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Are the majority of drummers technophobes?
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12-02-2012 2:47pmI'm a bit puzzled on this one. I would have thought drumming and drum programming on music programs would compliment each other due to the nature of rhythm being fairly straight forward /mathmatical.
Yet most of the drummers I know are almost in fear of computers and want nothing to do with them, even the mention of a click track sends them into wild highly passable imitations of Animal of "The Muppets" fame.
Anyone here a drummer and into music programming on computer programs?
How do you find it?
Any drummers who are against programming, can you say why?
Is it a fear of having to learn to read music (the rhythm part anyway) which may lead to a samey/too clinical drum technique?0
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A lot of people start learning drums with the idea that their job will always be to 'keep time' or whatever, having everyone else playing to them, which works great a lot of the time. I think a lot of drummers have a hard time getting passed the idea of having a computer keep time playing to that.
I'm a drummer but I got into programming and other instruments before I started playing drums so I dunno if my opinion is the one you're looking for. A human will never be able to keep time perfectly, a computer can do it perfectly every time and never get tired. And 'keeping time' is a pretty mundane task isn't it? Why not let the computer keep time so that I can concentrate on more creative things?
It doesn't suit a lot of music though - the 'feel' or 'groove' or whatever of a live drummer is, I reckon, a lot of the time down to human error - each hit of the hi-hat in a backbeat won't be exactly the same distance apart each time. Little rit.s and rubatos that a computer can't do very efficiently or convincingly can make a beat or a hook.
I also think a lot of musicians think of themselves way too much as someone who plays an instrument instead of someone who creates music. "I'm a drummer" or "I play guitar" can be a bit restrictive. I saw a great video of a masterclass with bassist Victor Wooten who made a really good point, along the lines of "I'm an English speaker, not a mouth talker", and compared that to being a musician rather than a bass player. Spot on. So er, my point is, everyone should learn how to use absolutely everything there is in the world to make music :pac:0 -
Nice post. I'm in agreement with ye. USe a computer as another means of making noise. I'm starting to use loops in my setup now so little by little, click tracks are becoming more and more prominant. It's no problem for me, I've been using one for years because of working with loop pedals and I've been adding guitar to programmed stuff on computer since my teens.
Now that I think of it, quite a lot of musicians i know regardless of their preferred instrument steer clear of computers as much as possible. Personally, I love the things it allows you to do, but maybe because i've done sound engineering I'm looking at it through an engineeers eyes.
I've a new year resolution to learn the drums this year and get good at drum) programming too. So both at the same time. I use reason for programming and I have a V-drum kit set up and ready to go. My plans right now are so busy that I can't start just yet but looking forward to it.
I don't think there's any particular secret to it, ust play until you get so familiar to a few rhythms that you can start experimenting with them, and know the dynamic effect the drums has on a tune, for example hi hat during the verse and ride during chorus gives a restrained vibe for the verse and unleashed feeling for the chorus.
Am i on a good path here?0 -
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{
While (toop !1)
{
Drum();
}
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raindog.promo wrote: »I don't think there's any particular secret to it, ust play until you get so familiar to a few rhythms that you can start experimenting with them, and know the dynamic effect the drums has on a tune, for example hi hat during the verse and ride during chorus gives a restrained vibe for the verse and unleashed feeling for the chorus.
Am i on a good path here?
Well, yeah, but you sound like you're thinking like a drummer :pac:
That's the kind of stuff that rock drums have done for decades. Why not change it? Sure, it's important to be able to play in standard idioms like that, but there's so much other stuff to do. The two biggest things I've ever learned about on drums were polyrhythms (not at all drum-specific, I just learn them on drums before anything else) and rudiments (pretty drum-specific but you can apply the thinking to anything else).
A good exercise I did was only playing with a hi hat, snare drum and bass drum for a few weeks. When you have a load of drums around you it's easy to start playing the few things you know on the plenty of drums you have. But if you only have three things to hit you're gonna have to exercise your brain a little more to get a full sound. Stuff like, instead of hitting the hi hat on every eighth note, hit it more erratically, so that when you do start hitting it all the time, that's a significant change that'll stand out....0 -
Crawl before you run and all that. Then fly. \m/0
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raindog.promo wrote: »Crawl before you run and all that. Then fly. \m/
Yeah that's true. But I always thought it'd be really cool to take someone with lots of musical knowledge but no technical knowledge of a particular instrument, and throw them in the deep end. Results could be really cool. Just force someone to write something on an instrument they have no knowledge of.0 -
Check out some Krautrock. Kraftwerk and all them. Professionally trained (I think) musicians who then turned around and started using synths instead. Building the things. In interviews they were saying they've no idea what they're doing, just turning dials til they have something they like the sound of. And they can never reproduce the same sound twice
I think it's a BBC doc called The Birth of Krautrock.0 -
raindog.promo wrote: »Check out some Krautrock. Kraftwerk and all them. Professionally trained (I think) musicians who then turned around and started using synths instead. Building the things. In interviews they were saying they've no idea what they're doing, just turning dials til they have something they like the sound of. And they can never reproduce the same sound twice
I think it's a BBC doc called The Birth of Krautrock.
Oh yeah, sure! Big fan of Kraftwerk CAN and Neu!, never really thought of it that way. Cool.0 -
I think the Pogues went from playing guitars to trad instruments without knowing how to play the trad instruments also.
Just to meander somewhere back on course though, would the majority of drummers you know use computer music programs, if you incorporate a V drum kit into your acoustic drum kit then you can set up triggered samples and all sorts of fun. I think that might be dismissed though because once the word "sample" is heard, the words "click track" aren't far behind. Or maybe it's just a big enough pain in the arse transporting the kit that you don't want anything else to have to deal with.0 -
I'm a drummer and I'm into my computers and all that and even used Reason's drum machine to create polyrhythms so I could learn that. I also spent time learning odd time signatures and all that.
Ya go to the studio and because of the technology, drums have taken back foot to what they used to do. As polyrhythms were mentioned earlier, I'd like to mention too great songs that incorporate a polyrhythm within the beat, Alannah Myles' Black Velvet and Tears For Fears Everybody Wants To Rule The World.
On each it's in a 6/8 and the drummer plays a straight 4/4 hi hat above the 6/8 groove. To walk into a studio now you'd be told to play straight, most times now the drummer is not needed, drum machines are programmed and the drummers goes and learns what was done in studio for the live. The art of drumming is slowly dying because of this, thankfully not in metal though, but it will get there too.
It used to be, a great drummer is solid but can phrase with the band, now it's play the simplest beat possible for 2hours and deviate and you may hit the crash cymbal 3 times in a song.0 -
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markthedrum1 wrote: »It used to be, a great drummer is solid but can phrase with the band, now it's play the simplest beat possible for 2hours and deviate and you may hit the crash cymbal 3 times in a song.
Who's causing this to happen? Are you talking about session drumming?0 -
Almost this entire thread is bóllox. It's like asking "Are the majority of Irish alcoholics?" Silly.
The art of drumming is also not dying. Any drummer that takes his "art" seriously, should be praticing rudiments to a metronome regulary... that's the click piece out of the way. Some drummers prefer an entirely acoustic kit, some like triggers and pads and samples and so on. I mean Jaysus lads, talk about generalising.
This talk of drums taking a back foot to technology is also bóllox. Computers cannot replicate the human element, and yes, the human element is down to mistakes... most drummers don't have perfect timing, but that's often what makes a song dynamic. e.g. some drummers play behind the beat, some ahead, some right on.
So no, most drummers aren't against programming and/or clicks, but some are. They're more than likely gonna be old school dudes, and there's nothing wrong with that either. In my opinion, as a musician you should use everything available to you to enhance your sound.0 -
Hi All,
I'm a keyboard player who uses Mac/Logic/Mainstage so I'm coming at this a little differently. I had to learn how to use music tech from scratch. It's a very important skill for modern music and a crucial skill for drummers. Click tracks are part and parcel of live music now so get used to it! It's just another tool in your box not the apocalypse. Most bands now use tech in some form or another live. I've spoken to some drummers who say clicks have made them better drummers and they also said that drummers who resist clicks aren't that good anyway! Controversial I know but it really shouldn't be a big deal, after all we all want to be better,don't we?0 -
Almost this entire thread is bóllox.
It's like asking "Are the majority of Irish alcoholics?" Silly.
The art of drumming is also not dying. Any drummer that takes his "art" seriously, should be praticing rudiments to a metronome regulary... that's the click piece out of the way. Some drummers prefer an entirely acoustic kit, some like triggers and pads and samples and so on. I mean Jaysus lads, talk about generalising.
This talk of drums taking a back foot to technology is also bóllox. Computers cannot replicate the human element, and yes, the human element is down to mistakes... most drummers don't have perfect timing, but that's often what makes a song dynamic. e.g. some drummers play behind the beat, some ahead, some right on.
So no, most drummers aren't against programming and/or clicks, but some are. They're more than likely gonna be old school dudes, and there's nothing wrong with that either. In my opinion, as a musician you should use everything available to you to enhance your sound.
Well thanks for putting everyone straight. Although everyone on the thread is speaking from their own experience it's nice to know that they're living in some fantasy world.0 -
raindog.promo wrote: »Well thanks for putting everyone straight. Although everyone on the thread is speaking from their own experience it's nice to know that they're living in some fantasy world.
No problem.0 -
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raindog.promo wrote: »So how many drummers do you know gigging locally that have drum programming incorporated into their set?
Two. That use electronic elements. I personally just use a perc-pad for claps and clicks and other additional sounds. I think that these days you'll also find most drummers will have an electronic kit for practice purposes, and as I said, IMO, any drummer worth their salt will be practicing along to a metronome. Even still, I don't think electronics will ever over take the acoustic kit, but should be used in conjunction with.
Also, in honesty, I was one of those old school drummers that disagreed with click tracks and electronics, but I was young when I held that opinion. I've now copped on.
There are other statements in this thread, such as "keeping time is a pretty mundane task" which are nonsense. Keeping time is a drummers bread and butter, and a drummer that can sit and play a simple groove perfectly is a valuable asset. Hence the need for metronome practice. If you can't sit in a groove, you're a shít drummer. The difference between a top notch drummer and a computers timing would be miniscule, or should be. If you intend to learn the drums, 2 pieces of advice I have... 1) practice rudiments to a metronome and 2) start slow and practice control before speed.0 -
I said most drummers I know don't use drum programming and would most drummers out there use them or not (perhaps I should have stated locally, but as this is pretty much a local/amateur musician forum and we're speaking of our own experiences, I took that as being assumed). You've come along saying everything everyone else says is bollox then say you know 2 drummers that use drum programming.
Which would suggest that the majority do not.
Interestingly, those on this thread that say they do use programming have come to drumming after first writing music with music program software. This throws up a few other questions about the role of drummers in the future.
Hardly bollox.0 -
Well, I'm sorry if my opinion doesn't match what you wanted to hear, but there ya go! I should have said 100% of the drummers I know use electronic elements. I only know 2 drummers personally and directly, this is the question you asked me.
However, judging by the drummers forums I use, I would say an awful lot of drummers are using electronic elements in their drumming. Just have a browse of drummerworld or other similar forums and you'll see what I mean.
Also, I said "Almost" this entire thread is bóllox. Almost is different to "everything" I'm sure you'll appreciate.
Here's a list of things stated which are bóllox and why;
1) 'keeping time' is a pretty mundane task isn't it? - I've already explained my reason for thinking this is nonsense. This is the most stupid statement on the thread, and from a drummer! Have a look at this, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8PHL0xSlqM0 Any professional drummer you care to think of will hold the same opinion as me here, I'm positive on this. I mean, keeping time is the basis of music FFS!
2) Stuff like, instead of hitting the hi hat on every eighth note, hit it more erratically, so that when you do start hitting it all the time, that's a significant change that'll stand out.. - I don't know what exactly this means, but hitting beats "erratically" is going to get you nowhere. There's a place for every beat.
3) once the word "sample" is heard, the words "click track" aren't far behind - Why would this be the case?
4) Ya go to the studio and because of the technology, drums have taken back foot to what they used to do - If this were the case, there would be no live or sessions drummers around, and I think you'll find this is not the case.
5) To walk into a studio now you'd be told to play straight, most times now the drummer is not needed, drum machines are programmed and the drummers goes and learns what was done in studio for the live - I have never actually heard of this, I'm sure it happens, but most times? I don't think so. I've been playing 15 years, and not once heard of this.
6) It used to be, a great drummer is solid but can phrase with the band, now it's play the simplest beat possible for 2hours and deviate and you may hit the crash cymbal 3 times in a song. - Nonsense. Serve the song is the rule. That's it. There are many different styles of music, some require the drummer to play a straight consistent groove, others allow the drummer more freedom.
This is all of course just my opinion. You don't like it, then you can just incorporate the opinion of others - that match your opinion - to reinforce your own opinion. That seems to be how you want to roll. Confirmation bias?
Also, the thing about drummers not being musicians, is another generalisation. We all know the drummer jokes. The fact of the matter is, you don't have to learn to play to a click, but you're better off if you can. You don't have to learn how to program, but it's probably worthwhile. Also, you don't have to be a tech geek to start programming drums, but you must absolutely have rhythm - or at least the willingness to learn good timing - to start playing the drums. In other words, the jump from drummer to programmer is a small one, the jump from programmer to drummer, is quite a large jump. In my opinion remember.0 -
Well, I'm sorry if my opinion doesn't match what you wanted to hear, but there ya go!
I wanted to hear opinions. However ones that begin with "Almost this entire thread is bóllox" don't interest me, true. They tend to colour everything else that follows. A peculiar bias.
Discussion involving different people's opinions instead of someone that obviously knows better than everyone else. But sure why am I even writing this as you know exactly how I and everyone else rolls.0 -
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raindog.promo wrote: »I wanted to hear opinions. However ones that begin with "Almost this entire thread is bóllox" don't interest me, true. They tend to colour everything else that follows. A peculiar bias.
Yeah, this is why I'm accusing you of confirmation bias. You don't get the opinion you want, so you don't listen.Discussion involving different people's opinions instead of someone that obviously knows better than everyone else. But sure why am I even writing this as you know exactly how I and everyone else rolls.
My last post qualifies the "almost the entire" thread statement. I've broken down the points I think are nonsense, and why. You - or anyone else - have failed to provide a solid counter. The premise of the thread is however, bóllox. It's just a generalisation, which as you should know, are most usually inaccurate. Alcoholic Irish, snooty English, arrogant French, loud Americans, and dumb drummers who freak out when presented with a click track - all generalisations. So yes, the premise of the thread is indeed bóllox. Or do you think one generalisation holds more water over another? Do you think if I posted a thread over in soccer, saying "Are the majority of soccer players racist?" that it would last long or I'd get level headed responses? I'd be laughed out of the place and told I'm an idiot. You should try and post this thread in a drumming forum and see what happens.
I don't know where I said I know better than anyone else though. But, you're inability to provide reasoned counter arguments to my reasoned ones is where I'm getting the idea that you're only interested in a specific opinion.
In order to prevent you mis-interpreting my posts again, here's the summary....
1) The premise of the thread is bóllox. I've explained why above.
2) I believe musicians should use everything at their disposal to enhance their sound.
3) I believe a drummer should be capable of playing to a click. In fact, I think it's one of the first things a young drummer should focus on. I wish I had done this when I started.
4) I do not believe the art of drumming is dead. I actually think computers/programming can never replace real musicians, but should definitely be used to enrich music.
5) I most definitely do not know everything, and consider myself to be at a very, very early stage of development in my drumming. I've been playing around 15 years, and I don't consider myself to be a great drummer. Good, but not great.0 -
Yeah, this is why I'm accusing you of confirmation bias. You don't get the opinion you want, so you don't listen.
You dismissed the majority of everyone else's posts as bollox. Therefore your opinion doesn't interest me. That's my opinion. I didn't bother reading the rest of your points.0 -
raindog.promo wrote: »You dismissed the majority of everyone else's posts as bollox. Therefore your opinion doesn't interest me. That's my opinion. I didn't bother reading the rest of your points.
That's a pity, as I've justified my statement since. Your self-imposed ignorance simply confirms my point on confirmation bias. I was right. Hear something you don't like, so ignore it. A massive failure in reasoned thought. Good luck with that.0 -
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This talk of drums taking a back foot to technology is also bóllox. Computers cannot replicate the human element, and yes, the human element is down to mistakes... most drummers don't have perfect timing, but that's often what makes a song dynamic. e.g. some drummers play behind the beat, some ahead, some right on.
Hmmm....
A common misconception is that playing ahead or behind the beat is the result of having "bad timing". A good drummer will be able to play ahead or behind as he sees fit, that is what gives a groove it's feel. That's the human element you're talking about, it has nothing to do with "mistakes".0 -
irishthump wrote: »Hmmm....
A common misconception is that playing ahead or behind the beat is the result of having "bad timing". A good drummer will be able to play ahead or behind as he sees fit, that is what gives a groove it's feel. That's the human element you're talking about, it has nothing to do with "mistakes".
Indeed. I shouldn't have used the word mistake. The point is of course, that the computer - in my opinion - can't replicate this human element. I'm all for electronics, however I can't see acoustic - human - drumming dying.0 -
I'll reply to the ones I'm responsible for...1) 'keeping time' is a pretty mundane task isn't it? - I've already explained my reason for thinking this is nonsense. This is the most stupid statement on the thread, and from a drummer! Have a look at this, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8PHL0xSlqM0 Any professional drummer you care to think of will hold the same opinion as me here, I'm positive on this. I mean, keeping time is the basis of music FFS!
Keeping time is the basis of some music. There's lots of music that doesn't use any strict meter or rhythm. And do you not think keeping time is boring? I'd much rather use all my mental power on getting interesting patterns together and accenting them all perfectly and other stuff rather than just counting. So why not let a machine do the counting for me while I focus on all the other bits? Unless of course I'm playing the kind of music that doesn't rely on strict time being kept.2) Stuff like, instead of hitting the hi hat on every eighth note, hit it more erratically, so that when you do start hitting it all the time, that's a significant change that'll stand out.. - I don't know what exactly this means, but hitting beats "erratically" is going to get you nowhere. There's a place for every beat.
If you don't know exactly what I'm getting at hear, why did you point it out? I didn't say hit anything 'erratically', I said to hit things 'more erratically', as in, erratically with respect to a straight quaver pattern. Maybe it means every few beats is actually a dotted demisemiquaver, or you're playing one note and two rests of a triplet pattern intermittently between other 'straight' notes, something that thwarts the 'straight' feel of a pattern. Yes there is a place for every beat, including all the truly erratic and random ones.
The thing I don't really get about your arguments is in;This is the most stupid statement on the thread, and from a drummer!
you're acknowledging I'm a drummer and then saying I'm wrong about things I've learned from experience... I'm not making this stuff up, I've learned it through five years of drumming and around ten years of other musical practice and work... I don't get how I can say the 'most stupid thing on the thread' when it's been working perfectly well for me for years.0 -
The thing I don't really get about your arguments is...
Proving you just have confirmation bias.
Pffft, do ye know nothing?
*Incidentally, I don't think keeping time is boring. And quite hard to do on any instrument. When all the instruments come together playing in time is a great feeling. You can't have a groove without being able to keep time and some people think playing sloppy and having a groove are the same thing. Although playing sloppy is a technique in itself; I'm not saying you have to be technically brilliant to be considered a musician or anything.0 -
raindog.promo wrote: »most of the drummers I know are almost in fear of computers and want nothing to do with them,
Are you serious? Or are you speaking figuratively?
I wouldn;t have thought technophobia is related to what instrument you play.
In my opinon, some drummers don;t want to go down the programming route because they own acoustic kits, which don;t lend themselves too ready to being programmed.
I bought a set of V drums because I also like electronic music and I wanted to combine drumming with it.0 -
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I'll reply to the ones I'm responsible for...
Keeping time is the basis of some music. There's lots of music that doesn't use any strict meter or rhythm. And do you not think keeping time is boring? I'd much rather use all my mental power on getting interesting patterns together and accenting them all perfectly and other stuff rather than just counting. So why not let a machine do the counting for me while I focus on all the other bits? Unless of course I'm playing the kind of music that doesn't rely on strict time being kept.
Music that doesn't have any time? Sorry, I know of no such music. Maybe remote African tribes aren't using strict musical timing, but there's time there. All drummers need to know where the time is, all the time. We'll have to just agree to disagree here. I'm not sitting there counting every beat, but keeping time is a drummers bread and butter... you are there for every other musician to follow. It doesn't take mental power to keep time. Staying locked on a groove is not boring imo.If you don't know exactly what I'm getting at hear, why did you point it out?I didn't say hit anything 'erratically', I said to hit things 'more erratically', as in, erratically with respect to a straight quaver pattern. Maybe it means every few beats is actually a dotted demisemiquaver, or you're playing one note and two rests of a triplet pattern intermittently between other 'straight' notes, something that thwarts the 'straight' feel of a pattern. Yes there is a place for every beat, including all the truly erratic and random ones.The thing I don't really get about your arguments is in;
you're acknowledging I'm a drummer and then saying I'm wrong about things I've learned from experience... I'm not making this stuff up, I've learned it through five years of drumming and around ten years of other musical practice and work... I don't get how I can say the 'most stupid thing on the thread' when it's been working perfectly well for me for years.
Each to their own, but in my opinion, a drummers basic aim should be to keep time, and keep a groove. I didn't say everything you said was wrong, and I'll stand by my statement... A drummer that says keeping time is pretty boring doesn't fully understand the idea of his basic role yet.raindog.promo wrote:Proving you just have confirmation bias.
Pffft, do ye know nothing?0 -
Are you serious? Or are you speaking figuratively?
I wouldn;t have thought technophobia is related to what instrument you play.
In my opinon, some drummers don;t want to go down the programming route because they own acoustic kits, which don;t lend themselves too ready to being programmed.
I bought a set of V drums because I also like electronic music and I wanted to combine drumming with it.
I am serious,that's my experience. In saying that, they're 26 years of age and up. Pretty much what you said (in bold) is the situation. They dont use computers at all to make music and dismiss any suggestion of doing so0 -
Music that doesn't have any time? Sorry, I know of no such music.
You should listen to more music then.
Obviously there's time, but can you hear a beat or a rhythm or any meter at all?A drummer that says keeping time is pretty boring doesn't fully understand the idea of his basic role yet.
Oh, okay, I've wasted the last 5 years of my life then, thanks for clearing that up.
I'm practicing right now, and I've got Ableton Live clicking on every crochet. So I can worry about all the demisemiquavers and concentrate on my accents and rubato all and wait for the click to tell me when I'm on the next crochet. I'm way more interested in playing like that. But I don't understand what I should be doing as a drummer so that's fine, never mind my opinion. I should probably throw away the last two and a half years of my music degree too.0 -
You should listen to more music then.
Obviously there's time, but can you hear a beat or a rhythm or any meter at all?Oh, okay, I've wasted the last 5 years of my life then, thanks for clearing that up.
FFS. Nowhere have I suggested you've wasted your life. I've suggested that you might be missing the point of being a drummer, yes. I myself, have only in the past few years realised mistakes I've been making. No doubt I'm still making mistakes. Are you suggesting you know all you need to know after 5 years? Do you think that there is no more learning to be done?
Why are you acting like facking children here? I'm giving you an honest appraisal of your comments, and you're getting sarcastic and slightly insulting. I admit, for the second time, my thread opener comments weren't the most balanced, and I'm sorry, but at least I'm willing to accept mistakes made, and apologise if necessary. You folks still want to dig and jibe?But I don't understand what I should be doing as a drummer so that's fine, never mind my opinion. I should probably throw away the last two and a half years of my music degree too.
Possibly, I don't know. Maybe your drum teacher doesn't have a clue, I don't know. Maybe your course isn't up to scratch and you think it is. Maybe you're on track to becoming a musical genius. How the fack would I know? Or else, no, you shouldn't. I'm not saying anything of the sort, but I'll stand by my comment... a drummers bread and butter is his/her timing. There is no denying this. It's the drummers job ffs! If you can't hold time, you can't play drums. Or do you think I'm wrong here? Do you think you can play the drums without holding good time? Do you think having a degree in music means you're a better musician than the next guy? That you know more? Do you think telling us you have a degree has changed something important?
Ultimately, we're far removed from the original point here. I've posted my thoughts on the technology/drummers question, but you're focusing on defending your honour. Of course I don't know best, I mean, seriously? This is the best you can come up with? Childish sarcasm? How about an actual solid refutation of any of my points? Not taking into account already addressed points - such as the "erratic" idea. I still stand by the point that the premise of the thread is flawed. It's a generalisation. Am I wrong?0 -
I should listen to more music because what? You've given me an example of music that doesn't have timing? No, you haven't. It has timing, and you've succesfully proven... nothing. The musicians that sit down to play this, are given sheet music with the appropriate timing right? Let's not get into semantics here. The piece of music has timing.
Yeah it has time, I said that. A piece of music starts, time passes, the music ends... All music has time. I never said there was music that doesn't 'have' time, I said there's music that doesn't focus on 'keeping' time, and music with no strict meter or rhythm.
That Ligeti piece doesn't have meter or rhythm, or any accents at all. Just sound that changes over the course of the piece. The musician's don't sit down and play the sheet music, they play to the direction of a conductor, who indicates when they're to change their line. You can't count that, you can't lock into the groove of that or play in the pocket of that or whatever else.Yes, I see what you mean, but it's hardly the best example considering we're talking about drumming here. I can post up a free style jazz flute solo. Is it relevant to a discussion on drumming? No.
You're putting a division between drumming and other musicianship there though, aren't you? Which is one of the points you argued against earlier? If a drummer is just concerned with timing, then maybe there should be a distinction between musicians and purely drummers? I don't think a drummer should be just concerned with timing.
Actually that's an interesting point, why are drummers so obsessed with keeping time? Every other kind of instrumentalist ever also has to keep time. Why do drummers make such a big deal of it?0 -
Yeah it has time, I said that. A piece of music starts, time passes, the music ends... All music has time. I never said there was music that doesn't 'have' time, I said there's music that doesn't focus on 'keeping' time, and music with no strict meter or rhythm.
That Ligeti piece doesn't have meter or rhythm, or any accents at all. Just sound that changes over the course of the piece. The musician's don't sit down and play the sheet music, they play to the direction of a conductor, who indicates when they're to change their line. You can't count that, you can't lock into the groove of that or play in the pocket of that or whatever else.
You're putting a division between drumming and other musicianship there though, aren't you? Which is one of the points you argued against earlier? If a drummer is just concerned with timing, then maybe there should be a distinction between musicians and purely drummers? I don't think a drummer should be just concerned with timing.
Actually that's an interesting point, why are drummers so obsessed with keeping time? Every other kind of instrumentalist ever also has to keep time. Why do drummers make such a big deal of it?
I see your point. Yes, there's no groove to lock onto there, and I understand the musicians would be at the direction of a conductor. I'm pretty sure this music, written out, will have a time signature though? The divison between drummers and other musicians seems to me to be a reality. It's expected of drummers to have great timing. In my experience I don't think it's expected so highly of other musicians.
I think drummers are obsessed with timing, because it's their bread and butter. As a drummer, you'll usually be looked to as the one who is keeping the time for everyone else. I agree with you on the point that a drummer shouldn't only be concerned with timing. Musicality, and flair and technique and all the other things are important. I just think a drummers starting point should be to get the timing thing down. Then start concentrating on all that other good stuff.
In the context of the original post, I don't think computers can replicate the human piece. In fact, the Ligeti piece is probably a good example for this. I'm not sure a computer will pull that off. I'm not even sure it'd be played exactly the same, every time by human musicians. I could be wrong though.0 -
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I'm a drummer, been playing for nearly 11 years now. I don't use any electronic elements like pads, samples, etc. in my playing. And I know virtually nothing about how to programme (though I'd quite like to learn).
I do often practice on an electronic kit, but I would not use it for most live/band situations because I personally prefer the feel and sound of an acoustic kit (particularly the feel and the tones of the cymbals - imo a rubber pad can never replicate this).
However, one of the things I regret about my playing is not using a metronome/click more often for practising. Time, as Dr. Loon has repeatedly said, is the drummer's bread and butter. The most important thing for me, as a drummer, in all of the styles that I am likely to play, is time/groove. There are few things as satisfying as finding the pocket and staying there. It doesn't really matter what style, or what particular pattern you're playing. The tune needs to groove.
Staying in time, keeping time for the rest of the band, that's the thing I'm most concerned about. If someone wants or likes to use technology or a click as part of that, or to help get there, that's cool.
I'm not opposed to, or scared by the idea of using technology as part of drumming. But personally, I know I'd need more practice to be comfortable using it, because it's something I'm not used to. I know several session drummers who are regularly required to play to a click because there could be programmed tracks on the tune. It's an important part of lots of music.
Also, in response to OP's comment about learning to read music, I don't think it leads to "samey/too clinical drum technique". On the contrary, it massively helps your drum technique and can greatly vary it.0 -
my two cents - been drumming for 30 years , also now play bass, guitar , keys
and have spent 5 years learning how to record and produce and still learning .
I use an ekit , and samples all the time , and love them
mainly cos i get a pro sound in a small room, and its my playing style .
I still record real cymbals though - as i find the feel is just that bit better
my obervations about drummers
the drummers from about 20 - 25 years ago - in the main
hated drum machines , clicks , and were more of the ANIMAL mentality
i was one of those troopers
playing too loud, using bats for sticks
not self mixing the kit playing , wouldnt use anyone elses kit ,
wouldnt let people use mine, hated computerS and drum machines
never practised, never used a click. thought samples were the tools of satan.
couldnt read music or play another instrument.
or tune them !
i had to evolve or die .
the drummers of today appear to be much more savvy with machines , e kits , programming , samples
etc
what i do find is todays drummers seem to lack power and projection - not all but alot .
they do not hit the drums hard enough to project , particulalry the kick and the toms .
so here are some tips for modern drummers :
its a big ask / list -
but the days of the hairy drooling neanderthal 'hanging around with musicians' is over guys.
1/ learn to self mix - play your kit with these levels in mind
hit the following hardest from a down to f quietest
a/ toms
b/ kick
c /snare
d/ ride
e/ crashes
f/ hats - if possible choose a set of hats that are quiet and dark.
and learn to play each drum consistently - hit that backbeat the same vol every time .
2/ always always always
play with a click and or drum machine when practising or rehearsing
dont fear the click - even the very best get edited down and tweaked when recording
the studio is microscope and its pointed at you - dont go in unprepared - you WILL feel like a useless c*nt if you do.
make the click your friend from day one of picking up sticks.
ALWAYS
3/ learn another instrument - at least bass
piano is better though.
and learn to read music - at least a basic understanding .
4/ learn how to mic and produce a kit in a studio -
even better learn how to record and produce on a computer.
if it means annoying the enginner - annoy them - learn what mics and why / where.
5/ obviously learn to tune a kit -
and which heads suit room sizes and mics better than others.
6/ learn how to use samples / ekits - including things like ez drummer
- this is the future - now
7/ always wear hearing protection of some form - or use good in ear phones
ALWAYS !
8/ if the engineer says use this snare instead of yours - do it
yours is more than likely sh1t.
and never record with cheap cymbals - partc crashes
just dont do it - it sounds like a turd every time.
borrow or rent some good ones.
never allow ego to get in the way of sounding good
9/ get the best gear you can afford -
dont buy a brand new pearl export when a second hand yammie recording custom is available cheaper
just because travis barker plays pearl.
think sound - not hype .
10/ learn to use brushes - most of the top drummers you know or love
will likely be just at home playing jazz on tiny kit with brushes - open your mind
11/ learn to project the kit like a singer - its like point 1
if you are unmiked - play the room ,
learn to hit the sound off the back wall , the middle of the room , the front of the stage
this allows you to play dynamicilly and not drown out everyone else.
12// NEVER overplay - play the song - not your ego
13// open your mind0 -
Great post.
I've heard of a few people getting together, renting out a studio for a workshop where someone comes in and shows them how to mic up a drum kit. Don't know if they still happen these days though.
RE - Self mixing:
Is this just being aware of how heavy you're hitting the drum/cymbal?0 -
yes,
in the main - you hit the drums harder than the cymbals
toms the hardest etc
cymbals should be swiped or played just enough to get the tone and no more
unless its for effect.
most good drummers do this automatically
nothing worse than having a drummers hi hats all over the overheads , snare mic , tom mics - even the kick mic in some cases.
the addes bonus is - its saves your ears as well.0 -
one comment re drummer focus on time
the drummer in most modern music is the one looked to to keep time ,
most modern music is dead on time wise and people now expect this
partic with the advent of dance music and machine based music
drummers are expected to be accurate or the music sounds sloppy
your average punter will know straight away . especially in headphone experienced music.
in jazz its usually the bass player - jazz doesnt really use a click either.
jazz is more free timewise and not really expected to be as tight as a gnats chuff.0 -
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