1e+a2e+a3e+a4e+a
K KK
That can be a tricky groove to pull off - for me at least.
Luckily it switches to two 8th notes on the downbeat (bass drum) for the rest of the song.
What to do and how to be efficient?
As David say's, start building a repertoire of basic grooves that you can pull out of the hat and be comfortable with.
The way
I did that was to spend about two hours a day when I was a teenager playing along to pop records - like Wings, ABBA, Alice Cooper, Earth, Wind & Fire etc..
The big trick is to concentrate, try to emulate the recorded drum part as closely as you can, try to learn the arrangement of the song (this will teach you a sixth sense as to where a structure is going) and if possible, analyze the why's and wherefore's of the drum part. In other words, why was a particular groove chosen? Where did the drummer place his fills and how complex or simple were they?
It's a waste of time to play along and drift off into your own thing.
There might be some instructional DVD's detailing basic rock grooves.
I was thinking Tommy Igoe's 'Groove Essentials', but I just watched some lessons on YouTube and he quite quickly gets away from the basic grooves and covers advanced funk, jazz and world music.
The basic rock groove should be the focus.
Because as you are finding out, many basic drum grooves can be found in rock and pop, but also country, folk/rock, hip-hop/RnB and worship music!
By the way, if it's any consolation, as I mentioned earlier this is the exact process I'm going through this week. Next week I'm recording an album with a bunch of basic rock grooves. I don't play often any more. So I'm playing along to the demo tracks and checking myself for groove, consistency and musicality.
(1hr per day)