by 120decibels » Thu Aug 15, 2002 12:08 pm
I don't believe anyone who says that, for a given task, their hands are equal in strength or skill. There are very few truly ambidextrous people in the world.
Many conga patterns do emphasize the strong hand. However, when you begin to move to three or more drums, particularly positioned in a V pattern (conga, quinto, tumba), it pays to have a "strong" weak hand.
Personally, I do most exercises with both hands. I use a metronome. Although my weak hand is slower, it gets consistently better. After months of practice, I can play a passible mambo (tumbao) with my weak hand playing the shuffle. You can imagine how many neat improv things you can do alternating which hand plays the shuffle.
Johnny's exercise is great for making sure that you are getting the essential sounds with both hands. Through careful listening and practice, you can make both hands sound close to the same. This took me years on the snare drum. However, once you can pull that off, single and double stroke rolls sound smooth and even. I am still in search of that even sound on the congas.
My humble $0.02,
Zach