Strumming Patterns For Guitar
As there are many different picking techniques, and any number
of chord inversions, there are different strumming patterns for
guitar. A list of strumming patterns is nearly impossible to
define, as there are variations from jazz patterns all the way
to country strumming patterns (and every style in between) that
go well beyond the usual guitar strumming patterns. As many
players as there are, you can be assured new strumming guitar
techniques, as well as guitar strumming tricks will be invented
to challenge the old patterns. Learning guitar chords strumming
or just the basics of strumming the guitar could take a few
months, but years to master.
Basic strumming patterns is where this all starts. Down strokes
or up strokes, it is imperative you keep the rhythm steady
(unless of course you want a slower or different strum on your
opposing direction). Sometimes within the same stroke you might
slow down or speed up, but these are beyond the basic strumming
patterns. In fact there are those basic strumming patterns where
you don't even attempt opposing down-strokes and upstrokes, just
a nice steady flow with a flick of your wrist in one direction.
No matter what stroke you are trying, what level of skill you
have, the motion with guitar and strumming should come from the
rotation of your wrist. Overall it is best not to stiffen your
wrist stiff when strumming (even picking).
There are some differences in strumming a guitar, based on the
type of guitar you play. Strumming patterns for acoustic guitar
can often become very percussive; there is a lot of bouncing off
the strings. In some ways the acoustic makes guitar strumming
tricks easier and the flourishes you manage might seem very
showy because of the big sound you can get by moving your wrist
fast across the acoustic sound hole. But at the same time,
placement of your hand is very important when trying various
strumming patterns for this type of guitar; no matter how you
are strumming the guitar you get the best results by playing
directly over that sound hole.
Guitar strumming techniques for electric can be different, but
basically it is still up to how well you move your wrist...and
where you strum. The pick-ups in an electric guitar (or an
acoustic with pick-ups) allow you to play at various places over
the body of the instrument. Strumming the guitar close to or
away from pickups, even choosing to play over one pick-up
instead of another alter the sound of even the most basic
strumming patterns.
As a magician might claim, it really is "all in the wrist". By
regulating your speed during guitar strumming, adding some
guitar strumming tricks like hammers and pull-off's, and even
actually lifting your hand from the guitar, you can introduce
whole new strumming patterns into your playing. The trick really
is to keep the motion consistent and your wrist placed correctly
(and your pick held tightly (if you are using a pick). The
dexterity and speed you will gain in practicing a good steady
strum will help you even as much or more so, then the scales you
can run off. There are a bunch of good lead players out there,
in fact almost everyone who picks up an electric guitar wants to
play lead, but how many players do you know even know the most
basic country strumming patterns, or how many of us can keep up
a consistent, odd timed rhythm through an entire song?
Guitar strumming is a basic of playing the instrument.