Why Counting Improves Your Rhythm & Timing

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  • čas přidán 25. 09. 2019
  • Follow-up video answering counting-related questions: • How to count "unquanti...
    How does one best develop solid rhythm and timing? Counting out loud is the most powerful practice tool at our disposal. Counting does wonders for our timing, precision, and consistency. It's the key to mastering complex rhythms and playing accurate to the millisecond. To get the most out of your practicing, you need to be counting.
    A couple books for developing your counting skills:
    Rhythm Knowledge, Volume 1 & 2 - by Mike Mangini
    Universal Rhythms - by Dave Dicenso
    Support me on Patreon:
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Komentáře • 291

  • @ShawnCrowder
    @ShawnCrowder  Před 4 lety +47

    For those wanting to go deeper, I made a follow-up answering many questions from this video's comments here: czcams.com/video/4Bhj-qrB6Ao/video.html

  •  Před 4 lety +190

    As a guitarist mainly, I realize when playing with my band that internal timing is something us 6-strings fanatics never really train.. Thank you so much for sharing this method, I can already isolate a few scenarios where my timing fails!

    • @Elemy69
      @Elemy69 Před 3 lety +10

      I got the berklee book and that's one exercise they have you practice from the start. Count the measure while playing notes. It fucks with your brains but I can see the benefits already

    • @brturner
      @brturner Před 2 lety +4

      So true, I have good “feel” sometimes, but it’s all passive. And I feel guitar players are more privy to this because we are very “noodley” players (how many times have you just played pentatonic licks with the amp not even on, right?) and often, unless we are classical guitarists, aren’t that disciplined in our practice

    • @daredevil2724
      @daredevil2724 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Yea tried recording my riffs and i was so off time

  • @joshbuckwalter3293
    @joshbuckwalter3293 Před 4 lety +109

    I really wish you uploaded more :( I never miss a video of yours

  • @landendays
    @landendays Před měsícem +2

    THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU -- i've been playing for thousands of hours but my time is intermediate level at best, and I always felt like I was playing along to the music rather than driving the rhythm, which led to a lot of dragging. It wasn't obvious what specifically I needed to practice. But active time keeping and developing a perfect internal metronome is my new goal now. This video is gold

  • @nowtiming
    @nowtiming Před 4 lety +49

    Don't mumble! As soon as I noticed this in my practice and started "confidently counting" things were better.

  • @talkingbasslessons
    @talkingbasslessons Před 4 lety +20

    Pure gold!

  • @anthonythelopez
    @anthonythelopez Před 4 lety +78

    Man I’m getting that Adam Neely vibe hard but in a diff way that’s fresh! Awesome stuff Shaun!

  • @neeksquez
    @neeksquez Před 4 lety +59

    I’ve been recording myself without a met lately and listening back to the recording. I’ll put a met on top of the recording and I’ll change the tempo to follow when I rush or drag hearing the inconsistencies. After I watched this I tried counting the quarter note out loud during it, and it was far more consistent then previous times. Thanks for the great tip! I’ll definitely keep this up.

  • @DavidDiMuzio
    @DavidDiMuzio Před 4 lety +39

    Thank you for this incredibly valuable advice. I am going to take it to heart. From now on, counting it is!

  • @vitamin9165
    @vitamin9165 Před 4 lety +26

    I've heard this idea before, but this is a much more comprehensive and logical guide. Thanks

  • @GabrielPowerful
    @GabrielPowerful Před 4 lety +105

    I wanna see you counting Sequence Start or Drunk! That'd be sick 👌

    • @reidgowan2670
      @reidgowan2670 Před 4 lety +9

      Gabriel Power I’d love to see anyone try to count those dummy fast subdivisions articulately

    • @callumwilliams2172
      @callumwilliams2172 Před 4 lety +6

      Adam Neely explains it a little in his video about how to play in a drunk style about how rhythm was notated in drunk

  • @ronaldo.araujo
    @ronaldo.araujo Před 4 lety +7

    Timing is everything, even in pitch, that's a thing I learned on youtube

  • @thiagovieira4878
    @thiagovieira4878 Před 4 lety +7

    Keep up with those vids man! So refreshing

  • @elitedrumlessons6174
    @elitedrumlessons6174 Před měsícem +1

    I love when an 11 year old beginning drum student tells me that they can’t count and play at the same time, it’s just not possible! 😊

  • @brettnewmandrums
    @brettnewmandrums Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you Shawn for this incredible lesson!

  • @giannibadeau3344
    @giannibadeau3344 Před 3 lety

    I'm sure going to try that!! Great advice! Thank you

  • @stephenpenwolf
    @stephenpenwolf Před 3 lety

    Amazing how well this simple technique works... just what I needed - thank you for sharing your expertise!

  • @OddwicMusic
    @OddwicMusic Před 3 lety

    You are my absolute favorite drum teacher I have ever come across.
    You dont just show us what to do, but how to conceptualize the idea.

  • @thomasnaylor2162
    @thomasnaylor2162 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Timming and timming is every thing.thank you!

  • @njous1990
    @njous1990 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for explaining this on thought level.. was looking for this! :)

  • @matthieuchapeau
    @matthieuchapeau Před 4 lety

    Thank you, I will include those concepts in my practice routine 😀

  • @NoraMadonna
    @NoraMadonna Před 2 lety +3

    I've been looking at a TON of "improve your rhythm videos" but this, THIS, is the real advice. Actively keep the beat. Changes everything. Thank you so much for this!

  • @JasonLeonPike
    @JasonLeonPike Před rokem

    Excellent! Thank you.

  • @fredheadeded5358
    @fredheadeded5358 Před 4 lety

    I can definitely attest to the validity of this. It really forces you to lock in.

  • @blinkbeatbox4582
    @blinkbeatbox4582 Před 4 lety

    thats the best video about time keeping ive seen!

  • @Jolgeable
    @Jolgeable Před 4 lety

    You explain it so well!

  • @floralfire
    @floralfire Před 4 lety

    I love your videos! Keep up the good work very educational.

  • @tommygun88
    @tommygun88 Před 3 lety +3

    Wow, super helpful! I still kinda struggle with timing and slowing down. I have a tendency to rush and then over-compensate. Definitely going to continue incorporating this in my practice routines.

  • @euslipk
    @euslipk Před rokem

    Thank you so much this video really opened my world.

  • @eliasleverato9373
    @eliasleverato9373 Před rokem

    Yes. Man, you are the best. Such a great inspiration. Much Love

  • @alekzamonski1179
    @alekzamonski1179 Před 2 lety +3

    This is one of the best videos about rhythm I’ve seen in a long time. Love the Zappa reference but for real, this is something I’ve always known is a good thing but have ignored because it sucks. Especially when you’re not a drummer, but I’m gonna really work on my rhythm with this approach, thanks Shawn !!

  • @mattmusic188
    @mattmusic188 Před rokem

    hi shawn. thanks for sharing this. i had suspected that i need to go down that rabbit hole (counting to everything) but i wasnt convinced that it s the right approach. you have given me the confidence to go ahead! thank you 😊

  • @camilomateus
    @camilomateus Před rokem

    "You can hit the wrong thing at the right time, and it might work, musically" Absolutely true. This vid is a gem.

  • @yuriselukoff
    @yuriselukoff Před 2 lety +39

    Okay, I must say that at first I was pretty sceptical about this whole “counting out loud” idea. But now, having spent two months counting over EVERYTHING that I practice, my time-keeping has REALLY REALLY REALLY improved! And yes, adding the voice counting did force me to practice everything at least 20% (and for some exercises even 30%) slower at first. But within the two months I was able to get the speed back to the original level. Not only this whole experiment helped me improve my overall time-keeping, it also helped me keep the subdivision timing (or as Shawn calls it “microtiming”) more consistent.

    • @louiseanne830
      @louiseanne830 Před 4 měsíci

      Awesome this is motivating me to try it! Had never heard of this technique before :) can't wait to give it a shot ... I need to practice slower anyway :)

    • @louiseanne830
      @louiseanne830 Před 4 měsíci

      Awesome this is motivating me to try it! Had never heard of this technique before :) can't wait to give it a shot ... I need to practice slower anyway :)

    • @louiseanne830
      @louiseanne830 Před 4 měsíci

      Awesome this is motivating me to try it! Had never heard of this technique before :) can't wait to give it a shot ... I need to practice slower anyway :)

    • @louiseanne830
      @louiseanne830 Před 4 měsíci

      Awesome this is motivating me to try it! Had never heard of this technique before :) can't wait to give it a shot ... I need to practice slower anyway :)

    • @louiseanne830
      @louiseanne830 Před 4 měsíci

      Awesome this is motivating me to try it even more after watching the video! Thanks both. Had never heard of this technique before :) can't wait to give it a shot ... I need to practice slower anyway :)

  • @christianlevesque9017
    @christianlevesque9017 Před 3 lety

    best explanation I've found on this thanks !

  • @JGBDYT
    @JGBDYT Před 4 lety

    In 1 day with the new breed as a work support I already see improvements... Thanks a lot !!

  • @danmihaescu4687
    @danmihaescu4687 Před 4 lety

    Very helpful video! After 2 years of studying the flute, timing is still one of my main challenges. I will try to count in my head, I can already anticipate how this will help.

  • @user-nf6jl9cg1t
    @user-nf6jl9cg1t Před 2 lety

    Gonna apply this tomorrow thanks!

  • @co_iso
    @co_iso Před 4 lety +13

    this is super super important for piano pieces. if you're playing solo piano, it's easy to not have a sense of steady rhythm throughout, and counting really helps this. it becomes even worse when you're practising because while you naturally stay on beat on stage when you mess up, when you're practising you tend to go back and undo the mistake and lose complete track of rhythm. playing with a metronome helps, but I've found counting out loud to help more.
    P.S. great video as always Shawn, keep it up!
    P.P.S. more cowbell please

    • @evanbost3888
      @evanbost3888 Před 4 lety +4

      I second this big time. Piano being a part of the rhythm section, it's so important to internalize the pulse. I also find that in practice I don't tend to make it through a whole piece because as you mentioned any mistake or opportunity for embellishment takes me away from the pulse to correct the mistake or figure out the embellishment.

  • @mickeajax
    @mickeajax Před 4 lety +23

    The new breed by Gary Chester. Great book to learn how to incorporate the voice in your playing.

    • @coiLz0r911
      @coiLz0r911 Před 4 lety

      Well, just ordered it. Thanks for the tip!

    • @JGBDYT
      @JGBDYT Před 4 lety

      Yeah dude

  • @waltermontoya1508
    @waltermontoya1508 Před 3 lety

    I started doing this intuitively yesterday. I’m not a drummer but a songwriter. For me this helps me to find more interesting rhythm motifs that later becomes into hooks. Invaluable advice for any musician!

  • @willshakeyou
    @willshakeyou Před 4 lety +3

    I appreciate the contrast between how thorough and serious you are with your exposition of the material and how silly you act in the videos. It's dope, i like it :D

  • @dantelaw7759
    @dantelaw7759 Před 6 měsíci

    Wow, I'll be trying this immediately, thank you! I've been trying for years to improve my rhythm guitar, but have seemed to be on a plateau - I can't wait to try this new approach!

  • @darringodden7225
    @darringodden7225 Před rokem

    I know this must be done.
    So I am going to make myself do it.
    Thanks to you

  • @Josiah-ve6su
    @Josiah-ve6su Před 2 lety

    Great vid!

  • @YouriLigotmi
    @YouriLigotmi Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you for this mind opening video ! Counting over everything i'm playing is my next to goal, until now i relied on singing rhythms or Simply "feeling" the pulse, almost like dancing but by doing that i sometimes become "passive" and loose focus…

  • @BlackBearSixTV
    @BlackBearSixTV Před 3 lety

    Very worthwhile to learn from... thanks.

  • @ludens5129
    @ludens5129 Před rokem

    This helped me not just in playing music but also reading scores. I always got lost when reading a score while listening to the music, because a syncopation or suspension, or even fast tempo made me lose where the pulse was.

  • @FunkOsax
    @FunkOsax Před 4 lety

    You guys are on such a high level...... I'm a sax player (old), but came to this via Adam Neely's channel. This is great stuff, a really good insight, no matter what instrument you play. However, it made me realise just how bad I am at counting (I've been known to skip a beat). Now I'm searching for advice on counting, but aimed at those of us with an instrument stuck in our mouths.

  • @lifeontheledgerlines8394
    @lifeontheledgerlines8394 Před 4 lety +1

    Omg joining a drum corps is my dream! Great to see it featured here.

  • @benjaminholt6640
    @benjaminholt6640 Před 2 měsíci

    This is the best video on CZcams. Damn.

  • @daandezotte3323
    @daandezotte3323 Před 2 lety

    You're awesome! Thanx for the vid

  • @trojanhman8136
    @trojanhman8136 Před 2 lety

    Thank you very much for making this video. I was born without rhythm and now looking to learn guitar actually. looking over CZcams for someone to train this. I very much appreciate your advice.

  • @difquin
    @difquin Před 4 lety

    YAS! Counting rules supreme. Gotta remember to count more in practice. Thanks for the reminder Shawn! :)

    • @ErwinStoepman
      @ErwinStoepman Před 4 lety +1

      This comment made me listen to Coltrane's Love Supreme.

  • @gooball2005
    @gooball2005 Před 4 lety

    Very informative, thank you

  • @Andreas-yt9wv
    @Andreas-yt9wv Před 4 lety

    This was really cool!

  • @samwise2588
    @samwise2588 Před 4 lety

    Great advice, I know I need to do this more. It's similar to bassist Richard Bona, who often sings what he is playing, and I sometimes practice that. I think that his version is useful for gaining melodic understanding, knowing what note each note sounds like before you play it. This is a logical continuation of that sort of regiment. Excited to give it a go.

  • @minemoul2136
    @minemoul2136 Před 4 lety

    I watch videos about music all the time, but this one is quite groundbreaking. I value being a musician, not a robot. Many guitarists can blast out very fast riffs, but its just their fingers, not their brains. Gonna understand what im playing more, thanks!

  • @allenlights9994
    @allenlights9994 Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you shawn

  • @JohnKostarasskn
    @JohnKostarasskn Před 9 měsíci

    ohhhhhhhhhhhhhhh fine. Thanks for explaining this so well; I'll start counting. You've also answered a question I've been struggling to find an answer to: how to increase my freedom and confidence within a bar/beat/song etc. Peace.

  • @philipmacnaughton3454
    @philipmacnaughton3454 Před 3 lety

    Bruh I just found your videos like 2 days ago, I love

  • @timgawertdrums
    @timgawertdrums Před 4 lety

    Wow! This is a fantastic video

  • @MrArchie800
    @MrArchie800 Před 2 lety

    I play several instruments and do a bit of home songwriting, and although I can play to a decent standard my timing is a bit sloppy, and when I concentrate too hard on the metronome and timing I totally lose feel and groove. So I've just quickly tried this method by recording e-drums into cubase (the thing I struggle with the most) and STRAIGHT AWAY on first attempt without any practice I notice I am no longer over-concentrating on the metronome rather I am listening to my counting, which is obviously locked to the metronome. So as you say, I am now playing to my internal clock rather than something external. Such a simple thing yet this is pure gold and will make a huge difference to my playing for all instruments and recording (and blood pressure)! Thanks very much!!!!! If I ever meet you the beers are on me!

  • @ronniekonig6779
    @ronniekonig6779 Před 4 lety

    (I am not a drummer) It has always been very hard for me to play bass and sing at the same time. A long time ago, I realized, that not only I can't sing, but I can't even count (1,2,3,4,1...) why playing a bit more complex lines. Learning to count helped me with the singing a lot (now I can sing over bass lines, that were to me absolutely impossible before, but I still have a long way to go).
    All this is something, that nobody told me, I figured it on my own and I sort of thought, that's just in my case and everybody has his/her way of learning things. Now, when I see, that a professional recommends it highly, I will practice counting even more. Thanks for the video! Good stuff.

  • @anime5h_m1shr4
    @anime5h_m1shr4 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you so much for putting this video together. I play guitar in a band and rhythm is what has made me sound instantly musical in my journey so far.
    If my drummer, who likes playing by "feel", watches this video diligently, it would save my band so much of frustration and needless arguments.

  • @patrickselden5747
    @patrickselden5747 Před 3 lety

    Thanks, Shawn. ☝️😎

  • @kirjian
    @kirjian Před 4 lety +4

    Successfully doing a fill while counting feels x2 satisfying btw 👌

  • @naturligfunktion4232
    @naturligfunktion4232 Před 4 lety +1

    This video is great! Im a guitarist, which by nature is terrible at timing and keeping rhythm. However, I have this dope riff, and I need to record it proper, but I fail to keep the tempo. I feel bad. Then I see this. And I try. A month later and the recording sounds n i c e in tempo, real good. Counting is key, many thanks

  • @tonini1994
    @tonini1994 Před rokem

    Thanks a lot man, love u

  • @colindrakemusictactics9919

    Thanks for this! I'm sending it to all my students :) I think counting aloud is beneficial for other instruments such as guitar, bass, keyboards too

  • @mwhossaini
    @mwhossaini Před 7 měsíci

    As a pianist I found this video assuring. Thank you.

  • @pluutapus8663
    @pluutapus8663 Před 4 lety

    A really important lesson!

  • @ld654321
    @ld654321 Před 2 lety

    You’ve convinced me. Now counting out loud when practicing or sight-reading - and working on hearing an internal click-track. :-) (pianist, Berlin)

  • @zecalimazeca
    @zecalimazeca Před 2 lety

    GREAT VIDEO, THANKS AND HUGS FROM BRAZIL

  • @PlaybySoul
    @PlaybySoul Před 3 lety

    Awesome !!

  • @t4lkshow631
    @t4lkshow631 Před 3 lety

    GRE4T STUFF! Makes so much sense!

  • @7177YT
    @7177YT Před 4 lety

    love your stuff, more pls! (:

  • @garysnowdon1918
    @garysnowdon1918 Před rokem

    Great man,

  • @the_jfaull
    @the_jfaull Před 6 měsíci

    This is outstanding and essential info, just what I needed to hear to confirm my suspicions on the difficulty that I am experiencing. When I started to learn drums (6 years ago) I noticed immediately that when I started to count, especially when counting rests, I made mistakes. I would impulsively strike a note on the rest that I counted, and the groove would spiral down the drain from there. “Ok so relax…go slow… now go, 1e+a…BAM!” Again would hit a note on the rest that I counted. It’s impulsive and automatic. So I looked up ADHD and drumming because I was pretty convinced that my condition is causing the impulsivity. Did not find anything. So I progressed on without ever counting rests. But now it has become an obstacle.
    I tried your advice the other day while driving to work; I practiced counting and just imagined playing the bass note where it should land. When I started, it was a train-wreck, so it took more than an average amount of patience with myself, but by the time I gotten to work I had worked it out in my mind enough to believe that I can get better at it. Woohoo!

  • @IfunkY1
    @IfunkY1 Před 9 měsíci

    thank you!!!!

  • @MN-de
    @MN-de Před 4 lety

    Thank you! 😊

  • @TheEmil1234567891
    @TheEmil1234567891 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you.

  • @Godislove225
    @Godislove225 Před rokem

    great video

  • @bassoelettrico
    @bassoelettrico Před 4 lety

    Very interesting, thanks 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @johannesopsahl
    @johannesopsahl Před 4 lety

    Good video Shaun

  • @mishabeast
    @mishabeast Před 4 lety

    You are fantastic dedicated musician.

  • @mishterpreshident
    @mishterpreshident Před 3 lety +1

    Many moons ago one of my drum teachers forced me to do what you're doing: count out loud. It totally blew my mind how HARD it was to do, and I really hated having to learn to do it. But, I have found it's an integral part of learning how to run your own internal clock (accurately). There's something about FEELING what your limbs are physically doing in coordination with the sounds coming out of your mouth helps cement the "muscle memory" part of learning to play in time. But it's hard AF to learn.
    It's a GREAT way to learn how to play polyrhythms, too. Try doing a 4 (hi-hat/snare) over 3 (kick) and then COUNT one of them at the same time, or up the ante by making the vocal count use a different base (say, count to 6, following 2 measures of the kick), while maintaining the original 4 over 3. It's hard to do, but once you can do it, you can remove the voice, and like Shawn noted, suddenly you have all this thinking space available in your head that's been taken up counting, and you don't really need the counting any longer cuz your internal metronome works on its own.

  • @heinvelema7060
    @heinvelema7060 Před 2 lety

    Fine motoric skills and voice are very much related from a neurologic perspective. I would love to see a video with Shawn in an MRI scanner to see what happens if he plays a rhythm with and without counting with his voice.

  • @jandew314
    @jandew314 Před 3 lety +2

    I feel like a prereq for counting while playing is counting while listening to music. If you count time well while actively listening to different instruments in the same song, you are more likely to be able to keep time while playing with others, or yourself (which is an other to your ears)

    • @Coastfog
      @Coastfog Před rokem

      I think you're making a great point. Yesterday I was listening to some Meshuggah and for the first time I could *really* comprehend two parts of two songs. I've watched videos about those songs in the past, trying to understand them, but I only got so far. I've been counting over music for some time - trying to comprehend or even transcribe it - but now that I've started doing it over my own playing, I think it fused the whole thing together.

  • @WasabiNoise
    @WasabiNoise Před 4 lety

    Adam Neely recommended this in his latest Q+A video! I tried counting in numbers but it seems that the click makes more sense. Really good tips here! Thanks!

    • @WasabiNoise
      @WasabiNoise Před 4 lety

      I watched the whole video now. I mean while playing, in my mind, it seems easier to imagine the click rather than counting? if that makes sense?

  • @user-mg7hz7ug5h
    @user-mg7hz7ug5h Před 24 dny

    I will try my best to reach the goal!Hope after years of practicing i can finally understand why bassist like jaco can do such precise timing😂😂

  • @georgemickel6608
    @georgemickel6608 Před 4 lety

    I found you via the Rick Beato vid...liked and subbed!

  • @joelandrew84
    @joelandrew84 Před rokem

    Thank you! I'm def a rusher and never have been able to figure out how to not be. simple as 1 2 3...4 😂 I'm going to start this tomorrow when I go to practice.

  • @Dreamscape_xo
    @Dreamscape_xo Před 4 lety +8

    Wow, didn't know you were in the drum corps scene. Would love to hear more about your experience and how the drum corps experience transfer into the drum set world both in technique and music making!

  • @JaimeMoralesDrums
    @JaimeMoralesDrums Před 11 měsíci

    will also help with your sight reading

  • @JS-yc8wj
    @JS-yc8wj Před 4 lety +1

    I learned at a young age, through the power of metal and to BANG MY HEAD

  • @hotlava768
    @hotlava768 Před 4 lety +2

    Hi Shawn! Absolutely wonderful video and pedagogical approach! One question for you though! I play both jazz and classical bass and see this method as really helpful for me improving my jazz time, but as for the micro ritardandos that accompany some solo classical repertoire such as Bach, would you still recommend this method and if so, would you make any accommodations or think about things any different?

  • @renatosabato
    @renatosabato Před rokem +1

    This was a great video! Two questions:
    1 - do you ALWAYS count time in a song? Or only in complicated parts where you might get lost?
    2 - do you have some practical exercises?

  • @briloheim
    @briloheim Před 4 lety

    Great video! The story is true.

  • @huraqan3761
    @huraqan3761 Před 4 lety

    Timekeepers. The keepers of time... Sounds so poetic ^^