This palm-mute accent pattern was given to a guitar student to help them go between playing straight 16th notes, gallop, and reverse gallop rhythms.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
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This was given to a guitar student so they could work on improving their gallop rhythm speed. It's easier to get faster at strumming chords in a gallop when you only play 2 string power chords VS the bigger 3 string versions.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
Given to a guitar student to help them with their single note gallop rhythm playing, this exercise goes straight down an a minor scale and finishes with a power chord.
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This was given to a guitar student to demonstrate the use of chords that you don't typically see in metal music.
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This was given to a student so they could work on palm-mute accents while doing gallop and reverse gallop guitar rhythms.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This was given to a guitar student to help them practice doing gallop and reverse gallop rhythm patterns while using the a minor scale.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This was given to a student to help him work on playing a melody while performing a gallop with palm-mute accent patterns.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This was given to a guitar student to help him work on fast gallop guitar riffs using single notes and palm-mute accents.
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This was given to a guitar student to challenge their ability to read and play gallop and reverse gallop rhythms. Each bar has the rhythm patterns presented differently.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This was given to a guitar student to introduce the idea of switching between a reverse gallop and gallop rhythm every beat. Mostly an E5 chord gets used here.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
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