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The Book of Rhythm

The Book of Rhythm

The Book of Rhythm by Blake Fleming is an unprecedented collection of 5,096 meticulously organized rhythms for ALL instruments, laid out in a format that is easy to read and easy to follow.

One of the Top 5 instruction books in the 2020 Modern Drummer Reader’s Poll.

The Book of Rhythm by Blake Fleming
The Book of Rhythm by Blake Fleming

The Book of Rhythm

The Book of Rhythm by Blake Fleming is an unprecedented collection of 5,096 meticulously organized rhythms for ALL instruments, laid out in a format that is easy to read and easy to follow.

“No serious musician can be without this book!” — Sean Ono Lennon

Now Available as a Digital eBook
through Hudson Music!


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What is The Book of Rhythm?

What is
The Book of Rhythm?

The Book of Rhythm is an encyclopedia of 5,096 possible rhythmical permutations of 3-, 4-, 5-, 6-, 7-, 8-, 9-, and 12-beat combinations that can be used for rhythm study, reading, compositional inspiration, or creativity—on any instrument.

  • 240 pages
  • 5,096 rhythms
  • 9″ x 12″ paperback
  • 1 lb 15.5 oz
  • $34.99
  • Ships internationally (has already shipped to over 20 countries outside the US!)
  • Published by Skin & Stick Publishing
  • ISBN: 978-0-578-41692-2
Contact:

Blake Fleming
facebook.com/blakeflemingdrums
instagram.com/blakeflemingdrums
blakefleming@hotmail.com

The Book of Rhythm is an oversized 9″ x 12″ paperback, 240 pages, 1 lb 15.5 oz, and built like a tank.  Available exclusively at blakethedrummer.com.

Both instantly accessible to the new musician and a massive, diverse resource for the seasoned proThe Book of Rhythm is an interactive archive of rhythms containing every possible rhythmic combination derived from a 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9-beat grouping as well as every combination derived from a 12-beat grouping.

No prior musical experience is required to read and play the first 238 rhythms of this book (these rhythms are written in a purely binary manner – on or off, note or rest) and only a very basic amount of knowledge is needed to play and utilize all 5,096. I wrote this book in simplified musical notation so that it can be accessible to anyone regardless of musical experience. An instrument is not even necessary to make magic from the information inside. Tap the rhythms out on your body or on a chair or table, use some old spoons or rolled up magazines. The Book of Rhythm will help you think outside the box and give you the ability to create endless musical ideas.

An incomparable resource for students, teachers, composers and musicians of all kinds.  This is not a conventional music primer, meaning that it does not have to be read in a linear fashion like many instructional books. It’s really a launching pad for your creativity. Open it to any page, pick a rhythm and start creating. 

Whether you’re a violinist, trumpeter, bassoonist, death metal drummer, jazz drummer, french hornist, latin percussionist, experimental flautist, programmer, beat producer, alto saxophonist, bassist, conductor, concert pianist, avant garde guitarist, seasoned pro or total beginner, regardless of instrument or experience, this book is for YOU.

I have wanted to write a book for many years now. There were a number of starts but eventually I’d always get derailed from the overwhelming nature of the idea. Then one day in November of 2017 my student Sal came into my teaching studio for a drum lesson, and after one of our many talks that usually started each lesson he said to me, “Man, you should just write a book!” and for some reason it finally stuck. That evening I sat down on my old red crushed velvet couch (which nearly crippled me in the process of writing this book as it was old and saggy but suited my aesthetic) and started scribbling ideas in my notebooks. After putting pen to paper for a few weeks I came upon an article on combinations and permutations. I started doing more research along these lines to see how I could relate these mathematical concepts to rhythm, but what I came across seemed unnecessarily complicated. I decided to try and create a system of my own to collect as many rhythms as possible in a manner that was straightforward and comprehensive. Ideally, I wanted to create a book that would give the reader an endless supply of musical inspiration. 

Creating this system took me on quite a journey, hitting walls along the way, dealing with back and knee ailments from sitting so much while writing, seeing notes swimming around in my sleep (like a dream sequence from some 1940s film involving the stock market or number grids like you might see in The Matrix), causing many restless and sleepless nights. My brain was working nonstop trying to “crack the code” before I discovered the underlying math. I just couldn’t get away from it. I loved it, but it was also making me a little crazy. 

It was all well worth it, however, because when used to its potential The Book of Rhythm is not just a collection of exercises and patterns, but rather something alchemical and universal. 

The BoR is a logical progression of rhythms that includes all the possible combinations from 3 beats all the way up to 12 (minus 10 and 11-beat groupings because these combos alone were going to add another 3,000 rhythms and can also be achieved by combining a variety of rhythms readily available in the book). There are 4,094 different 12-beat combinations alone. These 12/8 rhythms can be interpreted and utilized in a variety of contexts, including as a measure of triplets in 4/4 time. This means The Book of Rhythm contains every single combination of triplets in 4/4 laid out in mathematical order. With the addition of the 9-beat groupings I have also written and organized every single rhythmic combination of triplets in a 3/4 measure. These two sections alone, the 9 and 12-beat groupings, combined with the ability to swing every rhythm in the book, should make it a required text for every jazz musician or student on the planet.

The above-mentioned is only one way to think of the 12-beat groupings. They can also be thought of as a 3/4 measure of 16th notes. If we can simultaneously think of these 12-beat groupings as triplets in 4/4 or 16th notes in 3/4 (4 groups of 3 or 3 groups of 4) this means that you also have every single possible rhythmic combination of 3 against 4. African music enthusiasts take note! You could also think of the 12-beat groupings as two measures in 6/8 time or two measures of triplets in 2/4 or 2 measures of 8th notes in 3/4, 4 bars of quarter notes in 3/4… so many possibilities and these are just the tip of the iceberg!

If you’re tired of the same old rhythms in your rock band or the same strumming patterns for your guitar songs, you have the 8-beat groupings which give you every single rhythmic combination of 8th notes in 4/4, or every combination of 16th notes in 2/4, or every combination in a set of 32nd notes, or two measures of quarter notes in 4/4… so many different ways to think about the same 8 beats. Get the idea? You can do this sort of thing with every grouping in the book and I show you how in the introduction. 

Want to play something in 11? Try combining rhythms from the 7 and 4-beat groupings, or the 8 and 3-beat groupings, or the 5 and 6-beat groupings, etc. With all of the odd groupings and the ability to combine measures for endless time signatures, The Book of Rhythm is a progressive musician’s dream resource!  

The rhythms in this book can be applied to ANY musical genre. 

Imagine kids growing up and counting rhythms in 3, 5, 7 and 9 as comfortably and easily as they would in 2 or 4. That right there could change the musical landscape over time, especially for us westerners.

Are you starting to see how this book is so much more than just an archive of over 5,000 organized rhythms?

Blake Fleming is a percussionist known for his involvement with several influential experimental bands and has recently written his first book, The Book of Rhythm, an unprecedented collection of 5,096 meticulously organized rhythms for all instruments. His drumming has been written about in such major publications as The New York Times, NPR.com, Spin, Rolling Stone, MOJO, Modern Drummer, DRUM!, Dangerous Minds, and Pitchfork.  He was included in SPIN’s 100 Greatest Drummers of Alternative Music and has recorded and toured extensively, working with luminaries in the jazz, rock and avant-garde worlds. Alongside a variety of studio work, he also enjoys teaching students worldwide with live online lessons and is an adjunct professor at The State University of New York at Oneonta.


Study Suggestions

Blake Fleming shares some ways to interpret the source material.

1. Have one limb play the written line and one limb play the rests. Do this hand to hand, foot to foot, hand to foot, or foot to hand.

2. Play continual 8th notes, 16th notes, triplets, etc. in the hands so there are no rests, and then play the notes of the written line as accents.

3. Play any variety of ride patterns—say, the traditional jazz ride pattern to start—and use the written lines as comping material for snare, bass drum, or hi-hat foot.

4. Play the written line with the hands, and fill in the rests with the feet, either bass drum or hi-hat, or alternate between the two.

5. Have your lead hand and foot play the rhythm in unison while the other hand fills in the rests. To expand this, have your other foot keep straight time.

6. Layer two, three, or four rhythms, a different one for each limb.

7. Play every other note on the opposite limb, whether it be between both hands, both feet, or some combination of hand and foot or foot and hand.

8. Think of the rhythms as riffs, like a guitar riff in band practice. Verbalize the rhythm out loud, either by singing or counting, and play around the riff on the kit, the same way you might if your guitarist just showed you a new riff to jam on.

9. Play the rhythms over various ostinatos.

10. I mention in the intro to the book that any of the Alan Dawson methods can be applied. So then we can…

• Play a jazz ride pattern: have the snare play the written line, play the hi-hat foot on 2 and 4, and the bass drum fills in the rests.

• Do the same thing as above, but switch the bass drum and snare drum so the bass drum plays the written line and the snare fills in the rests.

• Do the same thing as above, but instead of the traditional ride pattern, have the ride play the written line in unison with the bass drum while the snare fills in the rests.

• Have the hi-hat foot play the written line, the non-lead hand fill in the rests, and the other hand play various ride patterns.

• Snare plays the line while the bass drum and hi-hat alternate playing the rests.

• Assign the kick to play all the long notes and the snare to play the short notes, or vice versa, underneath various ride patterns.

As seen in

Though he’s a founder of Dazzling Killmen, Laddio Bolocko, and the Mars Volta, bands whose influence extends widely among experimental, progressive, and technical hardcore musicians, the author’s playing and teaching go far beyond genre and are rooted in rudiments, Scottish Pipe band drumming, jazz, and beyond.

Blake Fleming is an omnivorous student of the drums, so his announcement about self-publishing The Book of Rhythm was met with keen interest by those familiar with his career. A conversation with a student in November of 2017 prompted Fleming, who’s been teaching drums since he was a teenager, to actualize his dream of creating his own method book. After a few false starts, research into the theories of composer, theorist, and advisor Joseph Schillinger inspired him to create a rhythmic “book of spells.” The resulting Book of Rhythm is an encyclopedia of 5,096 possible rhythmical permutations of 3-, 4-, 5-, 6-, 7-, 8-, 9-, and 12-beat combinations that can be used for rhythm study, reading, compositional inspiration, or creativity—on any instrument.

For Fleming, this kind of open-ended reference book is a perfect model of his teaching style. “I want to unlock students mentally and physically,” he says, “so that they can start to get their own ideas out in an articulate and powerful manner. I’m very interested in helping people find their own voice on the instrument. The fact that this book is a vast archive with which you can create should make it appeal to composers and musicians of all backgrounds. It truly is a reference book, workbook, and an overall creative manual.”

One of the book’s strengths is its simplicity. The rhythms use only quarter notes, 8th notes, and dotted quarter notes. Even students with limited exposure to reading will be able to sit down and play most of the examples, and a little effort can unlock them all. Fleming lists every permutation of possible three- to twelve-beat combinations progressively through the book’s 229 pages, but you could also just open a page at random, pick a rhythm, and start playing. The book includes a short introduction and an appendix of “creative usage” ideas that you can apply to the rhythms, but the material is generally unadorned. As Fleming writes in his introduction, this is “not just a collection of exercises and patterns but rather something alchemical and universal.” Your instrument or compositional practice could include working from any one of these thousands of rhythms while applying multiple approaches to the source material.

Fleming says he wants The Book of Rhythm to become the Syncopation for the 21st century and recommends that drummers use the “Alan Dawson method” on the rhythmic material that can be found in his book.

Blake outlines his teaching approach further: “Even within a basic snare solo, all four limbs and all parts of the kit can eventually be utilized. There are so many miniature lessons just within one piece, and sometimes there are many lessons just around one measure. This is where The Book of Rhythm comes in, because you can take one measure of rhythm and see how many ways you can utilize and manipulate it.”

The Book of Rhythm stands in opposition to the over-engineered tendencies in drum pedagogy and gives the reader more control to develop a personal path through the essential elements of rhythm. It’s a unique addition to the literature and is a recommended book for creative drummers.

As seen in Percussive Notes

New Percussion Literature and Recordings

All the best drum set books are open-ended. That is, they can be used in a myriad of different ways. Ted Reed’s Syncopation and George Stone’s Stick Control come to mind as examples of books that can be studied for a lifetime. Blake Fleming’s The Book of Rhythm, or “BoR” as he likes to refer to it, falls into this category. An inventive student could literally spend a lifetime in this book without exhausting all the possible rhythmic possibilities.

The material in the book is actually quite simple. Beginning with a division of three notes and moving up through a division of 12, the book provides all the possible rhythmic combinations of eighth notes, quarter notes, and dotted-quarter notes, along with their respective rests. These are arranged in a logical order. For example, in a division of three, there are only six different combinations if we limit ourselves to “1 out of 3,” and “2 out of 3.” By the time we get to a division of 12, there are 4,094 combinations.

Fleming then instructs the student to begin to re-voice and combine the rhythms, playing them on different sound surfaces (or pitches) or combining the rhythms by playing them simultaneously with different limbs. Now the possibilities are truly endless. This would require some creativity from the student and/or teacher, but the result of practicing this way would be mind boggling. The book could be used by a player of any instrument or by a singer.

The book ends with a one-page appendix, which encourages rhythmic substitution, or replacing “one rhythm with another of equal value but of a different subdivision.” So quarter notes could now become two eighth notes, or an eighth-note triplet, or four sixteenth notes, or a group of five, etc. You get the idea. No one will live long enough to “finish” this book. But it would be an endless source of ideas for anyone who is willing to jump in with both feet.

What Others Are Saying

A recommended book for creative drummers…

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The Book of Rhythm stands in opposition to the over-engineered tendencies in drum pedagogy and gives the reader more control to develop a personal path through the essential elements of rhythm. It’s a unique addition to the literature and is a recommended book for creative drummers.
John Colpitts
Modern Drummer

Blake Fleming proves that the total package is in fact possible…

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“There’s a false idea, in music generally and in drumming specifically, that chops and technique are somehow antithetical to raw passion and creativity. That might be true when it comes to lesser musicians, but a player like Blake Fleming proves that the total package is in fact possible. He is simultaneously one of the most scarily brutal drummers I’ve ever witnessed behind a kit, and also one of the most learned about his art form that I know. I still draw inspiration from his playing on albums like Dazzling Killmen’s Face of Collapse (a record that was essentially my Revolver or Led Zeppelin IV during my teen years) and regularly reflect on pointers he gave me during lessons around two decades ago. I believe that Blake is profoundly committed to the art of drumming and the study of rhythm, and I can’t wait to see what he has in store with The Book of Rhythm…”

Hank Shteamer
Senior Music Editor, Rolling Stone

World-class drummer, world-class book!

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Obviously this is a highly specialized text, so if you’re here looking at this, you likely know what it is and whether you need/want it. I’m primarily a guitarist – and have scarcely scratched the surface here – but I still have logged more hours with this book than any other theory book on my shelves. So let me assure you that as much as Blake is a world-class drumming talent, he’s also created a world-class resource with this book. Enjoy!
W.F. Weaver
Guitarist

Nothing short of a paradigm shift

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“I just got Blake Fleming’s comprehensive tome, “The Book of Rhythm,” and was hoping for guidance from the man himself. So, I sent Blake a message asking to schedule some time with him; he responded immediately and we scheduled a Skype session for the next day at high noon. Within the first few minutes, I was nodding my head in muted but enthusiastic response to Blake’s incisive direction and the obvious limitless potential of this book. The simple approach to utilizing his unabridged collection of rhythm is nothing short of a paradigm shift in both personal potential and student inspiration. The liberation I experienced when I realized the infinite possibilities of this material altered my view of rhythm forever. I suddenly saw the capacity for applying Blake’s method to other books I’ve used for decades, as well. “The Book of Rhythm” is a never ending expansion of the awareness and imagination of rhythm itself! Get your copy immediately, if not sooner.”
Tony Lee
Owner/Instructor of Freeway Music, Columbia, SC

No serious musician can be w/ out this book!

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My good friend Blake Fleming has done it! He has written the definitive rhythm codex that shall forever be the Bible of Beats! Every possible iteration of every possible arrangement of note patterns lovingly realized in this instant classic for all musicians. Buy this book immediately or forever be damned! No serious musician can be w/ out this book!
Sean Ono Lennon
Songwriter, Producer

essential reading for the creative drummer/teacher.

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My personal concept of a great drum set book is they are open-ended that is, they can be used in a myriad of different ways – Stick Control and Ted Reed’s Syncopation for example can be a source of endless idea’s once you know how to unlock the workings of them.

Blake Fleming’s The Book of Rhythm, falls into this category. A serious student/teacher could literally spend a lifetime in this book. One of the book’s strengths is its simplicity The rhythms use only quarter notes, 8th notes, and dotted quarter notes. Even students with limited exposure to reading will be able to sit down and play most of the examples, and a little effort can unlock them all. Fleming lists every permutation of possible three- to twelve-beat combinations progressively through the book’s 229 pages, but you could also just open a page at random, pick a rhythm, and start playing.

Fleming then instructs the student to begin to re-voice and combine the rhythms, playing them on different sound surfaces (or pitches) or combining the rhythms by playing them simultaneously with different limbs. Now the possibilities are truly endless
This is essential reading for the creative drummer/teacher.
Ashley Wardell
Music Educator

A must for any musician, teacher or composer

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This is a bible not only for drummers but for all musicians and musician/composers. It is a lifetime of practice, a meditation. I have dreamed about a book on rhythm that would not only teach musicians how to read rhythm, but with the right kind of practice, how to feel rhythm. A must for any musician, teacher or composer. Blake has succeeded to create the most comprehensive rhythmic study ever.
Jim Pugliese
Philip Glass, John Zorn, Marc Ribot, New York, NY

An absolute must have!

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“The Book of Rhythm is an absolute must have for opening your creative potential on your instrument. Blake’s done us the favor of laying out nearly every possible musical rhythm through permutations and combinations. Now, it’s up to you to be creative in applying it. Great for writer’s block, limb independence, playing with a band and general musical growth.”
Dan Ainspan
Drummer, Nashville, TN

It’s a stunning body of work…truly a masterpiece…

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“Every MUSICIAN…not just drummers…should own a copy of this new book… It’s a stunning body of work…truly a masterpiece. A lifetime of material to work on within it’s pages.”
Bobby Angilletta
Professional Drummer, Albany, NY

Thank you for writing this!!

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“Literally the very first page starts with wisdom I’ve been seeking my whole life. Thank you for writing this!!!!”
Arafat Kazi
Drummer, Boston, MA

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“Put on some coffee, going to the woodshed. I’ll see you guys in a few months. Thanks Blake! I think I will need the rest of my life to digest this amazing volume!”
Lincoln Dickison
Council Bluffs, IA

This book is incredible!

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“So excited to finally get this in my hands. Cannot wait to get to work on the multitude of rhythms that exist in this publication… This book is incredible! For all musicians, all ages.”
Matthew Bahl
Drummer/Instructor, Kansas City, MO

An excellent addition to any musician’s library...

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“This is an excellent addition to any musician’s library. It is not instrument specific, and is highly adaptable. Don’t take my word for it, order a copy for yourself… ”
Christopher Padgett
Drummer, Clarksville, TN