Roach Exercise
Roach Exercise
Roach Exercise
Letter A establishes a vamp where youll play quarter notes in all four limbs, with right hand on the
cymbal, left hand on the snare, right foot on the bass drum and left foot on the hi hat (or as Max called it,
the foot cymbal).
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Begin the exercise by vamping at letter A, at an overall dynamic level of mezzo piano. Focus on hearing an
equally balanced sound between the four tones youre producing by adjusting your four limbs. Think
harmonically. You are playing a four-voice chord of indeterminate pitch. Take the time to find a truly
balanced sound and groove on it a bit, now focusing on how it feels to produce the balanced sound. This
is, as Max said, Your starting point.
At this point go to Letter B, proceeding as follows: choose one of your four limbs to execute the four bar
crescendo, from mezzo piano up to double forte (peaking on the downbeat of Bar 5) then decrescendoing
for four bars, repeating back to the mezzo piano vamp at Letter A. The most important factor here is to
NOT disturb the mezzo piano dynamic balance of your other three limbs playing the quarter note rhythm
while the fourth executes the crescendo and decrescendo.
In other words, dont let your limbs surge up or drop down together dynamically. This is where the
challenge gets harder than it looks! With patience and repetition you will learn to control the separation of
dynamics between your limbs.
Notice the musical example repeats four times. This is to give each of your limbs a pass, one at a time,
through the dynamic separation. You might try a sequence as follows:
Vamp A, then Letter B w/RH / Vamp A, then Letter B w/LH / Vamp A, then Letter B w/RF / Vamp A,
then Letter B w/LF.
I recommend using a metronome with this exercise to work on your time in relationship with your
dynamics to help deepen your feel. It is common to rush the tempo when crescendoing and equally
common to drag the tempo when decrescendoing. Working with a click will help you anticipate and
overcome these pitfalls and multiply the advantages of this concept greatly. Try it around 120 bpm.
Of all the four limbs, the left foot on the hi hat is typically the hardest to control. This is usually because
the space between the hi hat cymbals is only marginally opened. I remember seeing Max, Buddy Rich, and
Tony Williams play live, and noticing, when each of them left the bandstand, how dramatically large the
space between their hi hat cymbals was. When I tried mine that way it felt like my foot went right through
the floor trying to close the pedal!
I didnt get it until I could see the parallel relationship of the foot to the sticks in my hand. Max pointed
out that it was easier to play dynamically by staying low to the head for soft sounds, and raising up from
the wrist, then forearm, for loud and louder ones. This way you could keep a looser grip and get a bigger
sound vs. tightening the grip and hammering the drum for volume. It then made sense that if I needed a
louder, chick sound from the hats, to help lock a band in, more space between cymbals was the sensible
way to get it rather than stomping my foot with the hats only marginally opened working against me.
Nowadays, I regularly use this exercise as a warm up, especially if I only have time to do a soundcheck
before a gig. It always helps me tune in in a musical and meditative way. If you stick with it youll find it
wont be long until becomes an instinctive reflex, refining anything you play. I considered this lesson to be
a great gift in my pursuit of a mature sound and not a day I play goes by that I dont say a grateful Thank
You, to Max Roach for sharing it with me. Check it out.
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This text copyright 2005 David Stanoch/Rhythmelodic Music