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The Gear Shifter | Using Every Fulcrum To Your Advantage 

Noah Alexxander
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Everyone is obsessed with which fulcrum you should use on drums. Middle fulcrum? Front fulcrum? Back fulcrum? Well, you should really know how to use all of them. Stick technique and fulcrum is kind of dependent on what we are trying to achieve, and every fulcrum specializes in something we need. This drum lesson takes you through each fulcrum, as well as shifting between them for our benefit.
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Chapters:
0:00 Intro
0:20 Stick Technique
1:14 Thumbs
1:38 Fulcrum Walkthrough
1:54 Back Fulcrum
2:51 Middle Fulcrum
3:36 Front Fulcrum
4:15 Fulcrum Development
5:41 Changing Gears
6:35 When To Change Gears
Gear:
Vic Firth 5a Barrel Tips: amzn.to/3N6wO99
Remo Controlled Sound Snare Head: amzn.to/3MKSjMu
Remo coated Emperor tom heads: amzn.to/3udwjTY
Remo Powerstroke P3 Clear Bass Head: amzn.to/3SGXC3b
Audio Equipment:
Bass Mic Sennheiser E902: amzn.to/3SGXC3b
Snare Mic SM57: amzn.to/47xbGQT
Tom Mics and Snare Bottom Audix FP5 Pack: amzn.to/46dVEdU
Overheads: Audix f9 (pair): amzn.to/46kBWNj
Interface Scarlett 18i20: amzn.to/3FYTVhH

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21 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 34   
@8020drummer
@8020drummer Месяц назад
oh shit need to detail watch this, but if this is what I think he might be onto something very important that I've been too lazy to make a video about 🤣
@NoahAlexxander
@NoahAlexxander Месяц назад
I'm working on the material to further expand on this concept, its something I haven't seen many people talk about. Uncharted territory so I want to get my words right!
@8020drummer
@8020drummer Месяц назад
@@NoahAlexxander nice! My only question after watching most of the video, and this is something I go back and forth with in my own teaching is "is practicing each of these techniques as its own thing 'over-fitting'? i.e. would it be most efficient to just simulate the playing situation where they're applicable and let them develop emergently, spot-fixing any inefficiencies that come up." it's an ongoing debate in my own head, soooo
@NoahAlexxander
@NoahAlexxander Месяц назад
@@8020drummer I think its overfitting to put too much focus on it for sure. I rarely cover these topics so deeply in my lessons unless I think I have to (especially with younger students). I usually like to explain how the mechanics work, then just let it happen naturally. But I think having an understanding of what it feels like to use these techniques is valuable.
@8020drummer
@8020drummer Месяц назад
@@NoahAlexxander 🔥🔥
@hot_trash_beats
@hot_trash_beats Месяц назад
Clauss Hessler talks about this a lot too.
@jonashellborg8320
@jonashellborg8320 Месяц назад
Noah, it was one of your early videos that made me deep-dive into my grip. Moving the thumb around, trying different levels of pressure, low contact to high contact. And I’ve found amazing sounds by doing this, snare drums and cymbals sound very different, in a very good way.
@NeCLiaH
@NeCLiaH Месяц назад
This topic needs to be adressed by us the drummers. Seriously, it's a fundamental subject when trying to play to the drums and almost no one talks deeply about it. All what you hear is wrist technique or finger technique, hand position on the stick and that's it. But it's a shorten version of the complete explanation. Thanks for the video.
@krusher74
@krusher74 Месяц назад
I was glad to find the middle fulcrum a while ago. I had been just using front and pinching the stick too much, the middle is helping be have a looser grip and keep my fingers on the stick. especially my weak left hand. Great Video, subbed.
@lobbyrobby
@lobbyrobby Месяц назад
I'm a fairly new drummer. My stick in my right hand is always flying out haha. It seems like it happens a lot when I first sit down at the kit. The good news is apparently my grip is relaxed
@maxwelldevita4329
@maxwelldevita4329 Месяц назад
Thanks for the vid, cool to see someone highlighting this. Ever since Iearned back and middle fulcrum, I've thrown them into the mix wherever I deem useful
@annoyedspy2173
@annoyedspy2173 Месяц назад
This video feels like a godsend, I've been struggling the past 2 weeks because I didn't understand how to integrate technique into playing fast doubles, and the crab claws tip you gave just opened my eyes, THANK YOU
@chrisgoodchild2204
@chrisgoodchild2204 Месяц назад
Aside from Bill Bachman’s technique series, this is the only other video I’ve watched that covers this topic. Really concise, too! I spent a long time trying to “correct” my grip which felt very unnatural. I think there’s a tendency to oversimplify things like this. I understand that it can become a point of too much focus in place of other things that are arguably more valuable, such as phrasing and vocabulary, but in a bid to develop a well rounded technique I believe this is a fundamental problem that should be addressed early on. At the very least, it saves a lot of time and potentially injury from thinking there’s a good and bad way to hold the sticks. I tried sticking to a rigid first finger fulcrum and frequently experienced thumb pain, then tried exclusively middle finger which eased that but then made it harder to play faster, more nuanced patterns. Great video, thanks!
@NoahAlexxander
@NoahAlexxander Месяц назад
Bill Bachman is a technique icon. His books opened up my mind and really helped my hands when I was younger.
@Ian_P
@Ian_P 11 дней назад
Thank you 👍😁
@Mr-Foad
@Mr-Foad Месяц назад
Been watching your channel for a while now, very impressed with your teaching and your skill, thanks for the great work !
@chad-tacular
@chad-tacular Месяц назад
Really good descriptions & explanations. Good job man! Seriously. 👍
@monumenteye
@monumenteye Месяц назад
cleared up so much for me. thank you!
@ArtemTeklyuk
@ArtemTeklyuk Месяц назад
good stuff, thank you
@adityatyagi4009
@adityatyagi4009 Месяц назад
Great lesson!
@JulianFernandez
@JulianFernandez Месяц назад
took some time to discover back fulcrum. Tony´s favorite! :D
@NoahAlexxander
@NoahAlexxander Месяц назад
Thats where I first learned about it! If its good for Tony, its good for everyone.
@AlvaritoYin
@AlvaritoYin Месяц назад
Awesome video! Emphasizing something that is so important and unnoticed by many people. A question I always had is if using pure middle fulcrum allows you to make a clear close roll? or is it indispensable to use the index pressure to make it possible?
@NoahAlexxander
@NoahAlexxander Месяц назад
If you work on keeping your hands relaxed and using the right motion, you can get a closed roll from middle fulcrum just as well as front fulcrum. It should give you a fuller sound, too.
@llRoBoBinHoll
@llRoBoBinHoll Месяц назад
I’ve never really heard of back fulcrum. How would it work if you have your first finger and thumb on the stick while doing it. Does the thumb just flop about, following the movement of the stick? And does the stick slide along the first finger?
@NoahAlexxander
@NoahAlexxander Месяц назад
With this approach, you still want all your fingers on the stick no matter which fulcrum is the emphasis.
@jaygee8566
@jaygee8566 Месяц назад
@@NoahAlexxander Respectfully disagree. I think ideally the back fingers should always be on the stick and developing the rear fulcrum helps with that immensely. But the front of the hand can be as loose as you want. And the looser you're able to achieve, the more you can develop the back of the hand and the easier lateral/circular movement becomes. As you approach your limits, the front of the hand comes back into play. Dan Weiss is a good example of a drummer who will often take the entire front of his hand off the stick and sort of use the first three fingers as "stoppers" to guide things along. But, I see where you're coming from if we're talking pragmatically. Telling a novice to take the front of the hand off the stick could go very poorly without the benefit of in-person instruction.
@NoahAlexxander
@NoahAlexxander Месяц назад
@@jaygee8566 I agree with you, and that's why I talk about developing back fulcrum with your front fingers off the stick. But I still like to keep all my fingers on the stick no matter what, even if they're limp and useless. I like the idea of no wasted motion, so switching my emphasis without moving my fingers around has worked well for me. But I dont disagree with you at all, just a different approach.
@jaygee8566
@jaygee8566 Месяц назад
Two nit-picky disagreements: 1) That there's a difference with how much each grip lets you "open up." If anything, I've had the opposite experience: more facility with powerful and large, upstrokes via the rear fulcrum. Have you practiced "snapping" the stick up with the last two fingers? 2) I question whether there's much point explicitly developing a middle finger fulcrum when you develop the front and rear. First because it's a bit "jack of all trades master of none" and for most things where it works better than front, rear works even better (and vice-versa). And second because, if you develop the front and the rear you tend to develop the middle anyway even when you aren't really trying to. At least, that's what happened for me.
@NoahAlexxander
@NoahAlexxander Месяц назад
Yeah honestly I didn't spend much time "developing" these fulcrums, rather over time understanding how to use them. This video is about understanding what they are and where they come from.
@jc3drums916
@jc3drums916 Месяц назад
On the contrary, because middle fulcrum is less specialized, more general-use, it should be learned first. It's faster to get the fundamental strokes down without also worrying about different fulcrums. Work on front and rear fulcrums later, when you want to go further, if you want - they're great, but not necessary for everyone. You'll always have middle fulcrum to fall back on.
@jaygee8566
@jaygee8566 Месяц назад
@@jc3drums916 It's faster to get the fundamental strokes down with the front fulcrum than with the middle. So you learn that first and then the rear fulcrum. In the process you get the middle fulcrum for free. It's obviously the most efficient pathway for learning.
@jc3drums916
@jc3drums916 Месяц назад
"The wood of the stick resonating is a big part of a good, open sound." Yes, but keeping all fingers on the sticks at all times inhibits the sticks' ability to resonate. I can understand wanting to keep all fingers on the sticks if it gives you a better sense of control, but it's a bit of a strange editing choice to bring up two somewhat contradictory pieces of advice/info back-to-back. If you want to maximize stick resonance, there should only be three fingers (thumb, index, middle) on the sticks (not counting rear fulcrum, of course). Develop all the fundmaentals this way, and use the rear fingers only when necessary for the sake of control. Watch any of Murray Spivack's students - Louie Bellson, David Garibaldi, Chuck Silverman, the Wackerman family, etc. - to see it in action. That said, control is more important, and if you feel you don't have enough control with a three-finger grip, use all your fingers.
@NoahAlexxander
@NoahAlexxander Месяц назад
The stick can resonate with all of your fingers on it as long as they're relaxed and you're not squeezing whatsoever. Having 5 vs 3 fingers on the stick shouldn't change anything, otherwise the stick would never resonate while in contact with our hands. Spivack is an icon, though. I do agree with that.
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