This guitar rhythm strumming pattern is basically playing 3 strums, and then the 3rd strum holds out the same length as 3 strums. In other words, you strum two 16th notes and then a dotted 8th note. The dotted 8th note is the equivalent of three 16th notes. Strum 3 times, and the 3rd strum lasts three 16th notes. This pattern repeats until the end of the 4th bar where a single quarter note breaks things up before the repeat begins.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
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This guitar strumming pattern is basically the introduction to the previous lesson posted. Here you have a 16th note followed by an 8th note strummed 4 times followed by a quarter note. The count is 1e_a2_na_en_4
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This guitar rhythm constantly goes between a 16th note, then an 8th note. This repeats for three full bars. Bar four is a rhythm to fill out a fourth bar before repeating the whole thing all over again.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This palm-mute accent pattern creates a polyrhythmic sound. Because you don't palm-mute the first 16th note of every grouping of three 16th notes, four times you create an emphasis with the chords that are evenly spaced across three beats. Beat four is when the polyrhythm is no longer happening.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
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:
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:
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 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:
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