Electric Guitar: Simple Rhythm Guitar Exercise

Jason Earls
All of my guitar related articles on Associated Content shouldn't contain only finger exercises and licks related to soloing on the electric guitar, should they? (I don't want them to). We could use a little rhythm guitar in here, couldn't we? (Yes, we could). Grooving and jamming in the pocket with a good drummer, or at least strumming some chords along to a CD, can be fantastic and wonderful experience and can also make you feel like a champion on rhythm guitar.

Rhythm guitar is of course highly important if you are playing in a band. And one of the most common mistakes beginning guitarists make is that they do not focus on rhythm guitar enough in the initial learning stages, but instead spend too much time attempting to play advanced soloing techniques. You don't want to merely concentrate on solos during the first one or two years of playing the electric guitar, because you won't be developed enough at that point and many people hearing you play might think someone is strangling a cat somewhere. Play a few chords once in a while. It won't hurt anything and it may even feel good. Give your fingers a rest and strum some chords, let the smaller muscles in your hands and digits recuperate, so they'll grow stronger and bounce back faster when you start soloing again. And when you play rhythm, don't just play power chords (root and fifth) all the time, throw in some more sophisticated voicings too, as in the examples below.

Here is a simple groove you can practice to help your fingers get used to changing positions and placing them into proper chords shapes quickly and efficiently. The focus here is more on playing the chords and getting your rhythm chops enhanced, rather than displaying any awesome musicality or composition skills. So go ahead and try this exercise:

|-7-7-----7-7-------|-7-7-----7-7-------|
|-8-8-----8-8-------|-7-7-----7-7-------|
|-7-7-----7-7-------|-7-7-----7-7-------| [repeat]
|-9-9-----9-9-------|-6-6-----6-6-------|
|-7-7-----7-7-------|-7-7-----7-7-------|
|------0-0-----0-0--|------0-0-----0-0--|

|-5-5-----5-5------|-5-5-----5-5--------|
|-6-6-----6-6------|-5-5-----5-5--------|
|-5-5-----5-5------|-5-5-----5-5--------| [repeat]
|-7-7-----7-7------|-4-4-----4-4--------|
|-5-5-----5-5------|-5-5-----5-5--------|
|------0-0-----0-0-|------0-0------0-0--|

The chords played are Emin7, E9, Dmin7 and D9, with the open E played twice between them. You can mute the low E if you like. Here is another way the chords can be listed (but notice they are not in the same order as the tablature above):

- - - - (E9)- - - - - - (Emin7) - - - - - - (D9) - - - - - - (Dmin7)- -
x 7 6 7 7 7 --- X 7 9 7 8 7 --- x 5 4 5 5 5 --- x 5 7 5 6 5

Notice that with the tablature above, the chords are written as being played in straight 8th notes, but in real life I would never play them that way. You should spice up the rhythm by doing variations on the timing of the chords. Emphasize some chords longer than others, add some funk and groove around a bit. Play the riff along with a rhythm track or a metronome and add some syncopated strumming and muting and give them some flair. (Hopefully you have a decent sense of natural rhythm; if you do not, spicing up the chord progression above while keeping it in proper time might be difficult.)

Also remember that when getting funky with various rhythms, it's important to let the strumming movement come from your wrist. Also, you will have to become adept at muting all the strings at any time with both your fretting hand and your picking hand, while being able to quickly transition into different chord shapes. For strumming practice, you can mute the strings with both hands and generate a rhythmic pattern of "scratching" by strumming all the muted strings at once. (Hopefully this brief strumming advice will help improve your funk level considerably on the electric guitar.)

Concerning rhythm guitar, personally I was guilty of not practicing it as much as I should have at the beginning of my guitar career. Actually, I still don't focus on rhythm playing enough. But I do love jamming with good drummers. I use a lot of eye contact (nonverbal communication) to incorporate many dynamics and to stay "tight" with the drummer. Sometimes after spending a lot of time with a good drummer in a band, we have gotten so tight that we can improvise using nonverbal cues and occasionally the communication has bordered on being telepathic.

Published by Jason Earls

Jason Earls is a writer, guitarist, and computational number theorist currently living in Texas with his wife, Christine. He is the author of Cocoon of Terror, Heartless Bast*rd In Ecstasy, Red Zen, How to B...  View profile

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