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Ideas for Jazz Drumming

Ideas for Jazz Drumming

Copyright T.R.Lake; drumming.timsparlour.com Jazz Drumming Blog; 2013 All rights reserved. The authors moral rights have been asserted. Reproduction in any form or by any means without the written consent of the author is strictly prohibited.

Ideas for Jazz Drumming

This is an ever expanding compendium of ideas that I developed for the Jazz Drumming Blog, and rather than endlessly adding ideas and pages to the blog I decided it would be better to turn them into a digital book that is regularly updated. I am fond of the word idea as it implies something that is not concrete, something amorphous. Ideas change and develop, and that is entirely the point of this collection; an idea is not restricted to boundaries. Theses ideas are little snippets of things I have found interesting and useful to work on but it is up to you to let the idea take hold in your mind, to nd a way to develop and interpret it in your own way. Each of these ideas is a starting point for your own creativity; hence they should be a spark for your own ideas of how to use them and what to play. I dont believe in spoon feeding a xed set of rules for anything, especially jazz, but prefer to give you a framework and a few guidelines. This will let you think and discover for yourself; that way the ideas are more likely to stick and become part of your self-expression. Have fun and be creative.

T.R.Lake http://drumming.timsparlour.com

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Idea #1
This was a little idea I heard at a gig. It is a nice subtle embellishment of the comping gure in Jazz Time using a drag onto the and, in this case, of beat 3 and works nicely at a medium to slow tempo. Fig.1 is the basic idea. Fig.2 is the most useful way to understand and practice it. Fig.3 shows two other ways to think of it that will work at faster tempos. Just make sure you dont slip into dragging onto the downbeat.

Idea #2
Having been working on the idea of playing continuous triplets between the left hand and the right foot underneath jazz time, using John Rileys Headroom Triplets among other exercises, I wanted to come up with a way to expand this into playing more broken time with the RH over the triplets. The obvious starting point was thus to play the exercise in 3/ 4. The Hi-Hat here is just written on beat 2, but in the pdf is a HH variation that starts to imply the 4/4. Start slow and then try to play one bar of 4/4 followed by the exercise (which gives a total of 4 bars in 4/4!). Also practice starting the exercise from bar 2, bar 3 and bar 4 and looping back round.

Idea #3
Ive been playing around with a lot of similar ideas to this for a while, grouping triplets into groups of 4 is a nice way to build some tension, both in time playing and soloing. It works well across 3 sounds on the drum kit and, as you can see in the exercise, leading from the ride cymbal seems to work better. On replacing the hi-hat for the bass drum, g.3 in the pdf, you can add the bass drum on the very last note, the and of 4, to create an ac- cent. This should be tied over, as it should in g.4, to beat 2 of the next bar.

Idea #4
This is a little exercise for developing the ever useful 5 stroke roll at medium-up to fast tempos in Jazz Time. It is important to focus on the landing on the and of 4 and really nailing it, picking up the time again on beat 2 of the next bar. Play exercise 1. as R L; then double each for exercise 2. RR LL. Re- verse the sticking. Exercise 3. is two buzzes rather than double strokes. Exercise 4. is the same thing but landing on beat 4. To expand the idea apply these rolls to landing on all other down and up beats! As ever start slow and work up.

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