Келесі
- 01:00
- 14 МЛН
- 9 күн бұрын
- 00:40
- 58 МЛН
- 16 күн бұрын
- 00:12
- 18 МЛН
- 12 күн бұрын
- 00:26
- 25 МЛН
- 13 күн бұрын
- 10:46
- 141 М.
- 12:42
- 1 МЛН
- 1:05
- 18 М.
- 2:47
- 30 М.
- 13:23
- 838 М.
- 3:39
- 111 М.
- 0:19
- 4,1 М.
- 4:00
- 541 М.
- 3:08
- 153 М.
- 2:41
- 89 М.
- 6:37
- 5 МЛН
- 3:39
- 119 М.
- 2:53
- 1,3 МЛН
Пікірлер: 16
I watch this video everyday.
Excellent video.....good drumming face too👍.
Superb swinging my friend
nice five strokes on ride and kick/snare work
I reckon watching this video has made a noticeable improvement in my playing.
@AlexanderFlood
5 жыл бұрын
Abe Baillie Ha sick!
What ride cymbal is that?
Which ride are u using?
Are you doing a 5-stroke push/pull or a 5-stroke moeller on the ride those few times throughout this video? I can hardly tell, which is great haha. Really nice grooves, thanks for uploading.
@AlexanderFlood
7 жыл бұрын
midinerd It's sort of a combination of both, mainly push-pull. Same technique Tony used for groups of 5s
@midinerd
7 жыл бұрын
Kind of obsessed with this video at the moment. Do you have groove references to what you're playing here? Cuts from certain songs/fills you know you're throwing in? Beats are so damn FRESH
@AlexanderFlood
7 жыл бұрын
midinerd I've listened to and transcribed a lot of Tony's patterns and comping stuff from the 60s Miles records. Definitely worth checking all that stuff out, especially Nefertiti and Miles Smiles. Tony is doing heaps of hip stuff throughout both records. In this video I'm just incorporating a bunch of Tony licks and patterns as well as my own stuff. It was all improvised
The Tony Williams 5 stroke is cool, and no harm meant by this, I just think it sounded to busy. Tony's cymbals really washed out. I like Jack deJohnette's approach using diddles and singles combinations. I even think that approach sounds better than the traditional 3 stroke cymbal pattern.
@thethatthisguy1110
2 жыл бұрын
The five stroke isn’t a tony Williams thing. Almost every jazz drummer plays the cymbal with more than three strokes. And jack dejohnette plays even more strokes and was playing around the same time. His 1966 recordings he was playing 7-9 stroke patterns on the cymbal while comping with his high hat snare drum and bass drum. If anything jack dejohnette was more “busy”. it’s fuckin stupid to call a solo drum part busy anyway.
Buy a better snare dude
@JulianFernandez
2 жыл бұрын
he cant. he uses all his money to take your mom out. gtfo douche.