Explore is DrumShed's community hub — discover patterns from drummers worldwide, follow people whose style you love, and watch an activity feed of what your network is actually practicing.

Find patterns by genre, time signature, tempo range, voice count, or keyword. Every pattern is tagged and searchable.
Save patterns to your library for quick access. Build a collection of go-to grooves and fills.
Take any community pattern and make it yours. Clone opens it in your editor — tweak kick placement, swap cymbals, add ghost notes.
Find drummers whose patterns you like and follow them. See their new uploads in your feed.
Share your beats and fills with the community. Get stars and followers when people love your patterns.
Rock, jazz, funk, Latin, hip-hop, metal, gospel, worship, marching — every genre represented.
See what people you follow are practicing and high-five their drills and sessions to show support.
Tap Replay on any activity to run the same drill or full session someone else just completed — same pattern, same tempo.
Explore is DrumShed's built-in community feed. Every beat and fill you create can be published to Explore with a single tap. Other drummers see your patterns in their feed, filtered by genre, time signature, difficulty, and recency. The community grows every day as more drummers share what they build.
When you find a pattern you like, you can star it to save it to your favorites, or clone it to copy it into your own library. Cloning gives you a full editable copy — change the kick pattern, swap cymbals, add ghost notes, adjust the tempo. The original creator gets credit, and their follower count grows.
Following a drummer means their new patterns show up in your feed. It's how you curate a stream of fresh musical ideas from players whose style resonates with yours. Combined with genre filters, Explore becomes a personalized discovery engine for drum patterns.
The Activity tab adds another layer: a live feed of what people you follow are actually practicing. You can see which drills they ran, how long they practiced, and what sessions they completed — then high-five them or replay their exact drill with one tap. It's the social accountability layer that keeps everyone in the shed.



