Little man has the DOG in him forreal. His understanding of rhythm and articulation transcends his time for sure! Keep doing what you’re doing! Kings raise kings! 🤝🏾
OMG this is a blessing to the dry places in my spirit. I just discovered your channel, and God is using your family to bless so many of us. This is just so wonderfully melodic. Thank you Jesus!
Happy to see a new video with Justin again, it's been a long time. 🤗 Having such s sense of rhythm, coordination, creativity and the ability to perform such complex rhyrtms at his age is just a miracle. This boy is a real prodigy ! 😗
I was watching this on TV, and I had to log into my cell phone so I could comment (which I never do this btw)!! I almost want to cry…I love this jam session! God Job Kings!!!❤ Btw: I didn’t realize I wasn’t subscribed under this account so now I’m subscribed to both accounts! Everyone please do that if you have more than one RU-vid account! Let’s go 💙W 🌍W💙 ⭐️ ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Love this family. Keep your family away from Hollywood etc. You have a beautiful pure family ❤❤❤🙏🙏🙏 May The MOST HIGH GOD keep you all❤️ Peace and Love ❤️
I love this family! You all are so very talented. I am unfortunately not a grammy award winning father, so I don't know where to start with my son learning the drums. Any suggestions? He is almost 3.
Thank You! Well I wasn't a grammy winning father when my son was 3 either haha. But honestly, at that age (3) all that matters is that you make it fun and join in with him since he'll always rather do it together than alone. I don't know how to play the guitar but I would grab the guitar and act like I was a guitar hero and jam with my son. He couldn't tell the difference anyway but it made it fun for him and that's one of the main reasons why he still finds it enjoyable in my opinion. You can''t really make your kids do anything at that age so always look for fun creative ways to keep them engaged. Hope this helps! All the best
@@WilsonWorld this is a great suggestion and helps me know I'm on the right path. He loves just playing on it and playing fake guitars and I try to join in. I should have never quit piano as a kid though, it's amazing to see you two create jams together. Keep it up, God Bless, and thank you for the response!
I think you need to focus on him developing his pocket feel more; he should be practicing with a metronome as much as he can and also practice rudiments on a practice pad. Time to have him start practicing the "boring" stuff so that he can become GREAT
I do this with you and you are my friend I don’t care what anyone else says but you don’t know me so you can tell my mom that you don’t care and you know me so please stop being a friend
The kid needs to spend many days in a practice room with a metronome and no big kit, kick, snare, hat, one cymbal. The boy needs to learn to groove, he keeps going for fancy stuff he can’t hit and he’s gonna develop bad habits on the instrument that will impede his success in the future.
My son’s name is Justin. It’s written on the video. The kid or boy who made this comment needs to learn my son’s name and write it out before attempting any kind of critique. Let’s start there 👍🏾
@@WilsonWorld Okay. Justin needs to spend many days in a practice room with a metronome and no big kit, kick, snare, hat, one cymbal. Justin needs to learn to groove, he keeps going for fancy stuff he can’t hit and he’s gonna develop bad habits on the instrument that will impede his success in the future.
@@PhilMarlowe392 Good start. Here’s the thing. Any ‘good’ musician knows that practicing lasts a lifetime. Even if Justin wasn’t 9 or if he hit every lick perfectly he’d still be spending ‘many days in a practice room with a metronome’ as you put it. You also don’t seem to know the difference between impromptu and structured/non impromptu songs. Or maybe you just saw this one video and decided to comment. We are making these songs up on the spot. They are completely impromptu. Whatever he chooses to play on them is his prerogative. I’ve done this with him since he was two years old and these sessions are designed to spur creativity, composition, and thinking outside the box. “He keeps going for fancy stuff he can’t hit.” That’s entirely the point. Going for ‘fancy stuff’ is how you push yourself. It makes you better as a musician. He’s also doing this in the comfort of his own home which you seem to forget. And how does pushing yourself on your instrument make you develop bad habits and impede success?? (Don’t worry, I know it doesn’t) I don’t know, maybe you meant well and really thought you were giving good advice and I don’t normally even respond to comments like this. But I just wanted to correct your thinking and your approach in case you plan on passing on your ‘advice’ to any other musicians on the internet. The core of what I think you were trying to say is sound. “Practicing with a metronome helps great with your timing.” That’s probably how you should have said it and where you should’ve stopped. I could post a video of what Dave Weckl said about his timing and groove at Weckl’s drum camp two weeks ago but that would just be petty 😂. Be blessed ✌🏾