by deadhead » Fri Jan 05, 2007 4:54 am
Practice your different tones on one drum over and over and over again... beat it into your brain, literally. Sit down and play slaps for 15 mins strait (use a metronome if you have one). Then do the same for open tones, muffled tones, bass etc. It may be boring, but it will pay off in the end. Create some heel tip exercises playing 8th notes or 16th notes at a quick but maintainable speed, change up the patterns tho like this:
Ex: h t h t h t h t h t h t h t h t h t h t h t h t
R L R L R L R L R R L L R R L L R L R R L R L L
L R L R L R L R L L R R L L R R L R L L R L R R
h t h t h t h t h t h t h t h t
R R R R R R R R R R R R L L L L
L L L L L L L L L L L L R R R R
I usually warm up by running through each of these 10-20 times. Substitute slaps, open tones, etc for the heel tip. This stuff may seem basic, and it is, but it will pay off in the end.
Technique is key to a good sounding player, the drum in most cases is not the problem with a bad sounding conga player. However on the other hand your problem may not be with technique at all. Maybe it is the drum, or the heads, or poor tuning? I've played on alot of congas and there were some that I loved, and some that I hated. Everyone has different preferences, maybe you havn't found the right congas for "your sound".
I hope this helps, goodluck!