upstroke$88836$ - meaning and definition. What is upstroke$88836$
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What (who) is upstroke$88836$ - definition

Strumming; Strumming pattern; Strums; Strummed; Strummers; Up stroke; Upstroke; Guitar stroke; Guitar strum; Rhythm guitar pattern
  • upbeat]] downstrokes.
  • Play}}: base pattern on open G tuning. Strumming is used to create a chord. Many patterns are created through subtracting beats from this base.
  • Play}}: pattern created by subtracting the second and fifth (of eight) eighth notes from the base, above.

strum         
(strums, strumming, strummed)
If you strum a stringed instrument such as a guitar, you play it by moving your fingers backwards and forwards across the strings.
In the corner, one youth sat alone, softly strumming a guitar...
Vaska strummed away on his guitar.
VERB: V n, V prep/adv
Strum is also a noun.
A little while later, I heard the strum of my father's guitar as he began to sing.
N-SING: oft N of n
Strum         
·vt & ·vi To play on an instrument of music, or as on an instrument, in an unskillful or noisy way; to Thrum; as, to strum a piano.
strum         
¦ verb (strums, strumming, strummed) play (a guitar or similar instrument) by sweeping the thumb or a plectrum up or down the strings.
?play casually or unskilfully on a stringed instrument.
¦ noun an instance or the sound of strumming.
Derivatives
strummer noun
Origin
C18: imitative; cf. thrum1.

Wikipedia

Strum

In music, strumming is a way of playing a stringed instrument such as a guitar, ukulele, or mandolin. A strum or stroke is a sweeping action where a finger or plectrum brushes over several strings to generate sound. On most stringed instruments, strums are typically executed by a musician's designated strum hand (typically the musician's dominant hand, which is often responsible for generating the majority of sound on a stringed instrument), while the remaining hand (referred to as the fret hand on most instruments with a fingerboard) often supports the strum hand by altering the tones and pitches of any given strum.

Strums are often contrasted with plucking, as a means of vibrating an instrument's strings. In plucking, a specific string or designated set of strings are individually targeted to vibrate, whereas in strumming, a less precise targeting is usually used. Compared to other plucking techniques, any group of strings brushed in a single sweep by a plectrum could be considered a strum due to the plectrum's less precise string group targeting (however, a plectrum might simultaneously pluck a small group of strings without being considered a strum). In contrast, a musician could utilize a technique with more precise string group targeting (such as a fingerstyle or fingerpick technique) to pluck all the strings on a stringed instrument at once and this would still be considered a pluck, not a strum.