Welcome to ultimate drumming calm. I'm Joe McCall. I'm going to show you this really excellent sounding, double shuffle pattern. First I'm going to play for you. I'm going to break it down note by note and show you how it works 123 When playing these great sounding shuffle beach, you got to be thinking, eighth note triplets with the right pattern. I count triplets evenly, evenly, evenly evenly.
The right pattern go like this 123 for the then Li evenly, evenly, evenly, evenly, even evenly even. Now when I'm playing the shuffle, I'm going to leave out the middle note of the triplet or the end note. So I'll go like this. 1234, evenly, evenly, evenly, evenly, evenly, evenly, evenly, evenly. Now saying all those evenly it gets to be a mouthful. So to simplify it, I'm going to count 1234 1234 but I have to maintain that triplet feel throughout it's going to go like this evenly, evenly 341-234-1234.
When playing this great sounding shuffle pattern, I'm actually playing a swing pattern in unison with both hands. The swing pattern is like a broken shuffle, and we go like this. What a two, a three, a four, a one. In this pattern, I'm playing both hands in unison. It's going to go like this. One, a two, a three, a four.
The trick is to try and accent the left hand on two and four. Without accenting on the right hand on the right pattern. Since they're playing in unison, this can be a little bit tricky. It's gonna go like this, what a two, a three, a four. Now I'm gonna add the bass drum on beats 123413. Once you get comfortable with that tempo, we're going to pick up the speed.
It's also smart practice to play couple measures right on the Closed hi hat, a couple measures ride on the symbol and alternate back and forth. Something like this 123. There it is another excellent sounding rhythmic pattern you can add to your drumming repertoire. I'm Joe McCall. Thanks for watching and visiting ultimate roaming.com