video,youtube_link,musiccaps_caption,youtube_published,youtube_channel,youtube_description,musiccaps_names,musiccaps_aspects,musiccaps_author,youtube_id,musiccaps_rowid https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BcVapmCbULQ&start=30&end=40,"{""label"":""105 BPM Funk Rock Drums"",""href"":""https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BcVapmCbULQ&start=30&end=40""}","This is a drum beat in the rock and roll style, with a drum roll in between that's intricate. The snare, toms, hi-hats and crash cymbal are used.",2014-12-24T23:21:21Z,LumBeat,"Recorded with Rock Drum Machine for iPad - iPhone https://itunes.apple.com/app/rock-drum-machine/id725234217 http://www.rockdrummachine.com Funk rock is a music genre that fuses funk and rock elements. James Brown and others declared that Little Richard and his mid-1950s road band, The Upsetters, were the first to put the funk in the rock and roll beat, with a biographer stating that their music ""spark[ed] the musical transition from fifties rock and roll to sixties funk. Funk rock's earliest incarnation on record was heard in the late 1960s through the mid-1970s by acts such as the Jimi Hendrix Experience (later work / Band of Gypsys), Eric Burdon and War, Ike and Tina Turner, Trapeze, Black Merda, Parliament-Funkadelic, Betty Davis and Mother's Finest. During the late 1980s and 1990s funk rock music experienced a surge in popularity, with bands such as Rage Against the Machine, Incubus, Infectious Grooves, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Faith No More and Primus mixing funk rock with many different genres, most notably heavy metal, hip hop, experimental music and punk rock, with this leading to the emergence of the funk rock subgenre funk metal.","[""Cymbal"", ""Drum"", ""Drum kit"", ""Hi-hat"", ""Rimshot"", ""Snare drum"", ""Bass drum"", ""Percussion""]","[""drum beat"", ""rock drum pattern"", ""drum roll"", ""snare"", ""toms"", ""hi-hats"", ""crash cymbal"", ""complex drum roll""]",3,BcVapmCbULQ,1265 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RI71ebbU0PQ&start=0&end=10,"{""label"":""How to Play The Rolling Stones' \""(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction\"" on Drums"",""href"":""https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RI71ebbU0PQ&start=0&end=10""}","This audio clip features a drum kit being played. A stick count is played in the beginning followed by the beat in eighth note pattern. The closed hi-hat, snare and kick are played in eight notes. There are no other instruments in this song. There are no voices in this song. This song can be played in a drum instruction video.",2008-05-09T23:41:45Z,DRUM! Magazine,"Get Your Free DRUM! Mag Pack ► https://pro.drummagazine.com/free-drum-mag-pack DRUM! Magazine Editor Wally Schnalle demonstrates how to play the drum part to The Rolling Stones' ""(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction.""","[""Cymbal"", ""Drum"", ""Hi-hat"", ""Rimshot"", ""Snare drum"", ""Bass drum"", ""Percussion""]","[""drum beat"", ""no other instruments"", ""no voices"", ""stick count"", ""hi-hat"", ""snare"", ""kick drum"", ""instrumental""]",0,RI71ebbU0PQ,2688