| Blues Guitar Shuffle Rhythm Explained |
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| Written by Zack Roberts |
| Sunday, 03 August 2008 10:25 |
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So you have understood the 12-bar blues or at least the concept of it and you would like to push your blues playing to higher grounds. Well your in luck my friend! The better way to invigorate up your playing is to learn the blues shuffle rhythm. I am not sure where the name derives from, but the shuffle is a term used to identify the break down of a beat into 2 components where the first is lengthier than the second. The blues shuffle rhythm is founded on an eighth note triplet rhythm. A triplet is when you use 3 notes in a given time space instead of two. In a standard 4/4 time signature where there is four quarter notes the eighth notes would be counted as... 1-&-2-&-3-&-4-& ... where the &'s are the eighth notes between each quarter. to fill the same time signature with eighth note triplets we'd count as... 1-trip-let-2-trip-let-3-trip-let-4-trip-let ... where the trip's and let's are eighth notes amounting up to 3 per quarter note. So basically... 1-& = 1-trip-let The blues shuffle is accomplished by playing the first and third notes in a series of triplets. And so if the count is... 1-trip-let-2-trip-let-3-trip-let-4-trip-let ... then you'll be playing on all the down-beats or numbers and the let's. I've indicated the notes you should be striking to better exemplify. 1-trip-let-2-trip-let-3-trip-let-4-trip-let. To hear what the shuffle rhythm really sounds like try listening to Led Zeppelin's - You Shook Me or Grateful Dead's - Truckin I hope this has cleared up any confusion you may have been having about the blues shuffle rhythm About the Author: Zack R is the founder of 50 Blues. Do you want free blues guitar lessons? Visit 50 Blues website and learn blues guitar with videos, articles and reports. Listen to samples of blues guitar backing tracks. Kindly provided by LJ-Marketing.dk You are welcome to use this article on your own website, if you include the link just before this text. |