Beginners 16th Note hi hat warm up

16th note hi hats are a rock and pop drumming staple. They can be heard in hit songs such as Mr. Brightside by The Killers, Everlong by the Foo Fighters, and Parallel Universe by the Red Hot Chili Peppers. They are also used on intros to songs such as in Run To The Hills by Iron Maiden and The Game by Disturbed. English Summer Rain by Placebo is another track with 16th note hi hat beats throughout.

How to play the warm up sheet

You could learn each line seperately and then try to play the whole exercise sheet in one go, or you could loop each line for as long as you want to. What we are working towards is the last two lines of the sheet. The other ones are building up to them, but could also be used in their own right as build ups in songs.

Line 1 – Just focussing on the hi hats and making sure to accent beats 2 and 4 so that you are preparing to move to the snare drum.

Line 2 – On beats 2 and 4 of the bar, right handed drummers should move over the right hand to the snare drum and no hi hat should be played at the same time. The next hi hat after the snare drum crucially should be the left hand. This often gets played wrong by students and the sticking ends up as RLRL RRLR (and then gets stuck), instead of RLRL RLRL.

Line 3 – Back to the same as line 1 but adding in bass drums on beats 1 and 3.

Line 4 – Ok, here is the main drum beat. Bass drum on 1 and 3 and snare drum on beats 2 and 4. Make sure to keep alternating the sticks and moving the right hand back and forth between the snare and hi hats when the snares are played, and keep the left hand raised and staying where it is for the hi hat notes

Line 5 – Same as line 4 but now we are turning it into a disco beat or a rock groove by adding bass drums to the snare drums. This is pretty similar to Mr. Brightside by The Killers, but in that song the hi hats get messy with open hi hats and extra snare drums.

Free PDF Download

You can download the pdf of this for free here: Beginners Drum Warm Up Exercises. You can also subscribe to the mailing list if you are interested in more free pdf content like this.

Beginners 2 bar drum grooves with open Hi Hats

I’ve had a bit of writers block lately and felt like I didn’t have it in me to work on another drum book at the moment. When I sat down to actually work on something I realised there was no block at all! It’s just been quite busy and I felt like I didn’t have the time or energy but just like with learning the drums, building a drum book happens by making lots of small additions, and it’s also quite fun too. So, exactly this for learning an instrument, this should be remembered. Small steps to learning and improving eventually builds into something substantial and just getting started is often the hardest step to creating something meaningful. It’s the same with saving money, lots of regular saving over a long time soon adds up to something meaningful, which is perhaps boring or frustrating on the first thought of not spending it and only saving a small amount, but it’s quite exciting when you see it grow and when it earns interest too.

So, for this warm up exercise sheet, you could play these with or without the open hi hats. I suggest to drum teachers to introduce open hi hats fairly early because otherwise pupils can get quite anti-hi hats if they are young so adding them into lessons early on may avoid this. However, some pupils are either too small or just really stuggle with holding down the hi hats with their foot so if there is this problem from day one, then just lock the hi hat into the closed position so it doesn’t distract too much from actually learning the drums.

Exercise 1 is a dance / pop / disco / rock beat that is in loads of songs like Eye of The Tiger, Another One Bites The Dust and Stayin’ Alive (especially with the open hi hat).

Exercise 2 is a general rock groove that is quite funky with the open hi hat and would work well in soul music or any pop / rock style too.

Exercise 3 is a hard rock groove with quarter note hi hats with a smooth open hi hat part.

Exercise 4 is a pop drum beat that has plenty of space for the vocals and builds tension, not too much going on in the middle of the bar.

Free PDF Download

You can download the pdf of this for free here: Beginners Drum Warm Up Exercises. Whilst you are there please subscribe to the mailing list if you are interested in more free pdf content like this.

Sheet 4 – Advanced Beginners to Early Intermediate Drum Warm Ups

This is an 8 bar drum warm up exercises consisting of a single bar drum fill idea, which is developed during the following 7 bars with similar fills and applying different 16th note and 8th note rhythms whilst following the same pattern around the kit.


The ability level is around Grade 2-4 because of the use of developed 16th note rhythms.

Help and notes for reading the warm up sheet

The first bar is played ‘RLRL’ throughout with 16th notes, accenting the pulse of 1 2 3 4. The accented notes move around the kit (snare, high tom, hi hat + bass drum, floor tom) but the other notes stay on the snare drum. On every other bar, the accents stay the same but the rhythms change.

On bar 2, the rhythm is 1 + a 2 + a, and so on. Bar 3 has a ‘1 e (+) a’ rhythm at the start, which is played ‘R L – L’, which is the same on beat 3. On bar 4 the rhythms are ‘1 e +, 2 e +’. Bars 5-8 have a dotted quaver followed by a semi quaver rhythm, which is played ‘1 (e) (+) a’. The ones in brackets can be counted, but not played.

On the final bar, the stepped hi hat is added in to finish off the warm up. If you wanted to, you could add the stepped hi hat all of the way through.

PDF Download

If you would like a PDF copy of this please visit Drum Warm Up Exercises for Advanced Beginners to Early Intermediate.

Go back to Sheet 3

Go forward to Sheet 5 (coming soon)

6 Rock Exercises with Drum Beats and Fills

These 6 Rock Exercises are selected from the pdf ebook ‘40 Beats and fills Exercises – Book 3‘.

I have selected these 6 exercises because they give a good insight to the book as well as being a really useful resource on it’s own. Perhaps a drum teacher would print this off for their pupils to work on, or a drummer might want to focus on rock drumming and use this on it’s own for several sessions.

The difficulty levels range from about grade 3 to grade 6, which I would say is advanced beginner to intermediate.

Below is a copy of the other two pages. You can also get the PDF file from here by clicking on the ‘Preview’ link: https://payhip.com/b/JESGw

Drum Warm Up Exercises for Advanced Beginners – Sheet 1

Advanced beginners drum warm up exercises for use in drum lessons, or for starting a practice or learning sessions.

Advanced beginners drum warm up exercises for use in drum lessons, or for starting a practice or learning sessions.

This is the first sheet in a collection of drum warm up exercises that will be made into a pdf ebook. You can use and print the main image on this website for educational use, or you also have the option of purchasing a PDF copy of Drum Warm Up Exercises for Advanced Beginners – Sheet 1.

In the sheet there is a snare drum rhythm exercise that has be made to sound good when repeated. Drummers should aim to increase the speed once comfortable with the rhythms. Likewise for the other exercises too. Start off slow and build up confidence and ability before going fast.

The flams exercise should be played by playing R L R L on all 8th notes, which is why one of the flams is played with the left hand playing the louder part of the flam, because it’s on one of the off-beat 8th notes. The second bar could be played R L R L or the 8th notes could be changed into paradiddles, meaning the second flam would be played with the left hand on the stronger note. Left handers will need to do the opposite to all of this.

The swing beat could easily be made harder but this could be the first time some drummers have been introduced to it so I’ve kept it fairly simple. The 8th notes are to be played with swing on the ride cymbals. If you don’ know what that means, have a listen to The Pink Panther theme tune and listen to the ride cymbals.

View Sheet 2 →

Page 5 – 25 Hi Hat Patterns with drum beat examples

Free PDF Download: Sign up to TL Music Books – Drums Mailing List to download the PDF of ’25 Hi Hat Patterns with drum beat examples’.

Page 1 | Page 2 | Page 3 | Page 4 | Page 5

This page continues from the last one, combining 8th notes and 16t notes to create hi hat patterns.

These hi hat patterns and drum beat examples are for styles such as rock, pop, funk, soul, all in a 4/4 time signature.

These patterns can be used with basic drum beats or more complicated ones.

The Moeller technique works well on patterns 5, 6, 9, 17, 18, 19, 20, 24, 25.

You could also add 8th note or 16th note swing to all of the patterns.

> = Accents (play louder). You can play the accents on the top of the hi hat for a clean sound.

You could play the accents on the hi hat edge with 45 degree stick angle, for a heavier sound.

Circle around the hi hat means open hi hat.

Page 4 – 25 Hi Hat Patterns with drum beat examples

Free PDF Download: Sign up to TL Music Books – Drums Mailing List to download the PDF of ’25 Hi Hat Patterns with drum beat examples’.

Page 1 | Page 2 | Page 3 | Page 4 | Page 5

This page and the next page concentrates on combinations of 8th notes and 16t notes to create hi hat patterns.

These hi hat patterns and drum beat examples are for styles such as rock, pop, funk, soul, all in a 4/4 time signature.

These patterns can be used with basic drum beats or more complicated ones.

The Moeller technique works well on patterns 5, 6, 9, 17, 18, 19, 20, 24, 25.

You could also add 8th note or 16th note swing to all of the patterns.

> = Accents (play louder). You can play the accents on the top of the hi hat for a clean sound.

You could play the accents on the hi hat edge with 45 degree stick angle, for a heavier sound.

Circle around the hi hat means open hi hat.

Page 3 – 25 Hi Hat Patterns with drum beat examples

Free PDF Download: Sign up to TL Music Books – Drums Mailing List to download the PDF of ’25 Hi Hat Patterns with drum beat examples’.

Page 1 | Page 2 | Page 3 | Page 4 | Page 5

This page focusses on accents on the hi hats whilst playing 16th notes with 2 hands. Adding double strokes to some or all of the non accents would be one way to extend this sheet further, as would adding open hi hats and appling different drum beats such as the beats in this book: 90 intermediate drum beats focusing on the bass drum – PDF ebook. You can also find more 16th note exercises with accents here: Accent Exercises with 16th notes – PDF ebook

These hi hat patterns and drum beat examples are for styles such as rock, pop, funk, soul, all in a 4/4 time signature.

These patterns can be used with basic drum beats or more complicated ones.

The Moeller technique works well on patterns 5, 6, 9, 17, 18, 19, 20, 24, 25.

You could also add 8th note or 16th note swing to all of the patterns.

> = Accents (play louder). You can play the accents on the top of the hi hat for a clean sound.

You could play the accents on the hi hat edge with 45 degree stick angle, for a heavier sound.

Circle around the hi hat means open hi hat.

Page 2 – 25 Hi Hat Patterns with drum beat examples

Free PDF Download: Sign up to TL Music Books – Drums Mailing List to download the PDF of ’25 Hi Hat Patterns with drum beat examples’.

Page 1 | Page 2 | Page 3 | Page 4 | Page 5

These hi hat patterns and drum beat examples are for styles such as rock, pop, funk, soul, all in a 4/4 time signature.

These patterns can be used with basic drum beats or more complicated ones.

The Moeller technique works well on patterns 5, 6, 9, 17, 18, 19, 20, 24, 25.

You could also add 8th note or 16th note swing to all of the patterns.

> = Accents (play louder). You can play the accents on the top of the hi hat for a clean sound.

You could play the accents on the hi hat edge with 45 degree stick angle, for a heavier sound.

Circle around the hi hat means open hi hat.