I purchased a Modern Drummer
magazine recently (because one of my favorite drummers,
Neal Peart is featured
this month - cookie alert on those links) and was quite
surprised by the Editor's Overview. Apparently,
trolling has reached the drummer's world. But
that's a misleading statement - trolls have always existed,
and the context of the following snippet from said editor
(Ron Spagnardi) is online forums from manufacturers' sites.
I thought you might appreciate what Ron had to say on the
subject, and more importantly, what he suggests:
To those who choose to abuse the privilege of forum participation, how about making an effort contribute something really meaningful on occasion? To those who profess to be serious players, but contribute nothing, just imagine what miraculous improvements you could make as a player if spent on tenth of the time you're foolishly wasting ... practicing!
jeffa
L-LL-L--L-LL-L--L-LL-L-- -R--R-RR-R--R-RR-R--R-RR B--B--B--B--B--B--B--B-- H---H---H---H---H---H--- (the triplet paradiddle with high-hat)
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Replies are listed 'Best First'. | |
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Re: Trolling in the 'secular' world (slightly OT)
by jsprat (Curate) on Aug 04, 2002 at 18:37 UTC | |
Re: Trolling in the 'secular' world (slightly OT)
by Marza (Vicar) on Aug 04, 2002 at 18:08 UTC | |
Re: Trolling in the 'secular' world (slightly OT)
by BorgCopyeditor (Friar) on Aug 04, 2002 at 19:15 UTC | |
by jeffa (Bishop) on Aug 04, 2002 at 20:56 UTC | |
Re: Trolling in the 'secular' world (slightly OT)
by giulienk (Curate) on Aug 04, 2002 at 21:29 UTC |
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