The Score Magazine February 2019 issue | Page 36

AMOGH RAO Drum Warmups for Better Expression Some of my favourite educational moments in drumming have been playing simple, straightforward exercises alongside the many teachers I’ve been lucky to have. I first fell in love with the idea of these exercises because of their sheer versatility and applicability around the instrument, beyond just a traditional warmup. When gearing up for a practice session, it’s important to also warmup your mind alongside your hands and feet. Just practicing bars and bars of rudiments has the opposite effect, making you switch off parts of your brain and go on auto-pilot to the extent that when you’re ready to actually play, your creativity has vanished. Keeping this in mind, here are two of my go-to exercises. Feel free to twist them around and re-apply them in the infinitely different ways they were made to be played. Inverted Doubles Far and above my favourite exercise, since its applicability has literally changed the way I approach phrases, expression and improvisation on the drums. The exercise is simply 4 bars of right- hand lead single strokes, 4 bars of right-hand lead double strokes, another 4 bars of right-hand lead singles and then 4 bars of right- hand lead inverted doubles. This makes the last note of the 4 bars fall on the right, switching the whole exercise to left-hand lead. You then play 4 bars of left-hand lead singles, doubles, singles again and finally 4 bars of left-hand lead inverted doubles. Don’t forget to keep an eight note on your foot! Here’s the sticking – 34 The Score Magazine highonscore.com RLRLRLRL x4 LRLRLRLR x4 RRLLRRLL x4 LLRRLLRR x4 RLRLRLRL x4 LRLRLRLR x4 RLLRRLLR x4 LRRLLRRL x4 The beauty of this seemingly simple exercise is the comfort you develop with inversions, which invariably allows you to fill in gaps in your grooves in unimaginable ways. You’re no longer playing simple ghost-notes and drags to buff up your eight- note grooves. These inversions create brand new textures across any and every groove once brought up to tempo and smoothened out. Accent-Ghost Permutations Arguably the most crucial component to learning dynamics is getting a strong control over your wrists and fingers as they play through different volumes and attacks. Fortunately to begin with, there are just two main kinds of strokes needed to master – the accent and the ghost-note. And since there are just two, the total possible permutations and combinations only add up to 6. However, they require significant wrist control and technique as you play them at higher tempos in order to maintain fluidity. So here’s an exercise that covers it. Capital letters denote accents and regular ones denote ghost notes. RrRr rRrR RRrr rrRR rRRr RrrR The same structure can be applied to the left hand, and to get even more creative, you can replace each letter with a single stroke roll (RL), or a double stroke or any other simple/compound rudiment. As long as you follow the framework of accent-ghost note, this system becomes another conceptual skeleton that can be applied in ridiculously enjoyable ways across the pad and kit.