The Most Popular Strumming Pattern in the World

Written by jboettcher

If you want one strumming pattern that works for more songs than any other, this is it. Colin Daniel walks you through the world’s most popular strum – a pattern you’ll recognize from Brown Eyed Girl, Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door, Let It Be, and dozens of other hits.

The Pattern: Count It Out

This pattern lives in 4/4 time – four beats per bar. Here’s how it breaks down:

  • Beat 1: Down (quarter note)
  • Beat 2-and-3-and-4-and: Down-Up-Down-Up-Down-Up (eighth notes)

So you’re playing: Down, Down-Up-Down-Up-Down-Up. The first beat gets a single downstroke, then the remaining beats are all eighth notes with alternating down and up strums.

The key insight: your downstroke is always the strong strum, your upstroke is always the weak strum. This creates the natural pulse that makes the pattern feel musical.

The Bonus Variation

Here’s a trick that buys you time if you’re slow on chord changes: add a quarter note on beat 4 as well. The count becomes: 1, 2-and-3-and, 4.

That pause before beat 4 gives you a split second to set up your next chord. Both versions of this strum work great together – you can mix them throughout a song.

Songs That Use This Pattern

Once you have this pattern down, you can play along with:

  • Brown Eyed Girl – Van Morrison
  • Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door – Bob Dylan
  • Last Kiss – Pearl Jam
  • Let It Be – The Beatles
  • Me and Bobby McGee – Janis Joplin
  • Simple Man – Lynyrd Skynyrd
  • Love Me Do – The Beatles
  • With or Without You – U2

Each song uses a different tempo, so practice the pattern slow first, then speed up or slow down to match the recording.

Read More Articles:

Guitar Strumming Patterns for Intermediate Players

A simple step by step guide to achieve [main benefit]

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