by Duke » Fri May 26, 2006 12:35 am
Hi Olsongo,
If your drum is not in tune with its self i.e. rims bent or out of shape or pulled down too much to one side you are less likely to sustain a clean note/tone from your drum (it is not in the frequency/pitch of a chosen note taken from any interval/triad). Then you would start hitting the drum too hard (trying to make it sound better - get a cleaner sound and more volume, etc), which in turn over a playing period of 1 hour plus you would start to slightly bruise your hands, which eventually leads to peeing blood.
Now I am no doctor, but I did suffer from peeing blood many years ago and it had me very worried, I spoke to my teachers at the time and they were all saying it is from bad technique (yes I was hitting the drum too hard to make up for my bad technique and lack of truly understand the tuning of these drums etc), after a lot of research and a very strict dedication to practice, also with a lot of guidance to improve my technique, I turned out a better player with very good technique.
I would suggest you go and see you local doctor and ask about a condition called Rhabdomyolysis, Myoglobinuria, Hemoglobinuria and Acute
Renal Failure. I would strongly suggest you speak to your teacher if you have one, if not I would go and find a teacher to review your technique.
My friend I am not trying to lecture any body here I am merely pointing out a reality that happens to some players (and you have pointed out this is starting to happen to you) and let me tell you from my experience it is not a good thing for your playing or more importantly your health.
Cheers
Duke