Logo Slogan
 Home | Help
Login / Register | My Cart (Your Shopping Cart is Empty)  
site top bar
My Cart
Your Shopping Cart is Empty
Box End
Signup for our newsletter
Email Address :
Click here to unsubscribe
Box End
Aeron Photography
Aeron Photography
Box End
Recently Viewed Items
Product - Just Singing (Download)
Product - Blue Rain (Single CD)
Product - French Accent (Download)
Product - Speakers Voice Method (Book & CD)
Product - Live At The Baked Potato (CD)
Product - Impulse ( Download )
Product - American Soul - Vol.2 (Download)
Product - Barry White - Live in Europe 1975 (Download)
Product - Italian Accent (Book & CD)
Product - The Sun Will Shine Again - (Download)
Product - Down Among the Dead Men (CD)
Product - Down Among the Dead Men (Download)
Product - Blue Illusions (CD)
Product - Downtown - effusion - video
Product - How I Feel (Download)
Product - English Accent (Download)
Product - Just Singing (CD)
Product - Achieving The Standard American Accent (Download)
Product - Learn to play Didgeridoo With Grahm Doe - DVD
Product - Effusion - Hush - Video
Product - Melancholie et Espoir (Download)
Product - Irish Accent (Download)
Product - Achieving The Standard American Accent (Book & CD)
Product - Southern Accent (Book & CD)
Product - Blue Illusions (Download)
Product - The Sun Will Shine Again - (CD)
Product - Melancholie et Espoir (CD)
Product - Rejuvenation Project (Download)
Product - Blue Rain (Download)
Product - Soul Patrol - Soul's Greatest Hits (Download)
Product - Singers Voice Method (Book & CD)
Product - Downtown - Single - CD
Product - English Accent (Book & CD)
Product - French Accent (Book & CD)
Product - The Temptations - Live In London (Download)
Product - Learn to play Didgeridoo With Grahm Doe (Download)
Product - Southern Accent (Download)
Product - Downtown - Single (Download)
Product - Effusion - How I Feel - CD
Product - Stream of Rejuvenation (CD)
Product - Bittersweet Journey - Effusion -Video
Product - Mystery (Download)
Box End
Abet Disc
Abet Disc | CD/DVD Duplication
Box End

Learn To Play The Didgeridoo

 

Didgeridoo Learn To Play Download

Didgeridoo Learn To Play DVD

Didgeridoo Learn to play Video Download Didgeridoo Learn to play DVD
Click to view Click to view

Why Not Try Something Different?

Do you remember your New Year’s Eve Resolution, to try something entirely new and different? Well, if this is one of your promises for the year, learning to play a musical instrument can be one of the most fulfilling and entertaining experiences you can offer yourself and whether you play just for yourself or to entertain your loved ones, learning can truly be a gift.

Choosing what to play is the next step. Perhaps, you have always wanted to learn a specific instrument? However, if you want to do something entirely creative and different, consider learning a musical instrument that is not necessarily part of the mainstream by opting for the Didgeridoo.

While not as well known as other instruments, the Didgeridoo is a melodic wind instrument, believed to be the oldest of its kind and has, on occasion, been described as a natural wooden trumpet that can measure anywhere from 3 to 10 feet and has strongly influenced modern Celtic music, among other genres.

While learning this instrument might seem intimidating at first, it is, in fact, quite simple and now, thanks to an easy to follow DVD or instant download for your computer, IPAD or IPOD, learning this beautiful instrument is as simple as following the instructions and guidance of Grahm Doe, who has been playing Didgeridoo for many, many years and clearly has a great love for the instrument.

Doe brings his passion for playing the Didgeridoo directly into your living room thanks to this easy to follow, instructional DVD. Doe explains his techniques, in detail, and slowly works through the various stages of learning with you – from the basics to the more experienced, all the while, giving you helpful pointers and guidelines to make learning through video a fun part of your day.

You will immediately feel at ease, thanks to Grahm Doe’s relaxed method of teaching and you will soon be absolutely amazed at just how proficient you become at playing an instrument that, for the most part, is unknown to many people.

This has been a good year for you so far –you have actually fulfilled one of your New Year’s Resolutions, but you have also dared to be different.

Aeron Nersoya

Learn to Play Didgeridoo

This new DVD is a must have for beginners to advanced players. Grahm Doe has years of experience with didgeridoos, and plays and teaches professionally. He starts with the very basics of how didgeridoos function and what didge options are available, and carefully takes the student on a journey through harminics, vocalizations, cheek pops, circular breathing, and specific rhythms. So whether you are frustrated with inability to create the drone, or if you want to expand your droning vocabulary and technique, this DVD will surely suit your needs!

Contents include: Didgeridoos and how they work, Examples of different types of didgeridoo, Getting the basic drone, Harmonics, Vocals - dog barks, bird calls growls, Interference patterns, Animal calls, Tongue and cheek position, Tongue trills, Cheek pops and taps, Jaw drops, Diaphragm control, Circular breathing, Ta Ka rhythm, De Ga rhythm, Wa Ka Doo rhythm, Double Breath rhythm, Harmonic rhythm, Low Key effects, Faster rhythms, Looped rhythms to practice along with, How to make a beeswax mouthpiece and more!

Shot in and around breathtaking Yosemite National Park. A 2 hour jam packed DVD with many in depth didgeridoo exercises and playing methods. Excellent for beginners to learn about the didgeridoo and how to play. A valuable resource for intermediate players to pick up new rhythms and techniques.

Video Samples

Slider Didgeridoo & Different Keys

 

Didgeridoo Drone

 

What is a Didgeridoo?


The didgeridoo is believed to be the worlds oldest wind instrument, dating back thousands of years. It originates as a musical instrument of the North Australian Aborigine. The didgeridoo is traditionally played accompanied with clap sticks and/or the clapping together of boomerangs in Corroborees (ceremonial dances). Players can also tap out rhythms on the side of the didgeridoo using fingers or sticks.

A didgeridoo is traditionally made from one of many species of Eucalyptus branches or saplings. Species of Eucalyptus number in the hundreds but only about a dozen species are used for didgeridoo making. The Eucalyptus is naturally hollowed out by termites whose nests abound in the millions in Australia. It takes at least a year for the termites to hollow a tree out. Harvesting has to be timed so that the wall thickness of the instrument is not too thin or not too thick. It has to be "just right". Making for the perfect instrument!

The varying length of the wood that is sawed off and its thickness and shape will determine which key the instrument will be in. Shorter lengths yield higher pitches where as longer lengths yield lower pitches. Didgeridoos generally range in keys from a high "G" to a low "A". A common "C" didgeridoo will be two steps below middle "C" of a piano. The keys of C and D are the easiest keys to learn how to play on the didgeridoo.

Bark is usually stripped from the outside and the termites removed. A rim of beeswax can then be applied to reduce the diameter of a large opening down to more playable sized aperture. About an inch and a quarter, similar to a tuba sized mouthpiece. Wax also creates a good airtight seal for the mouth and makes it more comfortable to play. The instrument can then be decorated with ochre paintings that symbolize a tribes food and/or totems.


A Story On How The Didgeridoo Came To Be...


Three men were camped out on a cold night in the outback. One of the men told another to put a log on the fire, because the fire was getting low and it was very cold. So, the other man turned and grabbed a log, which was awfully light to the touch, for it was hollow. As he went to drop it into the fire, he noticed the entire length was covered with termites. He did not know what to do, for he could not throw the branch into the fire, because it would kill the termites, and his friends were telling him to do so because it was so cold. So, he carefully removed all the termites from the outside of the log by scooping them into his hand, and he deposited them inside the hollow branch. Then he raised the branch to his lips and blew the termites into the air. The termites blown into the air became the stars, and the first didgeridoo was created.

How To Play Didgeridoo


You don't have to pay for instructional materials on how to play the didgeridoo. You can learn for free with our instructions and sound clips. The technique of how to play the didgeridoo is unique among wood instruments. You blow down the tube with loose lips creating a vibration that echoes down the tube coming out amplified as a drone. Similar to a tuba but even looser and more relaxed. It is important to stay relaxed, trying too hard will tighten your muscles which contradicts the need to create loose lips and face. Buzz your lips while gently pushing air down the tube.

The lip vibration is similar to giving someone a "raspberry". It can help to stick your bottom lip out a little more than the top lip. To improve the tonal quality of the drone it is important to try to tighten your lips a little after the drone is started, this will increase the pitch and really get the didgeridoo going! If you tighten up too much the drone will abruptly stop and you get a sound we call the "Blow Out". People often ask us how we can get a didge to play so loud and have such an eerie quality to the drone. The secret to a good drone is starting loose and tightening up the lips until you almost Blow Out. If you ride the fine line of playing tightly with almost doing a "Blow Out" you can achieve a loud and intense drone.

Getting a good drone is critical because the other noises you make while playing a didgeridoo happen while the drone is going. It takes most people a bit of practice to be able to drone so don't get frustrated and practice, practice, practice. But, you shouldn't really think of it as practice because this instrument is fun to learn!

Now try to drone as long as possible with one breath. While learning you will waste a lot of air discovering how to make the noise. As soon as possible start limiting the amount of air you use up. You only need enough air to vibrate the lips, this is what creates the noise. The toughest part of didgeridoo playing is learning to circular breathe. Circular breathing allows a player to be able to continually blow air down the didgeridoo without ever stopping for breath.


Viewers Comment


The DVD is great. It’s very fun and I really enjoyed the awesome scenery and all the cool didges. I need to work on new rhythms and circular breathing while playing fast rhythms. The DVD is really great for learning all the basic droning and circular breathing. I’ll definitely be using the rhythm section for improving my skill. The use of the clapsticks is a great tool for showing when to breathe, very informative and very helpful. I’ll be ordering a pair very shortly so that I can play along better with the DVD. Awesome video! - Mike

 

Site Bottom
Home | Site Map | About Us | Terms and Conditions | Contact Us | Help | How to Enable Cookies | Learn To Play The Didgeridoo
Credit Cards
Payment Processing
Official PayPal Seal   Checks
 
  Design by Design 2 Sound / Domain Name Web Hosting by Hold On Domain