I recommend the stick control book. Play with a metronome at 60 beats per minute AT LEAST for 1 hour a day. You may not notice changes quickly but in the long run. You will get faster.
In general you just loosen it up and replace the connections.However it can be very difficult to get to the connections.People with big hands can have more trouble than people with smaller hands.
Well I only think that fast pace heavy metal drumming counts as a sort of sport.
Dozens of songs begin with drumming, but 15 steps by Radiohead, the song that appears on the credits of Twilight, is one of them that I like; other users hopefully will be able to give more candidates.
Your local library is a great resource for finding many books on African drumming. Also youtube offers many tutorial videos on the subject. You can learn about the history of it from books.
You can start with your primary care provider for evaluation of drumming in your ear. An ENT, or otolaryngologist, would also help evaluate this symptom, but the intiial workup would be more quickly done by the primary.
You are getting blisters because you are allowing the srick to slip in your fingers. Work on your technique for the next few months while you play. Check out drumming websites for more info like The Pinch Pal or Tiger Bill or Drummer world for more on technique Peace
No
More germs are in the hair than hands!
If someone feels the pulse of the music - beats, rhythms and bass notes and is more likely to tap their toes and fingers than to hum the melody, they should consider taking up drumming and expand their inner rhythm sense to new horizons.
Some oil or WD-40 should loosen the kink in the chain, and then working it over with your hands should straighten it out more completely. It may not unkink fully until you have used it while actually riding your bike.
No. There are more sensory nerve endings involved in the hands.
what is tihs for song? hands up, put your hands up, gimme more gimme gimme more