|
Firstly,
rudiments are not an "end" but rather a "means"
to an end. During my earlier years of teaching rudiments, I made
sure my students could recognize and play not only the basic 13
but the entire 26 rudiments then prescribed and endorsed by the
National Association of Rudimental Drummers (have I dated myself
enough?) However, many of these rudimental "experts" experienced
difficulty executing them when faced with a line of written drum
notation. So, I tried something different: I began teaching the
rudiments in combinations to aid in a continuous flow of executing
a written line. That is, I taught them to "overlap" one
rudiment into another. I began by using the example of two names:
For example, "Nelson and Nathan." The common letter to
both names is the letter "N." "N" being the
last letter in Nelson and the first letter of Nathan. Thus, if I
combined the two names without doubling the common letter I'd arrive
at "NelsoNathan."
Next,
I used an old standard drum solo to illustrate how this worked in
drumming. The Connecticut Halftime is perfect. We discussed
the Seven-Stroke left flam/right flam; the seven-stroke right paradiddle/left
paradiddle and the right tap left flam/right flam. Think about the
opening line of this solo. If the student begins with the correct
sticking of the seven stroke roll the hands are "automatically"
in position for a left flam which is followed immediately by a right
flam. The same holds true for the "Seven-Stroke Right Paradiddle/Left
Paradiddle. The last stroke of the seven is the down stroke of the
paradiddle.
This
simplified method of applying the rudiments has worked wonders for
me and the students of Marshall ISD. I do not have a 6th, 7th, or
8th grader who cannot play through the four standards after using
this method: The Connecticut Halftime, The Downfall of Paris, The
Three Camps and Hell on the Wabash.
Anthony
Robinson
Marshall, Texas
|