Top products from r/drumline

We found 24 product mentions on r/drumline. We ranked the 29 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top comments that mention products on r/drumline:

u/hyland_44zx_ · 2 pointsr/drumline

Id say the two biggest things looked for are Leadership and chops (duh)

If you hold traditionally, i HIGHLY recommend you dont when you practice. If you hold matched while you practice, traditional will come naturally, and any setback you have can be easily adjusted with some extra time. Also, it would be in your best interest to avoid playing on a kevlar style head or practice pad while practicing. The amount of knockback on those heads may feel great, but the less knockback a head has, the more it forces you to use your fingers, which builds your chops up much faster and effectively. Learn it on a concert style head, then bring it over to kevlar and adjust from there.

Leadership is the easiest to explain, but also the hardest to get. You need three things: easy to listen to, respect from your peers, and the ability to mentor those who are lower then you. Those things are earned, and usually only come naturally, and they can be a pain to get. Take ownership without being an annoying disruption and see where that goes. if they like you, and youre easy to follow, getting that part down is already done. if they don't like you, sorry to say it man, its probably not for you in that specific environment.

As you do studies, pay close close attention to three simple things: your accents, your double strokes, and your flams. In a drumline, these three things are like the holy trinity of preformance. Bring out a solo book like Jay Wanamakers Champion Corps Style Contest Solos, or Edward Freytags rudimental cook book (i guarantee you've played SOMETHING out of these). Run through solos that are either easy or that youve already learned and pay very close attention to stick height, dynamic contrast, emphasis on that holy trinity i mentioned, and VERY close attention specifically to non accent / accent contrast. In rudimental playing, there should be a stark difference in accents and non accents, thats key to being good on a line. With that typically comes stick height for visuals, but the sounds gotta come first.

id say the most importantly part about being center snare is the ability to keep a solid and consistent tempo. To do this, you MUST be comfortable with what your playing. The only way you are able to do that is to have chops. How do you get chops? that's easy. I use Alan Dawson's Rudimental Ritual every single day, once a day, or before i preforme / practice. Currently, i can play every rudiment, front to back with little mistakes at 215 BPM on a concert-style head. When you are able to get your chops that well, playing at specific tempos consistently comes naturally. The reason people start slowing down or speeding up is because they feel stressed with what they are playing, glitch out and speed up because theyre thinking to hard. If you can get your chops up, anything you want to play you can, and it will feel natural while you do it. HOWEVER, DO NOT MAKE THE MISTAKE of learning it wrong. Play the ritual one time for an instructor and make sure all the rudiments are played stylistically correct, and DO. NOT. PLAY. FASTER. THAN. YOU. ARE. ABLE. TO. its an extremely common terrible habit of percussionist to play something faster then they can, screw it up, and start and stop over and over again until they get it. you learn NOTHING by doing that. you MUST play everything so slow you cannot possibly make a mistake while playing. Thats how you will be able to regonize your mistakes, find a way to practice them, and learn from it.

All in all, it comes down to your dedication, man. Drumming is something you gotta own. Take ownership of it. Practice practice practice. and studying with an instructor helps a lot to, get one if you haven't already. Good luck!!

Here are links to the things i mentioned. Theyre basically every single high schools go tos. Id be shocked if you havent heard of them or at least have played SOMETHING out of them at one point in time.

Championship Corps-Style Contest Solos: For the Intermediate-Advanced Snare Drummer https://www.amazon.com/dp/0739009338/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_fMn4BbNW3PGM8

The Rudimental Cookbook : A Collection of 25 State of the Art Rudimental Snare Drum Solos and Developmental Exercises From Easy to Extremely Advanced https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000E8O8E2/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_xNn4BbQZ18F7A

The Rudimental Ritual : https://bateriaipercussiovalls.files.wordpress.com/2014/08/rudimental-ritual-by-alan-dawson.pdf

u/tj_burgess · 1 pointr/drumline

If you just want a 'basic, all around' stick I would recommend SD1s from Vic Firth. They are a great, standard size stick that can be used for a lot of different purposes.

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https://www.amazon.com/Vic-Firth-American-SD1-General/dp/B0002F4TKA

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If you want to immediately start out with marching percussion, the stick I would recommend starting with Ralph Hardimons also from Vic Firth.

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https://www.amazon.com/Vic-Firth-Corpsmaster-Signature-Hardimon/dp/B0002F6NJA?keywords=Corpsmaster+drum+sticks&qid=1540777270&s=Musical+Instruments&sr=1-1&ref=sr_1_1

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There are other types of marching sticks with some different features that can be better or worse for you depending on what you are playing, your natural playing tendency and other things but these are sticks that have a nice weight, about the standard size for marching sticks and will help you while at least starting off and learning some of the basics.

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As far as practice pad, I would recommend any double sided pad with two different types of material to play on. One that I have used for many, many years that I believe is a great pad is the double sided Reel Feel pad.

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https://www.amazon.com/Evans-2-Sided-Practice-Pad-Inch/dp/B000FMDIXY

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There are other pads than this that are also really good, I am not saying this is the "only" pad you should get, but that this pad will certainly work for what you need.

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I hope this helps some.

u/IWonTheRace · 1 pointr/drumline

Couple things that'll help you overcome some barriers you are facing with moving forward.

Practice by sight reading and playing stick control books, like the infamous SCV Stick Control or the classic George Lawrence Stone's "Stick Control" book.

You can purchase GLSSCB it here, https://www.amazon.com/Stick-Control-George-Lawrence-Stone/dp/1892764040/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=George+Lawrence+Stone%C2%B4s+%22Stick+Control%22+book.&qid=1565023832&s=gateway&sr=8-1

The book itself has very basic, to intermediate, to high level rudiments.

Practice with the first few pages of the book. Master the movements, and you will pick up with speed. It's the basic rudiment patterns that will help you succed in playing the rest of the book.

The key is controlling your arm movements, stick, height, as well as tempo and fulcrum placements. Always practice with a metronome.

You will get better, it takes time. Set your frustrations aside and simply just start over.

If you want to lower the tone of the criticism you receive, invest 10 bucks into that book and you'll see praises then.

Happy drumming!

u/Tryounify · 1 pointr/drumline

These for if your school doesn't have gauntlets (whole line will need them).

These are pretty handy if you don't have one, they do everything drumline related.

These are great for practicing, they're heavier than your average sticks.

People say this is the best book ever in terms of learning.

Everyone should use a metronome when practicing.

u/thesalt19 · 2 pointsr/drumline

Vic firth pad for $180 on amazon. Great pad, great quality
Vic Firth Heavy Hitter Quadropad Small https://www.amazon.com/dp/B001E6VIQ4/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_OOsBDbNCJA768

u/559707 · 1 pointr/drumline

Thanks, this is the closest thing I've seen to what I'm looking for - a portable PA system in the $100 range. [Link here for anyone who's following along.] (https://www.amazon.com/Behringer-EPA40-BEHRINGER-EUROPORT/dp/B000TTVHRM) We have a battery of 12 and a pit of 12 - in your experience do you think that would work for this size group during indoor and/or outdoor rehearsals? You guys directly hook up a met to the PA system and you're good to go?

u/jacobgu3 · 2 pointsr/drumline

Head mounts are difficult to get right. If you don’t want to use a head mount, try using the jaw clamp mount.

Link Here

This can clip to the rim of a snare or tenor, or the tension rods on the sides of a snare in order to get a nice angle of the drum, your hands, and possibly your face depending on how you want it set up.

Good luck!

u/BrewinBombers · 4 pointsr/drumline

I have these:
https://www.amazon.com/Etymotic-ETY-Plugs-Fidelity-Earplugs-Standard/dp/B0015WJQ7A

and they help tremendously. I've worn them to deafening concerts and they've performed well. Cheap, effective and unobtrusive. Plenty 'strong'.

The only challenge is that because they're small, they can be easy to lose.

u/GormyGorm · 1 pointr/drumline

Get quad logic. It will teach you most everything you need to know. I am using it right now for learning tenors for my audition... Even though my audition is in 8-9 months, it still applies. If you have any questions, I would reccomend asking a current quads player at your school for help if you are struggling on anything, but mainly... Buy Quad Logic, and a Quadropad, I recommend the Vic Firth Heavy Hitter ones.

https://www.amazon.com/Quad-Logic-Revised-Eiton-Drumming/dp/1933001194/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1502565010&sr=8-1&keywords=quad+logic

https://www.amazon.com/Vic-Firth-Heavy-Hitter-Quadropad/dp/B0002F5CEC/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1502565032&sr=8-1&keywords=vic+firth+quadropad

u/horace_the_mouse · 1 pointr/drumline

Stick Control was written by George Stone. One of the most influential rudimental books every written.

u/Kittykat3328 · 3 pointsr/drumline

Try goo gone? It worked for me. Get some on amazon here