Swingin' Rhythm Handbook

Essential insight, chord vocabulary, and rhythm patterns for swing guitar

Marty FriedmanTommy EmmanuelSteve VaiEric GalesEric Johnson

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Swingin' Rhythm Handbook

About this course

There are countless technical definitions and subjective interpretations for swing. Formal music teachers will explain how pairs of written eighth notes are not played equally and will likely also suggest playing slightly behind the beat. Bill Treadwill's Big Book of Swing admits, "You can feel it, but you just can't explain it. Do you dig me?" Our favorite comes from the Jazz in America glossary, which defines swing as "when an individual player or ensemble performs in such a rhythmically coordinated way as to command a visceral response from the listener to cause feet to tap and heads to nod."

Two things that everybody seems to agree on though is that "swing" is all about feel and if want to learn how to play Jazz, Blues, R&B, Rock, Hip-Hop, Rock-a-Billy, House, Gypsy, Country or even Ska -- you definitely need to know how to swing. And no better way to do that than with Marcy Marxer's Swingin' Rhythm Guitar Handbook.

In the first section of the course, you'll learn the optimal right and left-hand positions and techniques for playing swing rhythm guitar. The second section covers the moveable chord voicings, inversions and chord progressions you'll need a grip on -- learn these and you'll be able to play hundreds of tunes with them! You'll also learn your first swing tune, Stay All Night. In the third section, Marcy shows you more chords, some alternate fingerings, some tips for economy of motion, and another swing tune, Get Along Home.

Section 4 further expands your chord vocabulary and introduces you to the blues with a few tasty turnarounds thus equipping you to play an almost unlimited repertoire of swing blues tunes. Section 5 steps up your swing game with even more chords, more progressions, more blues and more invaluable insight. The sixth and final section pulls it all together, adds Honeysuckle Rose to your repertoire, and ices the cake of your swing rhythm guitar bag -- you will now have all of the tools needed to dig into any songbook and swing your heart out.

Along the way, there are dozens of performance examples and playalongs so that you can put everything you're learning to immediate application -- you will play your way through the course! All of the chords, progressions and songs are also clearly charted out for you making the learning process even more of a breeze.

Duke Ellington and Irving said it best back in 1931, "It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that swing." Dig into Swingin' Rhythm Guitar Handbook and you'll see and hear why truer words have never been spoken.

What you'll learn

  • Play chord voicings for every bass note along the sixth string in a major key
  • Navigate smoothly through all scale degrees with appropriate chord qualities
  • Apply previously learned chords in a 12-bar blues context
  • Apply these concepts to traditional American music styles
  • Develop timing and rhythm within the 12-bar blues form
Release date: 05/11/2012 • 2h 52m runtime
Start Course
Sample lessons
Section 1
Section 1
Swing Primer
Left Hand
Left Hand
Section 1
Right Hand
Right Hand
Section 1
Movable Chords
Movable Chords
Section 1

What's included

85 lessons • 50 charts

Swingin' Rhythm Handbook
Welcome to The Swingin' Rhythm Handbook. Inside this course you'll find moveable chords, common chord progressions used in swing and in the styles of music that grew from swing roots.

Use these chords to add a swing feel to any song.
Section 1
The first section of this course is all about building the fundamentals of swing. Here we will work with a lot of the important left and right hand techniques that you need to get playing swing rhythms down.

Take your time as you work through this part of the course as we don't want you to miss any of the building blocks or you might end up stuck in a swingin' rut.
Left Hand
Most guitar players work on stretching and coordination for the left hand. We're going to add relaxation to our keys for coordination and longevity.

Remember, if your left hand looks uncomfortable, it probably is uncomfortable. It's also easier to dampen the strings we're not using with a relaxed left hand technique.
Right Hand
Let your right wrist loosely hit the strings. Your right hand and arm should feel like you're shaking out a dish rag. The action should be quick and use a swipe wide enough to reach all six strings and no further with no wasted movement.
Holding the Pick
Hold the pick just firmly enough so it doesn't fall out of your hand. Any kind of pick will work just fine. Try several picks with varying weights and see what sounds good to you.
Chord Voicings
The term chord voicing is a way of organizing the chord notes.

You are thinking about chord voicings any time you hear yourself saying "Hey, where are you going to put the notes? Are you going to play up high on the neck? Are you going to put the root on the bottom?"
Chord Inversion
Chord inversions are versions of a chord in different places on the guitar neck. They can start on any chord tone and can use the chord's notes in any order.

+ 78 more lessons

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Reviews

9 results

Lotharius

Verified buyer

03/19/21

Very good,it covers nearly everything I wanted to know

antonc

Verified buyer

03/17/21

Marcy rocks!

Marcy breaks down swing rhythm into easily digested chunks. When played up to speed the music goes at a pretty good clip with a lot of chord changes but Marcy really helps you relax and enjoy it.

Mike K.

12/30/20

Rockabilly and Blues Jumpers Take Note

I'll be honest. When I first got this years ago I watched the first several sections and got bored watching how many ways to strum a G6 chord. Now during the pandemic I started watching it again and eventually when a few more chords were added things picked up really quick. I soon found myself writing out all the chords and progressions that lead up to a very jazzy 12 bars blues incorporating a lot of chromatic movement using diminished chords and I VI II V I progressions. I'm a nerd for vintage rockabilly and jump blues and this has added a lot to my playing. If you're interested in western swing and chord melody this is also a great place to start.

borgars

Verified buyer

04/28/20

I learned a lot!

Bill

06/24/19

Marcy Marxer Swinging ' Rhythm Handbook

My first down load I got.. Had a DVD of hers , but this one I love it . Learned stuff I did not know . Don't hear any of this music played anywhere.. But I plan using it on Americana music .And then playing it at jams.

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