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Author Topic: Ambidexterity and Dominance?  (Read 760 times)
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Antman
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Purple!


« Reply #20 on: April 23, 2008, 07:19 PM »

An appropriate portion.

I've found that working on left hand lead hasn't been a waste of time, and while I still don't feel good enough to ride with the left hand on stage, it's helped me mentally free up my left and right hands into more graciously playing different notes in a bar without feeling it dictates my sticking greater than ergonomics.
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hankster
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« Reply #21 on: April 23, 2008, 10:31 PM »

i practice rudiments 5 days a week. i do them using a lefthand lead and then a right. i think it has helped in a lot of areas. cymbal play still a work in progress.  i write left, throw right, play drums right, fire a rifle left, play guitar left. at work with hand tools i am 50-50.  go figure.
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dea
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« Reply #22 on: April 25, 2008, 03:16 PM »

MASSIVE NERD ALERT! YOU'VE BEEN WARNED!  Kiss  Grin

What I'm saying is that IF kids picked the ambidextrous kit, they wouldn't pick the kit because their brains are aligned 50/50 (because they aren't) but because their bodies are aligned 50/50 in space making it more difficult to execute certain physical motions - i.e. crossing the hands over top of one another. Though, in fact, that actually isn't a huge problem in and of itself - it's just that in the physical confines of a drumset and with bouncing levers (sticks) flying around, things get in the way of each other. Simply crossing your arms and flapping your wrists is no different than flapping them uncrossed.

No worries.  No offense.  I love this stuff.

I understand where I have gone wrong.  The brain simply reacts to the bodies sensory input.  So it's the bodies natural alignment I should be speaking of rather than the brain.

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boomka
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« Reply #23 on: April 26, 2008, 02:38 AM »

Strictly speaking, the brain both initiates AND reacts to movements in space.
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In lumine lucem
TMe
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Bat Cat!


« Reply #24 on: April 28, 2008, 09:59 PM »

For me, the two things that help my left hand the most are playing the ride pattern with the left and learning a new grip.

I just listen to Blues and improvise ride patterns with my left hand, using traditional grip.  I try different approaches, using wrist only, finger control only, thumb only, Moeller triplets, etc.

My trad grip still sucks.  I don't have a functional left hand ride that's coordinated with the rest of my limbs.  But when I turn the stick over and play matched, my left hand works better than ever.

I think the combination of learning a new grip and playing ride patterns has increased my "body awareness" of my left hand  a lot more than all the back-and-forth rudiments I've practiced over the years.

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