What Rhythm Guitar Does
Rhythm guitar provides the chord backing and rhythmic drive that supports the rest of the music. It does not usually carry the melody — that belongs to the vocalist, lead guitar, or another instrument. Your job as a rhythm guitarist is to play the right chord at the right time, in time, every time.
If you can play all the brush stroke patterns you have learned smoothly with correct chords and chord sequences, you are ready to play rhythm guitar for most popular tunes in any of these situations: accompanying yourself while singing, backing another vocalist, or playing in a group.
Straight Chord Strokes — No Bass Notes
When playing in a group, leave out the separate bass note from your pattern. A bass player or keyboard handles those low notes. Instead, play straight chord strokes across the relevant strings of each chord on every beat. This creates a stronger, more percussive rhythm sound that sits well in a band mix.
Most rhythm guitarists in bands play straight chord strokes without a separate bass note. Your job is to play the chord clearly and in time. The bass player provides the bass line. Work together — do not step on each other's frequencies.
3-Beat Rhythm Patterns (3/4 Time)
Count ONE-two-three and make beat 1 slightly stronger. Try these three patterns, from simple to more energetic:
- Simple: DOWN — down — down (one stroke per beat)
- Medium: DOWN — down-up — down (upstroke added on beat 2)
- Full: DOWN — down-up — down-up (upstrokes on beats 2 and 3)
Start with the simple pattern and only move to the more energetic versions when the simple one is completely solid and automatic.
4-Beat Rhythm Patterns (4/4 Time)
DOWN-down-down-down — four even downstrokes, one per beat. Clear, solid, never fails. Perfect for ballads and learning new chord sequences.
1, 2&, 3, 4 — downstroke on 1, down-up on 2, downstroke on 3, downstroke on 4. The most common pattern in folk and pop guitar.
1, 2&, 3, 4& — two down-up pairs per bar. Creates a driving, forward-moving feel used in upbeat folk and country songs.
1&, 2&, 3&, 4& — eight strokes per bar (four down, four up). Very energetic — works for fast songs once your right arm is loose and relaxed.
Playing With Other Musicians
Playing with a vocalist, another guitarist, or any instrument is the best possible training for rhythm guitar. You learn to listen, keep time under pressure, and adjust your playing for the musical context. Start by playing along with recordings — put on a song you know and work out the chord backing. This trains your ear and your rhythm simultaneously.
When you play with others for the first time, listen more than you play. Find the pulse of the music before adding your guitar. A rhythm guitarist who listens is worth ten who do not.
What's Next?
Lesson 22 introduces fingerpicking — one of the most versatile and beautiful techniques in guitar, giving you attractive backings and melodic solos from the same instrument.