
MIM005 Book + CD $24.95
Billy Martin is a remarkable drummer who has successfully carved out his own musical path. As the organic beat-maker for Medeski, Martin & Wood, Martin has successfully blended world-music cultures into his own style.
Riddim: Claves of African Origin traces the roots of African rhythmic systems to the Americas. Learning these African-based claves is similar to jazz musicians learning chord changes, voicings, and scale patterns which enable them to improvise on songs. Claves are our ancient and modern scales. These claves open up rhythmic subdivisions, substitutions and a much wider vocabulary to draw upon than playing static beats.
Call them systems, bell patterns, or claves, be assured that there is much freedom to be gained from owning these rhythms. The coordination required to play these rhythms will challenge and benefit every aspect of your playing.
96 pages. Language: English
CD features 87 tracks of drumming
Edited and produced by Dan Thress
Visit Billy Martin’s Riddim Website
Available from Amazon.com
Distributed worldwide by Alfred Publications
3 Comments
This unconventional method book, by Medeski Martin & Wood drummer Billy Martin, is a serious four-way coordination workout based on a series of four-, six-, and eight-beat Afro-clave patterns and a few odd-note rhythms. Each clave is presented in the author’s unique notational system, which uses X/s for played strokes and periods for rests. The book gets progressively more difficult as various bass drum figures and left-foot/left-hand accompanying patterns are added to the mix. On the included CD, billy demonstrates many of the examples to help you get an understanding for how hard these things can groove. –Michael Dawson, Modern Drummer Magazine
Riddim is an extremely inventive resource and a must-have for anyone serious about understanding and applying these roots rhythms to any style of music. — David Stanoch, McNally Smith College of Music
Anybody who has ever taken an interest in drumming will drool over the endless rhythmic possibilities presented in this book. I wish that I had a resource like this when I started playing almost 20 years ago. This book will increase the rhythmic vocabulary of ANY drummer many times over. Thank you, Mr. Martin for cracking your own code and divulging to the world some of the funkiest grooves that I’ve ever heard.” — N. Zickefoose