![]() ![]() 3, the pattern gets shifted by an eighth-note, so that the pinch falls on the The “pinched” (thumb plus finger) accent stillįalls on the beat-but it’s beat 2, not beat 1. Words, everything has been shifted by a quarter-note. 2 is the same, except that the notes from first beat and second beat are reversed. We’re playing a similar game here.Ī common version of the three-finger pattern appears in Ex. Meanwhile, thisĬolumn deals with rhythmic displacement, as heard in all those song intros that trick you into thinking theĭownbeat is somewhere other than its actual location. If you’re a fingerpicking newb, the exercises in this column But that doesn’t mean they’reĮasy! After that, we’ll apply these patterns to more complex chord sequences. These are all playedĮxactly the same, but starting at different points within the measure. ![]() We’ll start with eight possible rhythmic variations, all played over a simple C chord. Heck, when I was a tween, I used a flatpick along with my middle finger, ring finger, and Thumbpick and two fingers, or grip a flatpick between thumb and index finger and pluck the high strings with your I play all of this with no pick-just my thumb, index finger, and middle finger. ![]()
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