Rhythm Guitar 101 Quarter Note Strumming Patterns
Book Details
Author(s)Taura Eruera
PublisherHookmedia
ISBN / ASINB0134VM7PC
ISBN-13978B0134VM7P7
MarketplaceGermany 🇩🇪
Description
This Rhythm Guitar 101 Quarter Note Strumming Patterns book is radically different from other rhythm guitar books. How? This unique rhythmocentric, quarter note, strumming patterns, book contains:
• Rhythm only.
• No harmony at all. No chords.
• No melody at all. No riffs. No hooks. No licks.
• Rhythm instructions only for your strumming hand. No fretting hand stuff in this book at all.
• Notation-free, rhythmisation instructions for your speech, strumming hand and feet.
What You Will Achieve With Rhythm Guitar 101 Quarter Notes Strumming Exercises
You will:
• Extend your dobodobo verbal rhythm mastery that you started with Rhythm Book 101 and Rhythm Definition 101 into a physical, guitar strumming mastery.
• Programme your strumming arm to coordinate with your speech as they both play different rhythms. This is the essence of strumming and singing in time, at the same time. This is also the essence of accompanying a singer.
• Programme your feet to keep dubu time while you talk the dobodobo strumming patterns. This is the essence of playing in time. This single skill will unlock other rhythm vocabularies for you with ease.
• Programme your feet to keep dubu time while you strum the dobodobo rhythms exercises. This is the essence of strumming in time: either by yourself or with a band or another musician.
• Programme your strumming arm to strum a quarter note, dobodobo rhythm while you talk the rhythm vocabulary over the strum. This is the essence of singing a song and strumming in time, at the same time. With your new skill, you can enjoy more songs confidently and pleasurably.
• Programme your motor system to execute three skills at the same time: keep a dubu dubu tempo in your feet, strum a dobodobo rhythm while talking the dobodobo rhythms against the strum. This is the essence of keeping time with your built in metronome, guitar strumming a persistent rhythm and singing variable rhythms: all in time; all at the same time.
• The biggest thing that you have done--that you may not properly appreciate yet because these skills are still very recent additions to your motor system--is that you have set up a guitar playing foundation that allows you to confidently learn other rhythm vocabularies.
• Master Rhythmisation strumming exercises that you can use in any dobodobo quarter note song.
Moreover:
• Out of all the vocabularies, the dobodobo, quarter note is the most important rhythm guitar vocabulary to master verbally and physiologically.
• Dobodobo is the one guitar strumming vocabulary that divides into the dabadaba (8th note) vocabulary, and subdivides into the dibidibi (16th note) vocabulary.
• Dobodobo is also the vocabulary that doubles into the dubudubu (half note) vocabulary and quadruples into the debedebe (whole note) vocabulary.
• By experiencing all the fifty chapters in this book you have experienced the pivotal rhythm guitar vocabulary of them all. You have also learned all the skills that will make learning dabadaba and dibidibi rhythm guitar strumming patterns all the easier. Congratulations.
• Musically you now know how to deal with single, double and triple lines of rhythm. This is the essence of arranging.
• But you have also built up enough rhythmisation experience to take advantage of a hidden benefit. Which hidden benefit? It is the ability to write down in notation any dobodobo rhythm you can say and play. This is the hidden benefit of transcription. The true gateway to rhythm guitar strumming patterns mastery and fluency.
Pre-requisite
• Read Rhythm Book 101 Quarter Note Rhythm Patterns then Read Rhythm Definition 101 Quarter Note Definition of Rhythm Patterns & Exercises
• Rhythm only.
• No harmony at all. No chords.
• No melody at all. No riffs. No hooks. No licks.
• Rhythm instructions only for your strumming hand. No fretting hand stuff in this book at all.
• Notation-free, rhythmisation instructions for your speech, strumming hand and feet.
What You Will Achieve With Rhythm Guitar 101 Quarter Notes Strumming Exercises
You will:
• Extend your dobodobo verbal rhythm mastery that you started with Rhythm Book 101 and Rhythm Definition 101 into a physical, guitar strumming mastery.
• Programme your strumming arm to coordinate with your speech as they both play different rhythms. This is the essence of strumming and singing in time, at the same time. This is also the essence of accompanying a singer.
• Programme your feet to keep dubu time while you talk the dobodobo strumming patterns. This is the essence of playing in time. This single skill will unlock other rhythm vocabularies for you with ease.
• Programme your feet to keep dubu time while you strum the dobodobo rhythms exercises. This is the essence of strumming in time: either by yourself or with a band or another musician.
• Programme your strumming arm to strum a quarter note, dobodobo rhythm while you talk the rhythm vocabulary over the strum. This is the essence of singing a song and strumming in time, at the same time. With your new skill, you can enjoy more songs confidently and pleasurably.
• Programme your motor system to execute three skills at the same time: keep a dubu dubu tempo in your feet, strum a dobodobo rhythm while talking the dobodobo rhythms against the strum. This is the essence of keeping time with your built in metronome, guitar strumming a persistent rhythm and singing variable rhythms: all in time; all at the same time.
• The biggest thing that you have done--that you may not properly appreciate yet because these skills are still very recent additions to your motor system--is that you have set up a guitar playing foundation that allows you to confidently learn other rhythm vocabularies.
• Master Rhythmisation strumming exercises that you can use in any dobodobo quarter note song.
Moreover:
• Out of all the vocabularies, the dobodobo, quarter note is the most important rhythm guitar vocabulary to master verbally and physiologically.
• Dobodobo is the one guitar strumming vocabulary that divides into the dabadaba (8th note) vocabulary, and subdivides into the dibidibi (16th note) vocabulary.
• Dobodobo is also the vocabulary that doubles into the dubudubu (half note) vocabulary and quadruples into the debedebe (whole note) vocabulary.
• By experiencing all the fifty chapters in this book you have experienced the pivotal rhythm guitar vocabulary of them all. You have also learned all the skills that will make learning dabadaba and dibidibi rhythm guitar strumming patterns all the easier. Congratulations.
• Musically you now know how to deal with single, double and triple lines of rhythm. This is the essence of arranging.
• But you have also built up enough rhythmisation experience to take advantage of a hidden benefit. Which hidden benefit? It is the ability to write down in notation any dobodobo rhythm you can say and play. This is the hidden benefit of transcription. The true gateway to rhythm guitar strumming patterns mastery and fluency.
Pre-requisite
• Read Rhythm Book 101 Quarter Note Rhythm Patterns then Read Rhythm Definition 101 Quarter Note Definition of Rhythm Patterns & Exercises
