How to write 16th note strumming patterns on paper?

I’ve learned the easy song above by ear and my goal is to make a quick video lesson about it, but I’ve run into a problem.

Even though I can play the strumming patterns, I’m having a hard time writing them down.
I’ve already watched Justin’s rhythm maestro videos and I can write down 8th note strumming patterns but I haven’t found a similar lesson about 16th note patterns and IF I’m not mistaken, the song is in 4/4 and the intro is 16th notes strumming.

The way I understand it, the intro pattern goes half bar of A, half bar of E, half D-half E and then repeats itself and that’s 4 bars using 16th note strumming.

  1. If I got it wrong, any help would be much appreciated

  2. If I got it right, please someone with music writing skills, help me to write down the intro pattern and I will use it as a base for future patterns.

The whole song goes A-E-D-E but the guitar is tune half a step down.

Thanks. I already watched that video. It’s not about 16th note strumming - it’s about ties in 8th note strumming patterns.

Hi, this lesson introduces 16th note strumming patterns. Justin displays some written out on the screen during the video.

2 Likes

Hey mate,

For 16th note strumming, , assuming 4/4, each beat is further subdivided by 4.

So at the basic level, for each quarter note 'one beat - its 4 x 16th notes joined together with a double bar. Then ditch the beats that arent played, so to speak, to create your pattern

Finding the score of a song you know well will also be very helpful.

Cheers, Shane

1 Like

Writing 16th note rhythms is indeed a tricky thing. I find standard musical notation and counting to be almost useless for this…at least at my current level of playing.

Not quite what you are asking here, but you might find some useful ideas in this old topic I started.

1 Like

Again, not quite about writing down strumming patterns…

…but from an instructional video standpoint, I find the “Let’s Play All” YouTube channel does the best job of demonstrating strumming patterns that I’ve seen.

Skip to the 1:15 mark for a good example.

Note that he shows the Tab onscreen, but the strumming is not shown on the tab…you have to watch the video section…possibly over and over again - which can be tedious.

If I can find an accurate tab (and that’s a big if!), I generally find it’s best to pencil in the up and down strums on the sheet. Then I can just practice the difficult sections from the sheet…going as slow as I need to.

Otherwise, I just hand write a chord sheet, and write in the up and down strums as needed.

1 Like

Unfortunately, I can’t attach a file to this post, but if you go to https://songnotes.net/tools/blank-tabs , you can download tab sheets with 4:4 8th note, 4:4 16th note, 3:4 and 6:8 timing noted on them. I use these when I’m trying to transcribe a riff and the timing is hard for me to feel.

2 Likes

I rarely write down strumming patterns, but when I do, I usually use

  • up & down arrows for the direction of the strumming hand.
  • Red for hitting the strings, black for not strumming
  • Large/bold arrows for accentuated strums

So the intro in your song would look something like this

image

2 Likes

That’s exactly what I wanted!

I don’t write them either but if I’m to make a tutorial and just play the pattern and expect everyone to just play it by ear, well it’s not much of a tutorial and they may as well listen to the original song and try it themselves.

I had written down a pattern and it is almost identical to yours - but when I “read” and play, I must slow it down too much, because my reading skills are slower than my hands and then the pattern sounds nothing like the song. So, I wasn’t sure if the pattern was correct.

Thank you very much mate. Cheers!

1 Like

I’ve had a similar problem to this but one possible approach is to use an app to record your playing and speed it up (it’s better just to practice on muted strings when hunting for a rhythm IMO) or to take the recording and slow it down. Neither are perfect but it might help get you in the right ball park

1 Like

Indeed. I use audacity to slow down the audio and it also allows switches in pitch.

1 Like

I meant I’ll use audacity to slow down the original song and see if it matches my slow reading pattern. Thanks for the idea. Cheers!

1 Like

FYI, you could just use youtube to play the song slower, click on the gear icon and then “Playback speed”. It’s a bit easier than fooling around with audacity.

Actually it’s pretty easy with audacity - you just change the tempo on the lower left corner.
You can also loop a part of the audio to practice it and you can also change the pitch which is very useful in songs where the guitar is tuned lower or higher - such as in this particular song.
Without this option, I would have to tune my guitar a semitone lower, just for this song.
Cheers!

1 Like

@brianlarsen , I like your notation!

How did you do that using the Community forum software?

1 Like

Aw, thanks, Tom :smiley:
No software, I’m afraid.
I just edit it in Word and do a ‘screengrab’, crop it, and paste the image into the comment section :smiley:

2 Likes