Buddy Rich One Handed Roll Tutorial
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- čas přidán 22. 03. 2013
- One handed roll explanation using the traditional grip. I think this is very close to how Buddy Rich plays his one handed roll. This is my official one handed roll tutorial using the traditional grip (left hand) Buddy Rich Style.
- Jak na to + styl
That plug in the background is mesmerised by your technique
Tom Hearn bahaha you're weird but funny
Tom, you can tell it's in awe
Egads!
I guess you could say... it's shocked.
😮
This guy is a damn good teacher. This is the clearest explanation I've ever seen of this technique.
Check out the three-part Jim Chapin video on Drummerworld. That's a classic.
@@kileabrew
Did Jim Chapin explained the one hand roll there?
@@marceibel1131 Yes he calls it the Moeller Method but it’s the same technique. Dave Weckl also does a fine video. All, including this one, are proper explanations. Good luck with your one handers!
Thats amazing….I always wondered how Buddy did it. Thanks for solving one of lives great mysteries.
This is the best explanation and videos for the B.R. left hand technique.
Thank you for this really good, detailed explanation of how to play one handed roll traditional grip. I look forward to seeing more of your videos.
Terry. UK
He is one of those special teachers. He made that perfectly clear with the best approach from moment to moment throughout the video. I'm reading the other comments and it seems like there is a consensus on this. Thank you.
Thank you for showing me this!!!!! I started this morning and the stick kept falling out my hand and I was getting really anoyed, but after practicing this for the whole day I am starting to get a steady rhythm going. I learnt the other type of drum roll where you double stroke against the rim of the snare, but this one is simply cooler i think! thanks again
This was the cleanest lesson on this I have ever seen. The slow motion and camera angle was perfect and provided a solid look at what is actually involved in executing this technique. First of your vids I have seen but I am planning to watch whatever else you have.
My god I have been looking for this. As a beginner drummer trying to make sense of a few of the different Traditional approaches, this solves a huge mystery of what the hell seems to be going on when you watch players do that “crab scratch”-looking thing while they are twisting the wrist. I can’t thank you enough. 🙏🏼
One of the best tutorials on this technique that I've seen. Good stuff. Can't wait to try out for myself.
God, that is just so foreign to me. Ive been playing matched grip and want to go traditional. But man, this looks like it going to take a lot of patience and discipline. I'm going to try. Ill start with the open hand tech as you stated.
I suggest getting use to just standard traditional grip and just using wrist turns so you can get used to this angle. This is a sub technique essentially and would only be used for certain things and not outright. You can't really accent with the technique as you can see
+BadRonald1 Dude, get Jojo Mayer's Secret Weapons pt. 1. It helped me out massively doing the exact same thing as you.
That's great!!! I love Buddy Rich style and his technique.this is a very good explanation, you are very talented, thank you!!
5 Thumbs up !!!! Brilliant break-down ! Demystifying ! Simply convincing !
Thx so much! I love how you break this down.... being totally a matched grip drummer, I have no idea how to approach traditional grip. This breakdown gives me a really good view of how to even start and what it looks like! So thx!
Great tutorial, man. like most drummers, with no lessons, I play with a match grip. I've been watching Buddy Rich videos all morning,and your tutorial was the cherry on top. I think I'll finish my coffee and go practice now.
zech so, how are you now that you are a year away form when you started?
Excellent tutorial - you really broke it down nicely - thanks
thank you so much for showing this. I had a chance to take lessons with Alex Acuna, Steve Houghton and Dave Weckl. Since then I've had 2 strokes so now it's all about my rehab.
One of the best descriotive videos for traditional grip I've seen. Awesome video man and vreat playing!
Great demo, really usefull. Clear, concise. Very appreciated !!!
Practicing this material will be really helpful to me, thanks very much for posting this great demonstration!
He must have a happy girlfriend...
LMAOOOOOOOO
I would love it much!🤩
Lol...
HAHAHHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHA
harhar
Thanks for sharing and you have gave a very clear explaination and demostration.
I started a long time ago on traditional grip, but gave up eventually and switched to matched-grip. I watched so many videos of Steve Gadd's hands and I could never figure what he was doing with his two fingers. If I had watched your video at that time I may never have abandoned the traditional grip (I probably would still have used matched-grip but I would have kept the option to use traditional as well). Well explained.
Outstanding technique and well done!
Oh man this is great. I was a student of a guy who studied with Alex Duthart and have incorporated the thumb into my technique long ago.
You are awesome at this. Will have to master this now. Thank you!
This is a perfect drum lesson.
Thank you very much.
thanks man (y) I like to say a couple things here. First, Iam a drummer of 45yrs, I'm not that good lol However, Ive got the love for percussion & drums in my heart just as much as anyone reading this? I sustain injuries to my left arm in an auto accident. Lost 45% of my elbow, have a metal plate in my forearm and two pins in my wrist. "Ive always said, it should have been me losing my arm instead of Rick Allen of Deff Leopard. All or most drummers wants to play traditional grip and Buddy Rich is the if not one of the most gifted? However, I taken lesson from my community college and my instructor told me something that made sense. AGAIN let me say = I believe different styles of drumming and music being played directly impacts on what grip and the best way to hold your 'Styx' with that being said. Matched Grip, is the natural movement of all the arms, elbows, wrist, finger joints and any thing else a person uses to play drums sitting behind them. NOW! When Standing up playing, In a Marching Band Position Traditional Grip seems to be the natural position, movement.
mannn in retro of what I just wrote, commented = "Looks aren't everything! Especially when it comes to playing music" Play that, those notes in the best possible natural way. In Essence 'Looks Aren't Everything' ;)
What a great inspiration.
I really want to master this .
Many have attempted to explain, many failed...you, my friend, have succeded by far! Cheers to you!
It's amazing how well many musicians can use their left hand to do cool stuff.
the best explained and showed video on youtube ....
but still can´t do it that fast .) brilliant and astounding
Yep, old Buddy had sure gathered a bag of tricks through the years....thanks for video....
Nice video. I played traditional grip for about 35 years. I was getting a bad case of arthritis so I used mostly matched grip afterwards. I still use it for traditional jazz but those gigs are few and far between anymore. Buddy was the best I've ever seen doing this. Virgil Donati's not to shabby either.
You did a very thorough job of demonstrating/explaining how to perform this technique. I'm having difficulty getting past the shuffle feel, obviously I'm not doing something right and it's getting a little frustrating. Thank you kindly!.
A very clear and expertise lesson on this. I believe I am on my way to learning this now. Buddy would be proud of you! I met Buddy Rich in 1974 and shook his hand and got his autograph. I had hoped that some of his "magic" would have rubbed off - lol!
Cool lucky you, Buddy was so amazing.
Thumbs up, great teaching. Gonna use it, when I manage to learn it. Drumming can be so complex.
Real nice informative demonstration.
I played for years self taught/hobby per CZcams. Who knew all of this finger stuff. Amazing
Really great job explaining this.
Great presentation thank you so much
Great video. Very informative. Thank you.
Great practice lesson. Something I really need to try
you are awesome. i play both traditional and matched. thank you for the further explaination. bret
This is a helpful video. I've always wanted to learn one handed rolls and these seem the most practical of the other ways you can do them - like bouncing off the rim and etc. It's still pretty hard, but thanks for the tutorial. I want to make a cool drum solo that incorporates this.
Nice! Really clear tutorial, thanks mate!
Such an excellent technique. Thanks for sharing your stuff. BTW, those sticks have seen better days!!
Very, very good! Thank you so much.
Great tutorial! Thanks
Nice job.
Awesome stuff.
After watching this video I couldn’t move my thumb for two weeks excellent lesson and teaching skills
Great tutorial.
Tremendous tutorial!
Thank you very much for your instruction. This has been very helpful. Awesome. Neil Peart would be proud.
Play RLLRLLRLL etc. as sixteenth notes at 200 bpm or so, and you’re nailing a Buddy signature lick.
Good teaching man. I love playing a shuffle. Do turnaround lick with the left hand and keep that shuffle with the rest of it all. People think I'm killing it.
Thank you thank you the best tutorial
Great job explaining this
What a marvelous video you made it help me so much thank you.....
Parabéns pelo vídeo. Muito bem explicado. Deus te abençoe
Hello everyone,
This is my version of the one handed roll.
Giving away free gear as well, check video description!
Thanks!
-OSD101
Fantastic explanation. Thank you :-)
GREAT LESSON!!!
Thank you for the tips watching from Philippines
very useful tutorial ... good job done !
Great video! Thanks!!
WOWW ..... GREAT TUTORIAL !!
Every technique has its place, and using the rim to achieve a fast one-handed roll is certainly one of them. Like anything else, it can be used tastefully or can be overdone. But it should be studied, practiced, and perfected.
I played traditional grip for the first 15 years of my playing. I still use it to play brushes. However the last 35 I have pretty use matched grip 95% of the time. I found it made more sense for me when playing the kit and I always questioned why you wouldn't use it for mallet instruments. I found it much faster to develop speed and touch using both hands the same and ease of getting around the kit. I cant find a sensible argument to play traditional except that it was the "norm" back in the day. I play in straight ahead jazz, latin music, blues, rock all with the matched grip and feel no need to use traditional grip. I use traditional with brushes because it feels more comfortable but that is really it. Anyway that's my 2 cents for what its worth.
Whatever works for you is the way to go. I just have found no valid reason for myself to use it anymore. I play jazz, afro-Cuban, play in rock bands, big bands etc. and have had no problem getting the sound or touch that I am looking for. To each his own. BTW I don't dismiss any of the players that use traditional grip. I have been influenced by them all. For me though I have found matched grip to be the way to go. I also want to mention that I have spent many years practicing matched grip. It took me quite a while to get my press rolls and doubles smoothed out like it had with traditional. And playing jazz , getting used to the left hand positin took some time. I think if you work at anything you can make it happen. I just wanted to focus on matched because it made more sense to me. I appreciate the argument though.
331paradiddle we do use matched grip for mallet instruments. Same way you hold a drumstick you hold your mallet.
Yea that came out wrong. My point was why not use traditional grip with mallets if it works so well for kit.
331paradiddle Because using traditional snare grip is really hard with mallet instruments and its much easier to move around and play faster with matched. The sticks are just too thin to do that and it would just make the instrument more difficult.
Jesus Christ the reason you play mallet instruments with what seems like "match grip" is because the end and start position of a proper mallet stroke is at the top. in other words your mallet head should start and end several inches above the instrument because of how it (the instrument) resonates. If you were to try to do this with traditional grip that top position would be pretty difficult to hold and keep coming to. the mallet instrument is played very differently then a tightly strung head like a snare! :D
Great video instruction brother. Actually, Best ever. You are a gifted instructor. Your voice inflection is calming and knowledgeably inspiring. 🙏💜
Thank you......keep lessons coming
How long did it take from the first time you had attempted this to when you finally was able to execute the roll correctly?
Man, that no finger one really gets the wrist burning.
Great video! Thank you!
Hey man, your third way, I use that quite back on the stick, maybe with a 2cm, 1" distance from the end of the stick. Works great for rimshots and then small notes after near the rim. I like that you tell it like is too get work or play for fun. I think technique is 90% for not hurting yourself. If it sounds good, do it, but don't hurt yourself.
Most drummers don't realize that Buddy Richs sticks were SUPER light weight like balsa wood .
No .Sorry you are wrong.Those are throwaways to give out.His are a 7a type.Darker and a little heavy for there size.Balanced beauty of a stick.Dense. Mine are best from the 60.s and complained about the change.He said it was a new company or factory?Have lots of pairs and used every one.Too bad because we had a good thing going. By the 80.s even his sticks got worse.Ask Dale Wise PA or any roadie.Thanks Brad forgot about those.
Thats great. Thanks for that.
You do an excellent job of explaining Much better than Mayer_ he seems more about showing off. The master of this imo is Jeff Hamilton as he uses the technique in an ensemble setting in musical ways.
so clever wow I wish I had a thought of it first :(
this is great, man!
Your thumb or first knuckle is always pinch-anchoring the stick to keep the stick in the "bed" or channel of your hand. I have never seen this explained before so thank you. Great demo. I'm going to work on that. And ten years after the fact. Thanks for leaving this video up. Do you have any travel control videos? I have problems with cross stick when playing over low toms. Thanks.
Damn you are good at that.
Great Video to learn from ! Everyone has a different technique do !
cool, very nice, I think it'll take me at least 2 years to get that right and even... thanks for the lesson
Did you get it down?
I love the video but frustrated by my inability. This is an awesome video explicitly detailing what is involved. Im pressing on! Lol
very useful video by the way!
I've only been playing drums for about 4 months and am determined to get close to pulling this off sometime in my life. So far it seems a bit easier with my right hand even though I will need to do it with my left.
Keep it up, you will eventually get there. However, i will say that at 4 months, this is a very advanced drum technique to try to get down. Ive been drumming for years and still I'm watching this over and over. There are thousands of videos out there to learn the basics. Good luck with your drumming, its a lot of fun and is a never ending process of learning.
one of the rare videos with +10k views and no dislike :)
well,you've really done your home work,now let's see if your followers can do there home work..thats one thing I was never good at..I've never seen this 1 hand roll,''But i like it,look's like it would be hard to grasp,but not impossible,nice..thank you for share'ing..''Your the Kind Of Person That Will Invent your Own Method That Other People will follow.Good Luck''...
Thank you for taking the time to explain this so clearly,I’m a beginner and this has helped me tremendously...Howie
this guy could do a one handed foot roll. He can use any part of his hand to do what I cant do despite months of trying. Gonna learn bass.
I can only seem to get to just over 110 bpm for 16th notes. How long did it take you to pick up to your current speed and how much time per day did you put in to get to that?
My left hand is like the dart playing cops hand in "Young Frankenstein".
Hahaha omg can you show us the nasal hair and lip technique while you're here, unbelievable control, i keep attempting doing any of the shown technique's and i just go back to matched grip.
I just can't get it certainly not the way you can and do.
Great video thank you 👏
very nice man, it really usefull, thanx
Great tutorial!!! You really break it down. Do you have a tutorial for match grip??
Thanks again.
Thanks, I don;t have a traditional video yet. I'll work on it!
now i can use this for blast beats,thank you
TheReverend24 traditional grip blast beats ? Can you record this I’m super interested
blast beats started in jazz...
@@gdrugg2006 lmaooo
That’s what I was thinking but Blasting traditional style and getting those Tom fills in will be the challenge
You may have just created a new genre of music lol
Hello Neufi,I also played left handed drumset. All these things can be played like that. But for the best possible example of left handed playing,check out Frank Belluci,he's the best!
Whew. this is a challenge. So, the last or 3rd phase is where I'm stumped. I can't tell what navigates the up vs down strokes. I see the index and ring are the controllers but what is prime and how does the wrist play into the motion? I am missing it. Great teaching though.
You are articulate to have learned the Giant's trickery!
Muito bom!!! - Very good!!!