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User:Hyacinth from common knowledge.
See:
File:Characteristic rock drum pattern.mid
Also characteristic funk drum pattern but with ride cymbal.
[1]
The "basic [rock] beat" may be notated using half notes on the
bass drum and a quarter note
ride cymbal pattern while "
four to the floor"
[2] features steady quarter notes on the bass drum.
[2].
The first of the examples of, "commonly used rock beats", given features, "an eighth-note ride pattern," as the pattern notated above but riding the
hi-hat.
[3]
"Basic" beats include four to the floor with quarter note hi-hat ride, described as appropriate for "hard rock", with eighth-note ride pattern appropriate for a "pop song", with swung eighths on the backbeat of the ride pattern for a "jazz feel", and second notated pattern above, descried as "basic 4/4 'beat'...[with] a sixteenth-note feel," with hi-hat ride.
[4]
Groove #1: "bass drum on beats 1 and 3 and snare drum on beats 2 and 4 of the measure...add eighth notes on the hi-hat".
[5]
"Straight blues/Rock groove" "Blues may also be played with a straight feel....The tempo of straight Blues grooves covers a large range of quarter note = 80-160 bpm."
[6]
-
↑ Bolton, Ross (2001). Funk Guitar: The Essential Guide, p.5.
ISBN
0634011685.
- ↑
a
b Schroedl, Scott (2001). Play Drums Today!, p.15. Hal Leonard.
ISBN
0-634-02185-0.
-
↑ Morton, James (1990). You Can Teach Yourself Drums, p.32. Mel Bay.
ISBN
1-56222-033-0.
-
↑ Mattingly, Rick (2006). All About Drums, p.42. Hal Leonard.
ISBN
1-4234-0818-7.
-
↑ Peckman, Jonathan (2007). Picture Yourself Drumming, p.50.
ISBN
1598633309.
-
↑ Berry, Mick and Gianni, Jason (2003). The Drummer's Bible, p.36.
ISBN
1884365329.