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Lesson 23 Intermediate Chapter III — Intermediate Skills

Guitar Eighth Notes, Sixteenth Notes & Rests

Quarter, half, and whole notes cover basic rhythms. Eighth and sixteenth notes let you describe and play the complex rhythms at the heart of virtually every style of popular guitar music.

Going Beyond Basic Note Values

You already know quarter notes (1 beat), half notes (2 beats), and whole notes (4 beats). These cover simple rhythms but not the more complex patterns found in most popular music. To describe and play these accurately, you need eighth notes and sixteenth notes.

Eighth Notes

An eighth note lasts half a beat. Two eighth notes fit in one beat. In a bar of 4/4 time, there are 8 eighth notes total.

Eighth notes are counted by adding the word "and" (written as &) between the main beats:

1 & 2 & 3 & 4 &

Each number and each & represents one eighth note. The numbers fall when your foot goes down, the & falls when your foot comes back up. Downstrokes usually fall on numbers, upstrokes on the &.

✦ Foot Taps on Numbers Only

Your foot taps on 1, 2, 3, and 4 only — never on the &. The & is between taps. This is critical: many beginners accidentally tap on the & when they first learn this system, which destroys the rhythm.

Sixteenth Notes

A sixteenth note lasts one quarter of a beat. Four sixteenth notes fit in one beat. They are counted by adding 'e' and 'a' (pronounced as letters) between each beat and &:

1 e & a 2 e & a 3 e & a 4 e & a

Sixteenth notes appear in faster strumming patterns and funk rhythm guitar. For most folk and fingerpicking styles, eighth notes are far more common. Learn to count sixteenth notes accurately but do not feel you need to master them immediately.

Rests

A rest is a period of silence. Rests have the same durations as notes:

During a rest, count normally but do not play. If open strings are ringing from the previous note, you may need to lightly touch the strings with your right hand to damp them — this is called a rest stroke damping. Always count through rests — they are part of the rhythm, not an opportunity to pause.

Dotted Notes Revisited

You learned dotted half notes in Lesson 15. The dot principle applies to all note values:

Dotted Quarter Note

1 beat + ½ beat = 1.5 beats. Very common in folk and country. Usually followed by an eighth note to complete 2 beats.

Dotted Eighth Note

½ beat + ¼ beat = ¾ of a beat. Creates a 'long-short' feel. Usually paired with a sixteenth note. Common in marches and jigs.

Applying This to Strumming

Now that you understand eighth notes and the & count, the strumming patterns from earlier lessons make complete sense:

This notation system precisely describes every strumming and fingerpicking rhythm ever written. Once it is familiar, you can accurately read and replicate any guitar pattern from sheet music or books.

What's Next?

Lesson 24 covers sharps, flats, and natural signs — the accidentals that add notes between the seven natural notes and open up every key on the guitar neck.

Questions & Answers

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about guitar eighth notes, sixteenth notes & rests

An eighth note lasts half a beat. In 4/4 time, two eighth notes fill one beat. They are counted as the numbered beat and the & (and) that falls between it and the next beat: '1 & 2 & 3 & 4 &'. Eighth notes are the most common rhythmic value in pop, rock and folk guitar.

A sixteenth note lasts one quarter of a beat. Four sixteenth notes fill one beat. They are counted using 'e' and 'a' between each beat: '1 e & a, 2 e & a, 3 e & a, 4 e & a'. Sixteenth notes appear in faster strumming patterns and are common in funk and rock rhythm guitar.

A rest is a period of silence. Different rest symbols correspond to the same durations as notes: a whole rest lasts 4 beats, a half rest lasts 2, a quarter rest lasts 1, and an eighth rest lasts half a beat. During a rest you count normally but do not play — and you can lightly touch the strings to stop them ringing if needed.

No — your foot taps on the main numbered beats only: 1, 2, 3, 4. The & falls between foot taps, when your foot is on its way back up. The 'e' and 'a' subdivisions also fall between foot taps. Never change your foot pattern when the note values get smaller.

A dotted eighth note lasts 0.75 beats (half a beat plus a quarter of a beat). It is nearly always followed by a sixteenth note to complete the beat. Together they create a 'long-short' rhythmic feel that appears in marches, jigs, and many classical pieces.