I stumbled across a video the other day of Steve Gadd playing a shuffle in which he used his left foot to play the skip notes. This frees up the the left hand to just play backbeats, and the right hand to just play quarter notes - be it on the ride or hi-hat. As no one limb has to play those two shuffled eighth notes really close together it creates a very relaxed feel.
Now, Gadd obviously isn't this first person to do this. Mel Lewis immediately comes to mind.
Here you are playing those two shuffled eighths with the same hand, but with the right hand as you would on a ride cymbal anyway. Again, it just seems to relax everything a bit. Or maybe it's just Gadd being Gadd.
Anyway, the curmudgeon in me kind of wants to say "just work more on your left hand", which we all should do, but actually these are nice to have the your back pocket. Stick them in your bag alongside the shuffles according to Keith Carlock.
That's actually the "Donald Bailey shuffle". To the best of my knowledge, he is the first to have regularly played the skip note with the hi-hat. Listen to Jimmy Smith's "Back at the Chicken Shack". Donald Bailey is a VERY underrated drummer.
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