This was given to a guitar student to... well, I can't remember. This riff/exercise was made over a year ago! But, it contains a bit of palm-mute accent work with with an open E5 chord, and some 16th note runs.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
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This palm-mute accent pattern has one chord not muted, then two chords muted, repeat that pattern, then one more no muted chord. The rhythm count is 1ena2en_3ena4en_
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This palm-mute pattern has the first beat with a non muted chord, then 2 muted chords, a non muted chord, followed by another beat with all palm-muted chords. This pattern repeats throughout this guitar exercise.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
The rhythm structure here is essentially a 4:3 polyrhythm. 4 chords are evenly spaced across 3 beats. This continues to repeat throughout 3 bars. The 4th bar breaks up the pattern to have something different.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This was given to a guitar student to introduce a palm-mute pattern where the first chord is not muted followed by two muted chords while dividing the beat up into 4 equal parts.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This was given to a guitar student to introduce them to the palm-mute pattern of picking one note with no palm-mute, then two notes that are palm-muted while dividing the beats up into 4 parts.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This was given to a guitar student to really test their ability to follow a rhythm pattern that's constantly changing where 16th notes are the smallest subdivision.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This type of guitar speed/tremolo/alternate picking drill allows you to focus on your picking more than your fretting. Changing notes after 4 pick strokes will help you keep track of where you are in the exercise as you get faster and faster.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This is a fairly basic triplet guitar rhythm. The count is 1na2na3na4na|1__2na3__4na
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This was given to a guitar student to test their ability to play different triplet rhythm/strum patterns each bar.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
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