Aww yeah! A brand new video. You're helping a lot of people bro. From my experiences, most band directors don't really care about percussion, so the kids never learn proper technique. That leads to them struggling to play even intermediate level music. We appreciate your vids bro.
Hey Steve, greetings from Australia. I've recently started exploring quads about 2 months ago and just wanted to know what type of sticks/mallets are best for practicing on a quad pad, Should I get wood or Alum?
Hello! You should start with wood. Alum mallets have specific uses. Plus, wood is best for pad work. My favorite go-to are the Promark Sean Vega sticks. They are very consistent and are designed for quad players. But using certain snare sticks are good for chop building and general usage. IP Jim Casella and VF M-Dawgs are good choices too.
@@TheQuadMethod Thanks man. I was using Colin Mcnutt snare sticks and ordered some Billy clubs before you replied back to me :D I will have to check out the Promark ones also.
HELP! This is probably simple and I may have forgotten something here but...... A cadence that I need to learn before my tenor camp next week has a sticking that says "S" instead of right or left. I may just be having a brain fart here, but can someone please tell me what this means??
Aww yeah! A brand new video. You're helping a lot of people bro. From my experiences, most band directors don't really care about percussion, so the kids never learn proper technique. That leads to them struggling to play even intermediate level music. We appreciate your vids bro.
band directors so damn selfish about their wind section
Were you in 2018 Santa Clara Vanguard
Hey Steve, greetings from Australia. I've recently started exploring quads about 2 months ago and just wanted to know what type of sticks/mallets are best for practicing on a quad pad, Should I get wood or Alum?
Hello! You should start with wood. Alum mallets have specific uses. Plus, wood is best for pad work. My favorite go-to are the Promark Sean Vega sticks. They are very consistent and are designed for quad players. But using certain snare sticks are good for chop building and general usage. IP Jim Casella and VF M-Dawgs are good choices too.
@@TheQuadMethod Thanks man. I was using Colin Mcnutt snare sticks and ordered some Billy clubs before you replied back to me :D I will have to check out the Promark ones also.
bueno vídeo amigo, saludos desde México 💜
HELP! This is probably simple and I may have forgotten something here but...... A cadence that I need to learn before my tenor camp next week has a sticking that says "S" instead of right or left. I may just be having a brain fart here, but can someone please tell me what this means??
Hmmmm that is highly unusual. Could be a typo? Typically the only sticking notations used are R for right, L for left, and B for double stops.
I'm sure it's not a big deal, just do what is most comfortable and hopefully they explain it
Math?? But I thought this was drum class...
Math and physics both relate to drumline very much :)