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This guy is the most musical genius I have ever seen in my life . Where is he from. If nobody else can be found that can make something like this and plays that many instruments at the same time or more then he to me is probably the best musician out there.
Lol, clearly this is not "playing 10 instruments at once". That's physically impossible. Unless you consider each piece of the drum kit a single instrument (you know, the bass drum, snare drum, cymbal, tambourine and whatever else he had in the percussion kit). I rather see a drum kit collectively as a single instrument; each piece of the kit is like a single 'note' as on a piano or whatever, although drums obviously don't produce actual "notes". If this guy were to actually play "10 instruments at once", he'd have to play, oh, let's see... the drum kit, a guitar, a bass guitar, a keyboard, a xylophone, a flute, a violin, a cello, a trumpet, and a trombone... all at once... or something to that effect. You can't just defy the laws of physics... there is absolutely a physical limit to how much a single person can do. Try playing all those 10 instruments I mentioned, all at the same time... it's impossible. The only way to achieve the sound of all those 10 instruments, in a physically practical way, is with electronic/mechanical assistance... some of it will need to be at least partially automated. Live looping is one commonly used technique, although with live looping you're not really playing all instruments at once... you're actually recording yourself playing each instrument one at a time, then what the listeners hear is all the recordings playing back at the same time; this is literally just multitrack recording. It's not the same as actually physically playing multiple instruments at once. I've seen a guy called Jordan B. Willson play 4 instruments at once, and it sounded damn impressive: he plays a drum kit (using pedals that trigger the beaters which strike the drums), an electric guitar (by strumming the guitar strings with one of his thumbs), a bass guitar (by strumming the bass guitar strings with his other thumb), and a keyboard (with only one-handed playing on the keyboard, using 4 of his fingers)... and this is all going on all at one time, it's not like he records himself playing each instrument separately or uses some mechanical device that plays all these instruments for him. That's probably about as physically difficult as you can make it... anything beyond that is simply gonna be too complicated, I would think. I don't say this to put anyone down or whatever, but I'm just using reality here... there is a limit to how many things you can physically do at once, and there is a limit to how much your brain can handle, at a certain point.
@@yophntm1518 Not "notes" of an actual discernable pitch though. That's the thing. The combination of frequencies a drum produces is so complex there's not really a clearly recognizable pitch. There are definitely certain types of drums and percussion instruments that do produce clearly recognizable pitches, but I'm not talking about that here. If you're referring to "notes" as simply "sounds", then yes, drums do produce "notes" in that sense. And so does every other instrument.
@@jasonfuentes1513 Well yes, and like I said before, certain percussion instruments do produce "notes" (I.E actual recognizable pitches). But, in general, drums are not a pitched instrument. That's why the drums in a rock band do not clash in pitch with the other instruments... you don't hear the drum kit and think "hmm, that sounds out of tune in relation to the guitar" or whatever. Of course there are exceptions to that "rule". But they're only exceptions.
@@justinnaramor6050 uhhh, well i guess a lot of things are subjective. Usually, (as a drummer) i will tune my drums to certain notes as do many drummers. Most of the drums i’ve heard are always tuned to specific note patterns. For example, a lot of drummers tune toms 5ths or 4ths apart. Take B to E or B to F# as an example. I did notice you mention rock which is a world I’m not familiar with at all. I am from the Gospel drum community which probably explains our difference in opinion.