Today while installing the new version of iTunes, I noticed something peculiar about the "software license agreement." It was written in Iron Maiden font.
As promised, I made an instructional video for double bass drumming. Here it is.
Update: This is a special day... :) my first YouTube honors: #70 - Most Discussed (Today) - Howto & Style #40 - Top Favorites (Today) - Howto & Style #51 - Top Rated (Today) - Howto & Style
This is a question I'm asked all the time, in person and in email, at trade shows, and everywhere I go.
Pud,
I'm working on a new site that will launch within the next couple of days/weeks/months.
It's gonna be huge.
You run an ad network. What's the best way for me to make money with advertising? I'd like to talk to you about putting AdBrite (or Google or whoever else) on my new site.
Thanks, New site guy Anywhere, Earth
New site guy,
Don't put ads on your site yet. Growing traffic should be your only priority at this point. A big site with lots of users benefits everyone (you, and the ad networks).
Think of it this way: The day you launch your site, is it worth 20-cents to have your first few users click away to an advertiser's site? Of course not.
Not until you have enough traffic to make significant money from ads, should you put ads on your site.
Of course, "significant money" is relative. $50/month? $10,000/month? Set an ad revenue goal, grow your traffic, and then turn on ads the day you think you can hit it.
But I typically don't answer those questions. Because unlike questions about love, money, and life -- they don't relate to everyone. But I'll make an exception here and answer a few drumming questions at once. And I'll continue to do so every once and a while, so feel free to keep asking if you have more drum questions.
Dear Pud,
Do you suggest that someone learn drums on an electric set? I want to play on real drums so that I get used to them, but I don't want to make a lot of noise.
Harold 22 years old Gainesville, FL
Harold,
It doesn't matter what you learn on. If you can tap out a beat with your fingers, you can play the drums.
My first drum set was a set of empty paint cans in my bedroom when I was 12. By the time I got my real first drum set, I was already pretty good.
One summer when I was 20, I auditioned for band (this band, in fact). I had to learn an entire album, but was living with my grandmother in NYC at the time and had no access to drums.
So I bought sticks, and set up the chairs, sofa, and bed as a makeshift set. I practiced the songs without a real drum set, and the audition was a success. What happened later is another story for another day...
Regarding using electric drums to play quietly -- while it's true they have a volume knob, if you live in an apartment with people below you, the beating of the bass drum will still drive them crazy. Plus, a decent electric set is usually beyond the budget of a beginner, starting at around $2,500 for something used on Ebay.
Pud,
I noticed your double-bass skills on your YouTube stuff. What kind of pedal do you use and how do you have it set as far as tension and beater type?
What's your pedal rig, Pud?
P. Simms 21 years old North Carolina
P.,
Pedals - DW pedals (5000 series, though they're all the same)
Tension - I keep the left pedal tight and the right pedal loo
Beaters - The ones that came with the DW pedals, on the soft side (the beaters are reversible, with one side soft and one side hard).
More importantly, I have a trick for playing double-bass that makes it very easy. I'll try to make an instructional video this week or so.
I get a lot of questions about double-bass. Even experienced drummers struggle with it. But I can usually get a beginner to play fluid double-bass within 10-15 minutes. Will post video soon.
Pud,
I'm looking to buy a new drum kit. What are the cheapest, high-quality drums out there?
Thanks, Armando 16 years old Los Angeles, CA
Armando,
Tama Superstar. They sound great and can be had for around $700. Or less, if you go Ebay.
Pud,
I came across your page after viewing your drumming videos on YouTube.
I was wondering 1) what prevented you from pursuing a career in music? And 2) I'm a drummer too. How do I make it in the industry?
Thanks, Josh 18 years old Summerville, SC
Josh,
Most people take the path of least resistance. There are many exceptions to this rule, but unfortunately I wasn't one of them. So:
Hard - Finding success as a professional musician and programming computers as a hobby. Easy - Programming for a living and playing drums as a hobby.
I used to wonder the same thing myself. Over the years I've put various efforts into becoming a professional musician. But I always ended up dropping out. So I started reading interviews with rock stars, to figure out what made them so different.
I noticed one common theme (other than heavy drug use and alcoholism). And there are hundreds of examples, but the one that always stuck out in my mind was an MTV interview with Axl Rose from Guns N' Roses.
Interviewer: What would you be doing if you weren't a professional musician? Axl: I dunno. I'd be working at a gas station or something.
So as for your second question, "how do I make it?" Take Axl's advice, and don't have ANY interests other than music, or they will derail you.
On my drive home from the office today, Tom Jones came on the radio. I decided to make a pit-stop at my little recording studio and record my own version. Here it is. Don't laugh.
Be content in knowing that the guys who are having a blast in high school, fucking cheerleaders and such, are ruined. As they grow up, they'll realize their best days are behind them. And when you're out in the real world making things happen, they'll be longing for "the good 'ol days."
High school doesn't matter, except for getting into college. And college doesn't matter either, except that sex is easier to come by there.
I have a few friends who are atheist. They're great people and I have a lot of fun hanging out with them.
But my Mom thinks that non-religious people are infidels. She's upset that I hang out with them, and was even more upset when I told her I was joining a band with them.
Should I listen to my mom and ditch them? Or should I tell her to mind her own business?
Thanks, Brian Age undisclosed USA
Brian,
Religion is faith. And faith is believing something without proof.
Therefore. anyone who firmly believes anything relating to the existence or absence of God, is religious -- since there's no proof either way.
So tell your Mom that your friends are just as religious as she is.
Don't wear jeans with buttons on the back pockets for a 6 hour flight. Ouchie.
Writing from my iPhone aboard a flight from NYC to San Francisco, attempting to keep my new years resolution of updating Ask Pud every day for a month, Pud
Why are abbreviations included in official Scrabble dictionaries if the rules say no abbreviations?
Thanks, Anthony
Anthony,
I play a lot of Scrabble and often get asked this question after playing valid words such as "ag" (short for "agriculture") and "lat" (short for "lateral muscles").
First, note that the Official Scrabble Players Dictionary (OSPD) contains ALL of the words from 14 different dictionaries, except for proper nouns (like "Japan") and words with punctuation (like "can't" or "etc." or "T.V.").
But occasionally, us English speakers decide that certain abbreviations should become "real" words, and they show up in dictionaries as such. For example, nowadays no one would argue that "gym" isn't a legit word, even though it was once an abbreviation for "gymnasium." Another common example is "ad," formerly an abbreviation for "advertisement."
Some fun former-abbreviations that are now legit Scrabble words include "bi" (short for "bisexual"), and "fem," short for "feminine," and defined in the Scrabble dictionary as "a passive homosexual."
Rock on, Pud
1/14/2007 UPDATE: As pointed out by a commenter, "japan" and variations (non-capitalized) are actually valid Scrabble words, with the following definitions:
JAPAN (JAPANNED/JAPANNING/JAPANS) to coat with a glossy, black lacquer
JAPANNER (JAPANNERS) one that japans JAPANIZE (JAPANIZED/JAPANIZING/JAPANIZES) to make Japanese
As for buying sneakers online, first go to a shoe store (or go through your closet) and find a brand that looks good and is comfortable. Stick with that brand, and you can order whatever you want in the same size online, in any style.
For example, I only wear Adidas Superstars (aka "Shelltoes," Wikipedia link here). They come in hundreds of styles, and the size 14 always fits me perfectly. I almost always order from Zappos.com, though occasionally from ShopAdidas.com for exclusives.
Pud is an expert in many things including money, sex, business, arts, music, food, fashion, technology, nightlife, travel -- almost everything except sports.