Listen to any good bluegrass rhythm guitar player and you’ll hear it: right before the chord changes, they play a quick little run of notes on the low strings that walks you into the next chord. That’s a bass run, and it’s one of the signatures of the bluegrass sound.
A bass run, defined
A bass run is a short line of single notes — usually two to four of them, played on the lower strings — that connects one chord to the next. Instead of just holding a chord until the change and then jumping to the new one, you use the last beat or two of the measure to walk up (or down) to the root of the chord you’re heading to.
The notes are almost always drawn from the scale of the key, plus the occasional chromatic (out-of-scale) note as a passing tone. The goal is simple: arrive on the root of the next chord, right on beat 1, so the run lands you exactly where the band is going.
When do you play one?
You don’t run on every chord change — that would be exhausting to listen to. A bass run works best when:
- A chord is held long enough to set one up — you need a beat or two of room at the end of the measure.
- The change is a strong one, like the move to the IV chord (G to C in the key of G) or the V chord (G to D), where a walk-up really announces the arrival.
- The tune has space for it — slower songs and the ends of phrases invite runs; a blistering fiddle tune may only want one at the turnaround.
Between runs, you’re playing your normal boom-chuck rhythm — the alternating bass and strum. A bass run is the seasoning, not the meal. Used sparingly, it drives the tune forward and tells the whole band the change is coming.
Bass runs vs. walking bass
These two get confused. A bass run is an occasional walk into a change, played between stretches of normal boom-chuck. Walking bass is when the bass plays a moving line on every beat, all the way through — think of the upright bass in a swing or bluegrass gospel number. A run is a moment; a walk is a whole approach. Both use the same raw material (scale tones leading toward the next root), just at different densities.
Hear them in a real tune
The best way to internalize bass runs is to hear them repeatedly against a real progression. Load a tune with clear, spread-out chord changes and listen for the walk-ups into each new chord.
Nine Pound Hammer in G. Follow the bass as it walks between the chords — those are bass runs in action.
Open Nine Pound Hammer →Once your ear knows the sound, try adding your own. Play rhythm along with the band, and on the last beat before a big change, walk up the scale to the new root instead of holding the chord. When you land on beat 1 with the band, you’ll feel it click.
Where to go next
Bass runs live inside your rhythm playing, so the foundation is a solid boom-chuck. Start with our Bluegrass Rhythm Guitar 101, then practice adding runs against the easy tunes where the changes are slow enough to give you room.