Everything you need for your first week behind the kit, in plain English. You will learn what each drum and cymbal does, how to hold the sticks, how to count time, and how to play the one rock beat that powers thousands of songs. When you are ready, you can practice every step free in your browser, no kit required.
The parts of the drum kit
Bass (kick) drum – played with a foot pedal; the low "boom" that anchors the beat.
Snare drum – the sharp "crack" on the backbeat; usually played with your dominant hand.
Hi-hats – two cymbals on a stand worked by your foot; keep the steady pulse, open or closed.
Toms – rack tom 1, rack tom 2, and the floor tom; used for fills and accents.
Crash and ride cymbals – the crash marks a new section; the ride keeps time like the hi-hat with a brighter "ping."
How to hold the sticks
Start with matched grip: hold each stick the same way, between thumb and the first knuckle of your index finger about a third of the way up, with the other fingers loosely wrapped. The stick should bounce, not be strangled. Let the rebound do the work; tension is the enemy of speed and timing.
Quick checklist
Relaxed wrists, elbows comfortable at your sides.
Tap a surface and let the stick bounce back to you.
Sit at a height where your thighs are roughly level and your foot rests naturally on the pedal.
Counting time
Most popular music is in 4/4: four steady beats per bar, counted "1, 2, 3, 4." Subdivide each beat into eighth notes by adding "and": 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 &. Say it out loud while you play; counting is the single fastest way to lock in timing.
Your first rock beat
Here is the classic beat. Hi-hats play every eighth note, the kick lands on beats 1 and 3, and the snare cracks on 2 and 4 (the backbeat). Read left to right; x means hit.
Count: 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 &
Hi-hat: x x x x x x x x
Snare: . . x . . . x .
Kick: x . . . x . . .
Play it slowly at first (try 70–80 BPM), keep the hi-hats even, and only speed up once it feels effortless. This single pattern is the backbone of rock, pop, and countless other styles.
Common beginner mistakes
Rushing. Speeding up during fills is normal at first; a metronome fixes it fast.
Gripping too hard. Loosen up and let the stick rebound.
Skipping slow practice. Slow and clean beats fast and sloppy every time.
Ignoring the feet. Your kick and hi-hat foot need practice too, not just your hands.
A simple first-week plan
Day 1–2: single strokes (R L R L) on the snare, counting eighth notes.
Day 3–4: hi-hat + kick together, then add the snare backbeat.
Day 5–6: play the full rock beat for two minutes without stopping.
Day 7: play along to a slow song and just hold the beat.
Practice it now, free
You do not need a kit to start. Open the practice app, turn on the metronome, and play the beat above on your keyboard or by tapping the pads. Then jump into Song Mode and play along to a groove.