This particular triplet guitar rhythm has you not playing on the down beat of beats one, two, and three. You play a quarter note on the down beat of four to help make sure you are still in time with the metronome. This rhythm gets pretty tricky as you get faster.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
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The count for this triplet based guitar rhythm using power chords is
1n_ _na 3n_ _na
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This reverse gallop rhythm (two 16th notes and an 8th note) goes through a chord progression that utilizes inversions to keep your hand in the same area of the fretboard to minimize movement, and create an interest sound in changing chords while retaining one or two notes when going shape to shape.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This was given to a guitar student to see how well they could switch between different time signatures. The "trick" to playing this is to just count more or less beats.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This guitar rhythm goes 16th note, 8th note, 16th note, and repeats that pattern the entire time. The count is 1e_a2e_a3e_a4e_a
The strumming pattern is ​down,up____up,down,up____up,down,up____up,down,up____up
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This guitar strumming pattern has you play three 16th notes, then hold that 3rd chord for the length of two 16 notes. This happens twice in each bar. Every time you reach beat four you'll hold that chord out for a quarter note. The count for this rhythm is 1en__ena__na4__
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
This guitar rhythm goes between a gallop (an 8th note followed by two 16th notes) and a reverse gallop (two 16th notes and an 8th note). All of the 16th notes are palm-muted, and all of the 8th notes have no muting. This accent pattern makes the 8th notes really stand out.
Here is the Guitar Pro 6 tab for this lesson:
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:
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:
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