Beginning Fingerstyle Guitar Patterns (3/4 Time)
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- Опубліковано 29 чер 2024
- The fingerstyle patterns in this lesson are perfect for the beginning guitar player or for the strummer who wants to get into fingerpicking. In an earlier video, I showed you two beginning fingerstyle guitar patterns in 4/4 time. In this lesson, I’ll show you three beginning fingerstyle patterns in 3/4 time.
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First Fingerstyle Guitar Patterns (4/4 Time)
• Beginning Fingerstyle ...
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Time Stamps
0:00 Intro
0:18 Right Hand Labels
0:33 Left Hand Home Position
1:41 P-I-MA Pattern
3:47 Free Downloads
4:18 P-I-M-A-M-I Pattern
5:52 P-I-MA-I-MA-I Pattern
7:09 Wrap-Up
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Thanks my friend I was struggling with 3/4 I seem to be always playing in 4/4 .. cheers Brian Ireland 🇮🇪I subscribed ur channel is great thanks my man ..
Yes sir Bro again thank you very much
Awesome job young man
Thank you!
Very good Instruction..thanks for posting
Thank you,will use again.
thankyou sir
Thank you!
Thanks for crisp and clear instructions and nice series on guitar theory!
You're welcome!
👍thanks from sweden 🇸🇪🇸🇪
Very good instruction.....thank you!
Thanks so much!
Very interestingly helpful.
🇧🇷 Thanks !
Happy to help!
Lovely lesson sir 🙏
Thank you!
Very clear and straight-forward! One question: wouldn't PIMAMI and PIMAIMAI qualify as 4/4 patterns?
The rhythms in these P-I-M-A-M-I and P-I-MA-I-MA-I patterns are straight 8th notes. Both patterns are counted “1 and 2 and 3 and,” which puts you squarely in 3/4 time. That being said, you could easily change the rhythm and adapt them to 4/4 time.
@@GodfreyGuitar thank you!
Thanks sir iam sri lanka
Thank you for the lesson. I do have one (probably dumb) question, please -- When playing chord Em, why would one pick strings 6, 3,2,1 when you're playing Em on strings 5 and 4? Why not pick strings 5, 3, 2 1 or 5, 4, 2,1 (or play Em7 using strings 1 and 2 as part of the chord)? -- Why play any chord at all in this case since the Em chord (strings 5 and 4) makes no difference in the sound -- or am I totally not understanding? Thank you.
You could pick any of those string combinations. The reason I showed strings 6-3-2-1 in this lesson is that, for starters, it’s helpful to always play the “finger notes” on strings 1, 2, and 3, and the bass notes on whatever string happens to play the root of the chord. For the E minor, the root note (E) is the 6th string, so that’s why I showed 6-3-2-1. It just so happens that, with this combination, you’re not plucking any of the strings that have a fret being played. But again, you could play any of those string combinations you mentioned.
For this reason, E minor is a really good chord for practicing new finger patterns, because you can leave your fretting hand out of the picture and just practice the picking hand.
I hope this helped. Thanks for the question!
Question: Do u play the whole picking pattern for each beat in a measure? 😮
Not for every beat in the measure. That would be super fast! Play each pattern once per measure.
@GodfreyGuitar Thank you! That's a big help, and I can't wait to try it!
Hi
My song is in 4/4 time signature can I use 11/8 finger pattern. This is for my new song and i am very much confused.please help
11/8 is more complex than either 3/4 or 4/4 time. You won’t be able to use any 3/4 or 4/4 patterns to play in 11/8, but you can adapt the 4/4 P-I-M-A finger pattern. In 11/8, the 8th notes can be grouped in a variety of ways. I don’t know what song you’re learning, so I’ll give you two common 11/8 groupings and hope that your song matches one of them.
The 8th notes in your song could possibly be divided 4+4+3. If this is the case, you could play the finger pattern P-I-M-A + P-I-M-A + P-I-M.
The 8th notes could also be divided 3+3+3+2. If this is the case, you could try the finger pattern P-I-M + P-I-M + P-I-M + P-I.
As I mentioned, there are other ways a song in 11/8 could be divided, but I hope this gives you some ideas.