Welcome to ultimate drumming calm. I'm Jim McCall. I'm going to show you this really cool sound and double pair total combination. First I'm going to play for you. And I'm going to break it down note by note and show you how it works. What at two, three When playing these really cool sounding pair doodle patterns, you got to be thinking the double pair doodle.
The sticking on the double pair doodle is right, left right, left, right, right, left, right, left, right, left left. Now I'm playing these in an eighth note triplet form. So I would count these evenly, evenly, evenly, evenly. But since the sticking for the double pair doodle is a little bit tricky. It makes sense to say the sticking out loud as you play it while trying to maintain the triplet feel. I'm going to play it on the snare drum, it's going to go like this.
Right left right, left right, right, left right, left, right, left, left, right. Left In this spare total pattern, I'm playing between the snare drum and the closed hi hat. Right hand on the hi hat, left hand on the snare drum. I'm gonna play the pair doodle sticking right left right, left, right, right, left, right, left, right, left left. The bass drum is going to be matching the right hand on the hi hat. You're going to be playing in unison.
It's going to go like this. Right, left, right, left, right, right, left, right, left, right, left, left right. Now you want to try to pick up a little bit of speed. Once you get to comfortable with this. It's gonna go like this. What?
A great way to practice this would be to play two measures to measure shuffle beat, two measures. To measure shuffle beat like this Another excellent sounding rhythmic combination you could add to your drumming repertoire. I'm Joe McCall. Thanks for using ultimate drumming.com