I dont think so mate. The Hi Hat in this one has a 1/4 note feel with some 1/8 note pushes which are played on the crash. The only 16th notes in the song as played as drum fills in the develp sections of the track. Hope this helps 🥁
@@frankmartines3595 That is fine, perhaps I have misunderstood your comment. At which part of the song are you suggesting the hihat is playing 16th notes? The tempo of the song is 182bpm, I have listened back to both the Trinity Rock & Pop version as well as the original version and I am not hearing any 16th note hi hats.
@@StirlingDrumTuition the original version on the power age album, you can clearly hear those are 16th notes pretty much through the whole song. Watch the video with Bon. Again you can clearly hear that Phil Rudd is playing 16th notes on the hi-hat. A lot of people play at the easy way because it's difficult to maintain that rhythm through the whole song.
With Drums: th-cam.com/video/huwDq7ZgaY4/w-d-xo.html
should they be 16th notes on hihat?
I dont think so mate. The Hi Hat in this one has a 1/4 note feel with some 1/8 note pushes which are played on the crash. The only 16th notes in the song as played as drum fills in the develp sections of the track. Hope this helps 🥁
@@StirlingDrumTuition I respectfully disagree.
@@frankmartines3595 That is fine, perhaps I have misunderstood your comment.
At which part of the song are you suggesting the hihat is playing 16th notes?
The tempo of the song is 182bpm, I have listened back to both the Trinity Rock & Pop version as well as the original version and I am not hearing any 16th note hi hats.
@@StirlingDrumTuition the original version on the power age album, you can clearly hear those are 16th notes pretty much through the whole song. Watch the video with Bon. Again you can clearly hear that Phil Rudd is playing 16th notes on the hi-hat. A lot of people play at the easy way because it's difficult to maintain that rhythm through the whole song.
absolutely, good work out