Guitar World

I GOT RHYTHM, PART 6

saw how an placed after a note or rest increases its value, or duration, by 50%. We also learned that its opposite, the , also known as the , placed directly above or below a note head or tab number, decreases its duration, or sustain, by 50%. Both kinds of dots can be used in some cases to render a simpler, less cluttered visual representation of a rhythm, by eliminating a of the dotted-quarter rhythm, which spans one and one half beats, and look at different ways in which it can be conveyed and repeated with anticipated chord changes to create syncopation and dramatic musical tension, via a chain of shifting accents.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Guitar World

Guitar World1 min read
Guitar World
EDITORIAL EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Damian Fanelli (damian.fanelli@futurenet.com)SENIOR MUSIC EDITOR Jimmy BrownTECH EDITOR Paul RiarioASSOCIATE EDITORS Andy Aledort, Chris GillPRODUCTION EDITOR Jem RobertsMUSIC TRANSCRIPTIONIST AND ENGRAVER Jeff PerrinCONTRIB
Guitar World4 min read
Inquirer Alex Skolnick
Q: What was your first guitar? It was a classical guitar that I got very cheap at a garage sale. It was very difficult and challenging to play. I was about 10 when I got it, and it lasted about two years. Then I got an electric guitar that looked lik
Guitar World2 min read
Andy Aledort
ANDY ALEDORT HAS been at the pinnacle of American guitardom for decades. He’s toured the world with Dickey Betts, played with Double Trouble and the Band of Gypsys, co-written a best-selling biography of Stevie Ray Vaughan, jammed with a who’s who of

Related Books & Audiobooks