Learning Drums

Home Practice Studio

It’s time to post some photos of my practice studio (front bedroom, in reality) to the blog. The fact is, the practice studio will soon move to allow for a nursery. So, this entry will act as a reminder of how it looked. Whilst I’m at it, I’ll highlight (underline) items I believe should be in all practice rooms.

First, the most important part of the studio - the drum kit (in this case, an electronic Hart Dynamics imported from the US). After two years of hammering it’s still standing strong.

Drum Kit

The brain… a Roland TD8 - includes metronome and plenty of drumkit samples.

Roland Brain

Pedals… a realistic electonic hi-hat pedal and a real bass drum pedal (DW 5000).

PedalsBase Pedal

The music stand positioned in line of sight to allow easy reading of exercises and tab.

Music Stand

You need music to play along to, so a CD player is essential. Here it’s connected to the electronic kit allowing a mix of both CD and your drums through headphones. The yellow box on top provides a MIDI connection to a PC for playing MIDI based exercises through the drum kit at any tempo. If you’re lucky enough you can also record your performances to the PC and have them analysed with appropriate software (I use Gigajam’s Drum Analyser).

Music Source

A mirror to look at yourself :-) This is a tool, not a form of self admiration. Viewing how you play is very revealing and can often tell you things that listening alone can’t such as how you sit (are you hunched?) and how relaxed you look when playing. Position it so you can see all parts of your body including legs and arms.

Mirror

Obviously, you need a seat to perch on and you also need some decent headphones to listen through. I use a set of headphones specifically for DJ’s; these bring out the bass drum and lower toms very well.

Seat

Most important item now, the sticks. I have two different forms; Standard 5A’s (Pro-mark) and Anti-Vibe (Zildjian). The anti-vibe are sometimes useful when playing on an electonic kit, in particular, the cymbals I own, as they greatly reduce the wear on your limbs, however, they do have slightly different weight characteristics to standard sticks. They’re resting on a practice pad which is very useful for repetitive rudiment work as you can take it everywhere with you.

Sticks

That’s it. Some of you may have noticed the bad decor in the room. It won’t last long, as the room will become the nursery. The studio will find a new place in the house, but whether I’ll actually have any time to practice with a new-born baby will be another thing. Only time will tell.

Learning Drums

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Are you allowed to practice?

Budding drummers can’t stop drumming. They’ll send people mad as they subconsciously tap at anything in sight, including their own body parts. But this is all part of practice and without practice we’re not capable drummers (unless you’re a natural of course).

I don’t own an acoustic drum kit - I would love to have a setup at home, but no-one within hearing distance is going to allow this. Drum kits are loud, very loud. Endless, repetitive practice will annoy anyone given time. Catch 22 then. You need to practice to get good, but you can’t practice because you sound bad and everyone tells you to stop. Even if you sound good, you’re going to be told to stop if it’s getting late, or someone wants to watch TV or just have some peace and quiet.

Unless you have very understanding family and neighbours, it’s really difficult to frequently practice at times that suit you. To be honest, I don’t know how this world has managed to create so many great drummers. How did they manage to practice?

Well, here are some solutions I can think of:

1) Find a studio and rent a room with a drum kit. Noise is no longer an issue. However, you have to travel and pay hourly rates.
2) Use a practice pad. Again this is quiet, but you’re limited to what you can practice.
3) Fit silencer pads to your acoustic kit. Now you can practice with the whole kit, but it doesn’t have the right feel.
4) Sound proof a room in your house. Expensive.
5) Practice on an electronic drum kit.

And number 5 is my primary solution, that’s right, the electronic drum kit, which has provided my freedom to practice.

Two years ago, I imported a Hart Kit from the states when I first decided to dedicate time to drumming. Note: I own the previous form of cymbals shown in the picture on the Hart site. Ok, it’s not an acoustic kit, but, that’s not the point. With this gadgetry setup in my home, I can practice when I want. I just have to walk to the front bedroom and start. This means I can spend an hour (or more) almost every day behind a drum kit. No-one complains and no-one will - it’s quiet except for a few taps of wood against machine. With headphones you can control the volume to suit your mood (remember, don’t ruin your ears). Plus, there’s a built-in metronome, multiple kits (which can help alleviate boredom) and the ability to play along to CD’s etc.

I’ve found short, frequent practice hours much more beneficial than less frequent marathon sessions. Of course, I don’t exclusively use the electronic kit. I mix it up with some pad practice for rudiments etc and I go to the studio every other week to get behind a real kit.

If you feel your practice is constrained and you’re not given the freedom to practice as much as you’d like, then try an electronic drum kit. It may surprise others more than it surprises you.

In the future, I’ll describe my practice setup in more detail…

What have you done to gain practice freedom? Please leave commments.

Learning Drums

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Too old? My dog isn’t..

My dog (a Cocker Spaniel) is now 8 years old - approximately half way through her life. She still manages to learn new commands and patterns of interaction, although it can take a while to sink in.

I’m 34 now (not as old as my dog), but only started seriously learning to drum 2 years ago. For most, this would seem too late to embark on such a journey. For anyone who is concerned they’re too old, I can vouch that age is not a barrier. Factors including attitude and enthusiasm are much more important to whether you can make it succeed.

Although I took the decision to take things seriously relatively recently, my interest in drumming has been held for much longer. Over many many years, two of my college friends (guitarists) and I have been regularly getting together to bash out some noise. We’re not a band as such, we’d just be three guys in a room who happen to be playing instruments at the same time. I wouldn’t really be playing, as I had no idea what I was doing. The only thing I owned was a pair of drumsticks.

But, the desire was always there. I’d have my drummer heroes and I knew I wanted to be able to play - to perform in front of others eventually.

Two years ago, circumstances changed. First, I decided to dedicate time to learning the drums. Simple enough, but you have to consider whether you can commit for long enough. Just like my dog, drums are for life, not just Christmas. Second, I managed to collect enough cash to buy an electronic drum kit. Third, I found a tutor I believed I could get on with.

So, it’s never too old. Age is not an issue. But, you do need:

1) The enthusiasm and desire to become a drummer
2) The time to dedicate to study, practice and general immersion
3) Some tools to practice with at times convenient to you
4) Someone to guide and encourage you
5) An avenue to show off your wares
6) To enjoy it!!

If you satisfy the above, no matter how old you are, and you’re thinking about getting into drums - then take the plunge. I did and I don’t intend to stop and that’s two years later.

Learning Drums

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