Sometimesin tabs like this where they have the chords over the words sometimes the chords are close together and sometimes farther apart and since tab doesn't really give you a feel for the rhythm or timing I was wondering when they are close together does that imply to strum it less than the four beats per measure?
Sometimes you will have to listen to the song. Close on paper doesn't mean close in melody. For example, let's say that you had one word, I don't know, "Hello". You could sing it fast where each syllable is a sixteenth note, or you could stretch each syllable into a whole note each. I am sure you could see how a chord per syllable would be extremely difficult in the first case and run-of-the-mill in the second. Listening to the sections you are unsure of will probably help you work it out.
As an avid fan of staind, and especially this song i can guarantee the whole songs strumming pattern is DDUDD - This is really probably the simplest song to learn on guitar and i feel would be great for one of davids lessons.
I really like ths song and it an easy song to strum. I haven't listened to the song in awhile but from what I remember it didn't sound like they strummed the D chord for a full four beats but I'll listen again.
From what I remember though it sounds like they are hitting a different chord then the E. But I don't know what it is, but it sounds pretty good this way. I think they play it tuned down to maybe Eb or D?
My favourite songs have to be "Home", "Outside" and "Excess baggage". Oo and epiphany aswell. The tuning to epiphany is the one i always manage to snap my strings on. Goes Db Ab Db Ab Db Db. Weird hey? lol
It sounds really good like this, tune down a half step.
This is the studio version. I tabbed it from the MTV Unplugged music video AND
from listening to the studio version. Mostly all the tabs for the acoustic parts
are wrong, so here you have it, the right way to do it. Also, i tabbed the electric
parts as Mike Mushok plays it, in particular on the right tuning. Enjoy!
I was the store yesterday and saw that Outside is tuned to Ab for the electric guitars. How do you tune to that? Up or down? If I tuned up I think I snap strings and if I tuned down it seems like there would be alot of slack?
If you listen closely to both songs (Studio versions) you can actually tell that both tracks sound pretty much the same. However, i can understand your worries about snapping strings (Especially the G!)
The first time i ever tuned this tuning i didnt snap anything. I thought "great". I woke up the next morning and tried it again and snapped the top e. Bummer but only cheap to replace! Anyway had it re-strung and tried it again, only to snap my G! It is difficult and you should probably be prepared to buy a couple of extra strings but I would advise you to wait a couple of days before trying it.
I know this is an old topic, but i just discovered it. I am trying to get the strum pattern down and its just not sounding right. I am trying D D U DD and it just sounds off. I'ved listened to different versions of it and the strum pattern sounds different. Anyone someone could upload an example of it, kinda like David Hodges lesson, explaining the strumming as you do it?
Like others have said, it's tough to get an exact pattern of what you hear or think you hear on a recording. As long as you have the rhythm and feel down you can use most any pattern with the same timing. For example, I misread the post and played it all weekend with a D D DU D, not the D DU D D suggested in the post. And it sounded fine to me after I got the rhythm and feel down.
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