[quote="Johnny O"]
Always have played with my heel down. Makes me feel more confident in finding the beat. Now, if you use heel down, have you ever got that top of your foot/ankle cramp while you were playing? Bah!
[/quote]
This is an important observation of HEEL DOWN:
The physical trouble with "Heel Down" it seems to me, is when you DON'T want to rest the beater on the head. I DO NOT want to rest the beater on the head. I want that drum to go BOOOM (beater smacks and rebounds) not BLOP (Beater smacks and stays).
It would, in fact, be really preferrable to be able to make it make either sound. But I can do BLOP easily. (Pluto SMASH!) So figuring out BOOOM is what I'm after.
It's figuring out how to do this easily, ergonomically, and thus, most comfortably, that I am after.
Here's what I *think* Johnny is talking about, and what I'm talking about:
If you play heel down, and you want BOOM, not BLOP, you are always curling the toes back/lifting the foot ever so slightly. One does this in order to ensure that the beater is not on the head. You have to make sure your foot isn't weighing down the pedal, so you consciously or unconsciously lift the foot or toe a little bit, all the time. Hence top of foot/front of shin cramp. For pros, this has RSI (repetitive stress injury) written all over it.
I could see maybe getting back of calf cramps with Heel Up.
I have a similar ergonomic problem with HEEL UP.
Drummers describe the knee floating, or the heel floating, or what have you. I don't understand that point, as it does not jibe with my understanding of gravity. My knee does not float. If I want my heel in the air, my knee has to be lifted by my abs and my psoas muscles. (Psoas is awesome muscle.)
I'm with Chatchka. Yoga/Core stuff necessary for drummers. I'm actually hoping to substitute drumming for going to the gym. Whenever possible, I want to be making music. But I digress.
Floating doesn't just happen, you have to make it happen, and I can see getting physically fit enough to make that float happen. However, it doesn't make sense to me in terms of physical efficiency to have that heavy thigh of mine lifted in the air most of the time in order to have HEEL UP. I'm doing work for no reason. Bad.
So a combination of heel up/down seems to me to be the most efficient.
Let me show you what I mean.
X = note.
O = rest.
Here are some typical rock 1/8 kick patterns.
1)
XOOOXXOO
2)
XOOXXOOO
3)
XOOXXOOX
4)
XXOXXXOX ( Stewart at So Lonely Climax pattern
)
With the exception of the last insane pattern, the other patterns have no music either half of the time or more. If I'm HEEL UP, then I'm still working on those rests. I don't want to work on the rests. I want to rest on the rests.
So I'm thinking that I'd play those patterns thusly. Let me know what you think, oh ye drum gods.
U= Heel Up
D= Heel Down
[quote="Johnny O"]
Always have played with my heel down. Makes me feel more confident in finding the beat. Now, if you use heel down, have you ever got that top of your foot/ankle cramp while you were playing? Bah!
[/quote]
This is an important observation of HEEL DOWN:
The physical trouble with "Heel Down" it seems to me, is when you DON'T want to rest the beater on the head. I DO NOT want to rest the beater on the head. I want that drum to go BOOOM (beater smacks and rebounds) not BLOP (Beater smacks and stays).
It would, in fact, be really preferrable to be able to make it make either sound. But I can do BLOP easily. (Pluto SMASH!) So figuring out BOOOM is what I'm after.
It's figuring out how to do this easily, ergonomically, and thus, most comfortably, that I am after.
Here's what I *think* Johnny is talking about, and what I'm talking about:
If you play heel down, and you want BOOM, not BLOP, you are always curling the toes back/lifting the foot ever so slightly. One does this in order to ensure that the beater is not on the head. You have to make sure your foot isn't weighing down the pedal, so you consciously or unconsciously lift the foot or toe a little bit, all the time. Hence top of foot/front of shin cramp. For pros, this has RSI (repetitive stress injury) written all over it.
I could see maybe getting back of calf cramps with Heel Up.
I have a similar ergonomic problem with HEEL UP.
Drummers describe the knee floating, or the heel floating, or what have you. I don't understand that point, as it does not jibe with my understanding of gravity. My knee does not float. If I want my heel in the air, my knee has to be lifted by my abs and my psoas muscles. (Psoas is awesome muscle.)
I'm with Chatchka. Yoga/Core stuff necessary for drummers. I'm actually hoping to substitute drumming for going to the gym. Whenever possible, I want to be making music. But I digress.
Floating doesn't just happen, you have to make it happen, and I can see getting physically fit enough to make that float happen. However, it doesn't make sense to me in terms of physical efficiency to have that heavy thigh of mine lifted in the air most of the time in order to have HEEL UP. I'm doing work for no reason. Bad.
So a combination of heel up/down seems to me to be the most efficient.
Let me show you what I mean.
X = note.
O = rest.
Here are some typical rock 1/8 kick patterns.
1)
XOOOXXOO
DOOOUDOO
2)
XOOXXOOO
DOOUDOOO
3)
XOOXXOOX
DOOUDOOU
4)
XXOXXXOX
UDOUUDOU
On all rest beats, HEEL DOWN.
PLUTO SMASH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
"Unpaid Bills... Afghanistan Hills!"