of this healing vehicle. These sounds awaken our spirits and speak to our most primal and truest selves.
The drum touches that part of us that knows nothing of cell phones, faxes and deadlines. This part of us to which the drum speaks knows only inner peace, self-expression, and that which is our very basic life force. Drumming creates an island in time, where all else is shut out except the rhythms that issue forth from your fingertips at your pace, expressing your feelings at that present moment. Is it any wonder our souls hunger for it? The only wonder is that a need so vital could be supplied by a vehicle so simple-the drum.’
This information is reproduced with the kind permission of Robert L. Friedman who wrote the book The healing power of the drum and runs the website www.drumming-event.com as well as www.stress-solutions.com. If interested in this aspect of drumming, visit his sites to find out more.
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AIN’T NOBODY DRUM BEAT - JOHN J.R. ROBINSON

Hey Drummers,
Following on the series of classic grooves (check out previous posts for SMELLS LIKE TEEN SPIRIT, LATE IN THE EVENING, CHAMELEON, FIFTY WAYS TO LEAVE YOUR LOVER , we are today looking at a groove my session drumming legend Jonh J.R. Robinson, a prolific recording drummer, proven with a glance at his extensive C.V. The main aspect that draws me to J.R.’s drumming is the flawless execution of his grooves as heard on tracks from Michael Jackson’s ‘Off the wall’ album as well as the track Ain’t Nobody from Rufus and Chaka Khan’s 1983 album ‘Stompin’ at the Savoy’.
Here we are looking at the Ain’t nobody drum beat. A commercially successful track and one with a very strong vocal hook, it doesn’t immediately grab the listener as a great drumming track. But that is part of the skill that J.R. possesses in my view. The ability to play complex parts that sit perfectly in the track and support the song rather than detract from it. There is a reason that J.R. is called upon by so many top artists!
And this example is one of those tracks that soun ds innocent enough to the casual listener, but upon closer inspection, is actually a cleverly constructed drum part and by no means the easiest to execute.
Download the sheet music HERE. And watch the video tutorial below to see how the grooves are constructed.
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DRUM WARM UP
Hey Drummers,
Many drummers prepare for their drumming performance with a pint of beer and a cigarette before they climb on stage and demonstrate a gruelling two hour set, exerting great physical effort and putting significant strain on their body.
This might seem satisfactory for some more gentle styles of music but in general, playing the drum set is a very physical activity and to enable optimum performance, as well as playing longevity, it would be a good idea to fore-go alcoholic or nicotine nerve calmers and instead consider a drumming warm up routine
Why Warm Up?
There are two main reasons here. One is performance related and one is health related.
Health
You wouldn’t take on a 100 metre sprint with cold muscles and just a pint of beer for lubrication. You would soon find pulled muscles, sprained joints and torn tendons appearing in your life.
Some well known drummers tell us they don’t warm up or practice. My advice is to avoid buying into this just because it suits the lazy part of your personality. The guys that really don’t warm up are outnumbered by the more sensible guys that do warm up, and they also risk injury and poor performance. Warming up prepares your body for action, and this is especially necessary if you are playing regularly, such as on a tour. The need for such preparation becomes even more necessary as you age so it is good to get into good habits from the start.
Performance
To use the sprint analogy again, an unprepared sprinter would only get in to optimum running speed by the end of the race (if at all), by which time his competitors would have finished and beaten him.
Although music shouldn’t generally be looked upon as a competition, the desire to perform at your best from the start of the performance to the end should be paramount. Don’t use the first three or four numbers of your set to warm into the show. Come out and start on all cylinders from the first number. Your warming up should occur backstage, not in front of the audience. They have come to watch a professional show and that is what you should deliver from the first note.
HOW TO WARM UP
There is no definitive warm up routine, and every drummer will have a different regime that works for him/her on both a physical and mental level to prepare them for performance.
The main thing is to get the blood moving to all the relevant muscles, oxygenating them and getting them supple and ready to endure the forces that will be applied to them through drumming.
Whatever exercises work for you, it is important to stay tension free. I used to try cramming a warm up into about two minutes so I would be forcing my hands to play at very fast tempos before they were warmed up. I would also find that, as a result, I was very tense whilst doing this and was holding my breath. Exactly what the warm up should be avoiding!
As soon as I realised my error, I decided to allow enough time to warm up. This in turn allowed the process to be relaxed. I was able to concentrate on slow steady breathing as I begun to play at a slow tempo. As my muscles warmed up, I found that the speed naturally increased. I also found that whereas my limbs didn’t feel ‘together’ at first, after a sensible, slow warm up, the limbs soon locked in together which boosted my confidence and left me feeling excited about performing.
WARM UP EXERCISES
Here are several ideas that you could use to warm up. The time spent on a warm up is down to individual taste but anything from 15-30 minutes should suffice.
It is advisable to start slowly, working through some basic rudimental exercises such as flams, paradiddles , single stroke rolls and double stroke rolls. As you start to loosen up, begin to vary the speed and dynamics. Use a variety of strokes to work your wrists, fingers and forearms. Basically, make sure you are working all the areas that will be involved during the gig.
You could also try stickings such as:
RRL RRL RRL RRL
LLR LLR LLR LLR
RRRL RRRL RRRL RRRL
LLLR LLLR LLLR LLLR
After several minutes, mirror these exercises with the feet. A bass drum practice pad with a bass pedal attached is a great tool such as the Pearl BD-10 or the DW Steve Smith Backstage Kick.
Once the feet and arms have been warmed up, try the hands and feet simultaneously to align all your limbs and get them working together as one.
Often these rudiment based exercises are great for warming up but sometimes you may feel put off by their non-musical nature. I too have found this but rather than not warm up at all, I have found that just playing something creative on my practice pad works just as well. I might get a little groove going and start tapping my feet on the floor to get all four limbs going. Now it doesn’t feel like warming up or practising. It just feels like playing for fun. The end result has always been the same; at the end my muscles are warmed up and I’m ready to play the drums.
Through the sport I have enjoyed in my life, I have learned that cold stretching isn’t effective for me and so I will always warm up the muscles first. I have taken this through to drumming as well and therefore, once I have sufficiently warmed the muscles up, and I feel supple, I will then to a few basic stretches. The result for me is that I feel very loose, relaxed and ready to perform at my best.
TIPS
- Allow enough time before the show for a proper warm up.
- Stay relaxed and breathe
- Build Slowly
- Work hands and feet
- Stretch the muscles too
- Stay hydrated
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LATE IN THE EVENING – STEVE GADD
Hey Drummers,
Here we are looking at the classic drum pattern from ‘Late in the evening’ by Paul Simon with the mighty Steve Gadd on drums. So far in this series we have looked at FIFTY WAYS TO LEAVE YOUR LOVE, SMELLS LIKE TEEN SPIRIT and CHAMELEON, so it may surprise you that we are already returning to a Gadd/Simon collaboration. BUT, my view is that you can never spend too much time examining the Gadd grooves so lets get on with it.
The ‘Late in the evening’ drum groove is based upon the Mozambique pattern so it’s necessary to get to grips with that single element before adding the other limbs. Once you’ve gone through each stage and have the whole beat together, you will no doubt find it to be one of those great patterns to play, that just flows and feels as good as it sounds.
Download the sheet music HERE. Watch the video below, and go to the original album and check out the man himself playing this pattern on the 1980 offering ‘One trick pony’.
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CHAMELEON DRUM BEAT – HARVEY MASON – HERBIE HANCOCK

Hey Drummers,
SO far in this series we’ve checked out the drum beats from SMELLS LIKE TEEN SPIRIT, and FIFTY WAYS TO LEAVE YOUR LOVER. Well, continuing with the classic drum beats series, today we are looking at a super funky groove from the track Chameleon played by Harvey Mason on the 1973 Herbie Hancock Headhunters album. The track is around 15 minutes long and this drum pattern dominates a majority of that track, starting quite slowly and building as the excitement of the music develops. Watch out for some interesting phrasing in the middle of the track as well when the band all hit stabs that’ll leave you confused and out of time unless you count through it carefully.
Just like the SMELLS LIKE TEEN SPIRIT groove, it is not particularly difficult, being based on the basic 8 beat that all rock, pop, and funk drummers are familiar with. But to spice things up and give it that funky edge, Mason has included some 16th note (semiquaver) bass drum and snare notes to create a very syncopated pattern that works well with the iconic bass riff.
This beat is great fun to play, and very usable in loads of other music so take your time to learn it accurately and it’ll give you loads of pleasure when you can pull this groove out of the bag and watch the crowd unable to resist dancing.
Download the FREE sheet music HERE.
Have fun!
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SMELLS LIKE TEEN SPIRIT DRUM BEAT- DAVE GROHL -NIRVANA

Hey Drummers,
Last week we looked at the classic drum beat from the Paul Simon track FIFTY WAYS TO LEAVE YOUR LOVER with the almighty Steve Gadd on drums. Continuing with this series of classic beats, this week we are looking at a groove performed by a little known drummer known as Dave Grohl. You probably haven’t heard of him as he’s up and coming. Despite being over 20 years old, this track still sounds fresh to me and the drumming from the album ‘Nevermind’, from which this track is taken, still inspires drummers today.
This is a very powerful drum beat with quarter note hi-hats powering it along whilst the busier bass and snare notes have more of a funk feel but played with the power and intensity that definitely place them in the rock camp. Download the sheet music HERE. Although we are only looking at the intro/chorus groove to the track here, the verse pattern is much simpler and beyond that there are just a few fills.
Have fun learning it and I’m sure once you know it, you’ll find yourself using it in many other situations as well, becuase it is a very versatile and effective pattern.
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FIFTY WAYS TO LEAVE YOUR LOVER – DRUM BEAT – STEVE GADD

Hey Drummers,
The video below takes a look at the classic drum beat created by Steve Gadd for the Paul Simon track ‘Fifty ways to leave your lover’. Gadd approached this song in a very unusual way, the result being a very unusual beat that not only sounds great in the track, but is also great fun to play.
This is a good work out for your four limb independaence as Gadd makes use of the hi-hat foot pedal to help create such an interesting sound.
Fifty ways to leave your lover is often remembered by this fantastic drum beat so watch the video below if you want help learning to play it. There is also sheet music to download HERE.
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