Rhythm practice exercise for musicians. Here we have straight 32nd notes (demisemiquavers). Drummers can play these as either single strokes (RLRL etc.) or double strokes (RRLLRRLL etc.). Contact: sightreaddrums@gmail.com
@@handavid6421 but also in classical music, rhythm isn’t as tight. There isn’t really any groove, so you’re less likely to face rhythmic struggles in general due to the rhythms themselves being hard. I do classical stuff on occasion and that’s what I’ve noticed, one was a piece a arranged for a classical orchestra did have 32nd notes but it wasn’t “real world” bc it was more for fun, at least in my mind.
@@connormcateer7125 really depends on the piece, there are notes inegales pieces, and many fantasias have complex mixes of 32nds and 16th notes ( for example: rossi's toccata settima / cpe or js bach fantasias ).
@@handavid6421 yes I know, but overall my point is despite being a professional musician who’s focus isn’t classical but still does some classical gigs, I have very rarely ever seen 32nd notes and considering the nature of classical music, the need to get super tight in the groove 32nd notes as a skill is borderline useless. If you’re fine with 32nd notes, you won’t ever encounter any issues besides maybe needing to lower the bpm for a few runs to get the speed itself up.
Thank u I’m in 7th grade in marching band I’m going to my 2nd rehearsal in 2 weeks and I had no idea what those notes meant now I know may god bless gang
Hi i wish to ask if possible , to have a PDF of these exercises , they are good for practicing. iam starting music lessons.If need be i will give my email.
It would be a lot more helpful for the player practicing to feel flow if there were stickings that reinforced the downbeats with the right hand. Like doing 8s and 16s. I’d say do the slow 16 pattern starting with left hand only for 2 counts move to right 2 counts and add the left for the 32nds so that way you can truly understand what the spacing should feel like
We used to have them in snare line during marching band all the time. They were just notated differently. They were always written as 16th notes with a diagonal slash on each note stem. These slashes are referred to as "diddles" and they turn a single stroke/note into a double stroke of the next smallest subdivision. So a group of four 16th notes with a slash on each note would become eight 32nd notes. Edit: Its worth noting that the notation I explained is strictly used to convey 32nd notes with a double-stroke sticking, while the one displayed in the video could be written with either a double OR single-stroke sticking.