Drum Book Beginners Level
Drum Book Beginners Level
CONTENTS
1. INTRODUCTION
2. ABOUT DRUM KIT
A SHORT HISTORY OF DRUM SET
3. A STANDARD 5 PIECE DRUM SET
4. HOW TO HOLD DRUM STICK
5. NOTATION
READING MUSIC
DRUM LEGEND
PARTS OF THE STAVE
TIME SIGNATURE
6. COUNTING
7. NOTE REFERENCE PAGE
8. SNARE DRUM COUNTING EXERCISE
EXERCISE – 1
EXERCISE – 2
EXERCISE – 3
EXERCISE – 4
9. BACKBEATS
EXERXISE – 5
EXERCISE – 6
EXERCISE – 7
EXERCISE – 8
10. DRUMS FILLS
PRACTICE TIPS
EXERCISE – 9
EXERCISE – 10
EXERCISE – 11
11.HIT-HAT PEDAL
EXERCISE – 12
EXERCISE – 13
EXERCISE – 14
END
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INTRODUCTION
This book is aimed at the beginner. Inside you will find many exercises which, with a little patience and
determination, will help you get to grips with the basics of drumming. I cannot emphasise the
importance of working with a good tutor to avoid developing bad habits. YouTube is a fantastic resource
for tutorials, but you can’t beat one-to-one lessons for real feedback on your playing.
The exercises in this book range in difficulty from the Initial level to Grade 2 of the Trinity Drum Kit
Syllabus, with most of the patterns based around simple backbeats. These kinds of beats are very
common in popular music and learning to play them with feel and commitment is a rite of
passage for every drummer.
Practising with a metronome is essential in order to develop a good sense of time. However, once you
have mastered a few of the patterns, try playing along to some well-known songs too. See if you can
keep up with the beat. If you can’t, find a slower track. Remember as a drummer your primary roll is that
of a timekeeper.
SStart listening to great drummers for inspiration. You might never be able to play as well as them and
you should never, ever worry about that. What you will gain is an understanding of feel, playing in time
and the realisation that every drummer’s style is unique to them.
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The Drummer Typically Holds A Pair Of Matching Drumsticks, And Uses Their Feet To Operate Hi-
Hat And Bass Drum Pedals.
The Drum Kit Is A Part Of The Standard Rhythm Section And Is Used In Many Types Of Popular
And Traditional Music Styles, Ranging From Rock And Pop To Blues And Jazz.
Drum kits are often marketed as ‘Rock’ or ‘Fusion’ sizes. The sizes of the
drums above fall into the rock category. Fusion sizes are smaller, typically
with a 20” Bass Drum, and 10”, 12” and 14” Toms.
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Step 1
2. Next, roll the stick across your forefinger so that it is now between the first and
second joints of the index finger but touching the first joint (Steps 2 & 3).
Step 2 Step 3
3. Now that you are holding the stick with the thumb and index finger, palm still
facing down, curl the other fingers loosely around the stick (Step 4). Don't grab the
drumstick tightly, since as you hit the drum, the stick should pivot around your index
finger.
Step 4 Step 5
4. Finally, tilt your hand at a slight angle to the right for the right hand, and to the left
for the left hand (Step 5). This will enable you use the 3 curled fingers to bounce the
stick, and is also a more natural hand position. For the matched grip, of course, the
drumsticks are held with left hand a mirror image of the right, forming capital ‘A’
shape (Step 6).
Step 6
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NOTATION
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READING MUSIC
In order to understand how to read music, it is necessary to become familiar with
the principles of musical notation; the set of visual symbols and instructions
which musicians translate into a musical performance. Whilst musical notation
is a vast subject, you don't need to know a lot to get started.
DRUM LEGEND
Music for the drum kit is written on a stave comprising five horizonal lines.
Different elements of the drum kit are positioned on these lines, or the spaces
between them. As can be seen in the legend below, drums are represented by dots,
and cymbals by crosses.
Fig 2: Drum legend showing the positions of the drums and cymbals on the stave.
Drum kits can vary in size dramatically. Rock and metal drummers often have
large kits, sometimes with two bass drums and multiple toms. At the other end of
the spectrum, jazz drummers often settle for much smaller kits, with just a couple
of toms.
Fig 3: Drum kits vary in size. Compare Terry Bozzio’s kit (left) to my kit (right).
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Different types of notes have different durations or values; some are long and
some are short, and each note has an equivalent rest. The U.K. and U.S. names
for notes are given below, with the U.S. names in italics.
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Although drums and percussion instruments use the same kinds of notes as all the
other instruments, duration is less important to drummers because drums cannot
sustain sounds in the same way as, say, a piano or a violin. A semibreve
performed on a drum sounds the same as a semiquaver!
NB: Drummers get around this by playing closed rolls, where the notes are played very close
together to produce a long, continuous sound.
TIME SIGNATURES
Time signatures comprise two numerals, one on top of the other. As a beginner,
it’s sufficient to understand the top numeral as the number of beats in the bar.
For many years, I didn’t understand time signatures much beyond this; the
meaning of the bottom numeral remained a total mystery! The penny finally
dropped after I learnt about the American method of naming notes. This explains
notes as fractions of the whole note. By dividing the whole note by two, we end
up with two 1/2 notes (or minums, in the U.K.); divide the whole note by four and
we get four 1/4 notes (or crotchets in the U.K.).
The bottom numeral ‘4’ in the time signature 4/4 implies 1/4 notes. So, the time
signature 4/4 means there are ‘4’ (top numeral) 1/4 notes in the bar.
In 12/8, the bottom numeral refers to 1/8 notes. The top numeral tells us there
are 12 of them to the bar. To reiterate, this is using the U.S. system. In the UK, a
bar of 12/8 is said to contain twelve quavers, because 1/8 notes and quavers are
the same thing. Notice how the quavers are beamed together in groups of three.
COUNTING
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Practise Tips
Exercise 1: Counting Crotchets
Set the metronome to .
Count 1,2,3,4 aloud as you play. Counting is provided in the first two lines.
Always count evenly.
Some bars contain crotchet rests . You do not play rests, but you must
count them!
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EXERCISE-1
Counting Crotchets
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EXERCISE-2
Crotchets and Quavers
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EXERCISE-3
Introducing the Quaver Res
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EXERCISE-4
Common rhythmic groupings
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BACKBEATS
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BACKBEATS
Have you ever clapped along to a piece of music? The chances are you were
clapping along to the backbeat; an emphasis placed on
beats 2 and 4. In rock and pop, it is common for the backbeat to be played on
the snare drum, but it can be accented by any instrument.
PRACTISE TIPS
Exercises 5 and 6: Backbeat Patterns
There are four different stages to this exercise. Work through each stage,
repeating several times before attempting the final one (5.4).
These exercises introduce the hi-hat and bass drum.
Make sure hands and feet are aligned when played together.
Count the slowly and evenly, saying ‘1+2+3+4+’. Don’t rush!
As always, it is recommended that you use a metronome when practising;
however, with the final stage of this exercise, make sure you can play it
first, then set the metronome to a tempo you feel comfortable with, i.e.,
not too fast to begin with.
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EXERCISE-5
Backbeat Patterns
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EXERCISE-6
Backbeat Patterns
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EXERCISE-7
Bass Drum Variations
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EXERCISE-8
Two Bar Patterns
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DRUM FILLS
Put simply, a drum fill is anything that isn’t the main beat of a song. They are
usually placed at the ends of verses and choruses to give the song forward
momentum. When a fill is used as the intro to a song, it is usually to quickly
grab the listener’s attention.
Drum fills are not just an excuse for the drummer to play as many notes as
possible; they provide musical signposts. Often drum fills convey information
about the song’s structure. When fills are used throughout a piece of music, it is
often to signal the conclusion of each musical phrase or chord progression. A
drum fill placed at the end of a song’s verse may be used to generate
anticipation of the chorus.
NB: Sometimes fills become famous, like the intro to Led Zepplin’s ‘Rock ‘n’ Roll’ or the
tom fill in Phil Collin’s ‘In the Air Tonight’.
Practise Tips
Each of the following exercises combines a simple backbeat pattern with a fill.
Although the beat is written for the hi-hat, feel free to try it on the ride cymbal.
Slashes are often used in drum charts in bars that are left open to
interpretation.
Refer back to Exercise 4 to help with counting these rhythms.
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EXERCISE-9
Introducing Fills
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EXERCISE-10
Four Bar Phrase with Fills 1
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EXERCISE-11
Four Bar Phrase with Fills 2
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HI-HAT PEDAL
There are three main ways to play the hi-hat: a) with a stick; b) with the foot
pedal (stepped hi-hat) or; c) a combination of both stick and foot pedal to create
open hi-hat patterns.
Most of the patterns this book has covered so far have focused on playing a
closed hi-hat with a stick. The hi-hat is said to be closed when the top and
bottom cymbals are pulled together by pressing down on the foot pedal.
Different effects can be achieved by varying the pressure of the foot on the
pedal. For example, when the foot presses down firmly, playing on the cymbals
with a stick will produce a ‘tight’ hi-hat sound. Slackening off the pressure a
little produces a loose or ‘trashy’ sounding hi-hat, where the two cymbals are
loose enough to rattle against each other.
Pulsing the foot on the pedal causes the cymbals to play against each other, to
produce a ‘chick’ sound. This is referred to as ‘stepped hi-hat’. Among other
things, this can be used to keep a metronome-like pulse through a rhythm or,
when placed on beats 2 and 4, to support the backbeat.
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In music notation, open hi-hats are indicated by a small circle over the hi-hat
note; closed hi-hat are shown by a cross. Playing open hi-hat patterns requires a
degree of co-ordination; from a closed position, the foot pedal needs to lift as
the stick comes down to play the hi-hat cymbal.
In some patterns, the hi-hat maybe opened and closed consecutively. When this
occurs make sure the ‘chick’ sound of the closing hi-hat coincides with the stick
playing the cymbal.
Fig 9: Hi-hat notation: a small circle indicates ‘open’ and a cross is used for ‘closed’.
Practise Tips
EXERCISE-12
Stepped Hi-Hat
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EXERCISE-13
Stepped Hi-Hat
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EXERCISE-14
Open Hi-Hat
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