In the vast language of the guitar, some of the most expressive syllables are not picked at all. They are born from the fluid motion of the fretting hand. One such phrase, often scribbled in guitar tabs as , is a tiny, explosive world of technique and emotion.

What you hear in that split second— chime, lift, fall —is a three-note sequence called a or a gruppetto . It is a musical ornament that adds vocal-like inflection to a sustained note.

Let’s decode it. On a single string—most commonly the or B string in a pentatonic or major scale context—you place your first finger firmly on the 7th fret. You strike the string once. Then, without picking again, you snap your ring finger (or middle finger) down onto the 8th fret: that is the hammer-on (h) . The pitch rises a half-step. Instantly, you roll that same finger off sideways, plucking the string as you release: that is the pull-off (p) . The pitch falls back to the 7th fret.

So, the next time you see in a tab, don’t just play the frets. Hear the sigh, the cry, the tiny vocal break. It’s proof that on a guitar, the spaces between the notes are just as important as the notes themselves.

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