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Wingman Workflow

How to add rhythm and bounce to flat chords in Wingman

Take a static chord progression and use rhythm presets, accents, and pattern editing to make it feel more energetic, musical, and connected to your groove.

Input Chord progression or loop
Output Rhythmic chords with more movement
Best for Adding groove, bounce, and energy
Time needed 3–8 minutes
Quick answer

Can Wingman make flat chords feel more rhythmic?

Yes. Wingman can help turn static chords into more rhythmic musical parts using rhythm presets, accents, and editable patterns. This is useful when the chords fit your track, but the part feels too plain, stiff, or repetitive.

Workflow preview

Turn simple chords into a groove

This workflow shows how to start with a chord progression, try different rhythms, adjust accents, and create a more musical part that works better with your drums, bassline, or vocal.

When to use this workflow

Use this workflow when your chords are harmonically correct, but the performance feels too static. The problem may not be the chord progression itself — it may just need better rhythm, spacing, or accents.

Good starting points

  • A basic chord progression
  • A loop that feels too stiff
  • Long sustained chords
  • A vocal-based progression that needs movement
  • A remix idea that needs more groove

What you can create

  • Rhythmic chord patterns
  • More bounce and movement
  • Chord parts that fit the drums
  • Accented grooves
  • MIDI or WAV parts for your DAW

What you need before you start

Wingman installed as a plugin inside your DAW.

A chord progression inside Wingman, either generated from audio or created as part of your workflow.

A track context, such as drums, bass, vocal, or a loop, so you can judge whether the rhythm feels right.

Step-by-step

How to add rhythm and bounce to flat chords

1

Start with a chord progression

Begin with a chord progression in Wingman. This can come from a melody, vocal, loop, acapella, or an idea you created directly inside the plugin.

At this stage, focus on whether the chords fit emotionally and harmonically. The rhythm can be shaped after the progression feels right.

2

Listen for what feels flat

Play the chords with your track and listen for the problem. Do the chords feel too long? Too repetitive? Too stiff against the drums? Too busy under the vocal?

Tip: If the chords sound right but the track still feels boring, try changing the rhythm before changing the progression.
3

Open the rhythm tools in Wingman

Use Wingman’s rhythm tools to change how the chords are played. Instead of holding every chord for the full bar, you can create movement with shorter notes, repeated hits, syncopation, and accents.

Rhythm editor

Try different rhythms until the part moves

Use Wingman’s rhythm tools to quickly audition different chord patterns and make the part feel less static.

Try different rhythms in Wingman
4

Try rhythm presets

Start by auditioning rhythm presets. This is the fastest way to hear how the same chords can feel completely different with a new pattern.

Some presets may make the chords feel more energetic, while others may create a smoother or more relaxed groove.

5

Edit accents and note placement

Use accents to emphasize certain chord hits and reduce others. Small changes in emphasis can make a chord part feel more human, more syncopated, or more connected to the beat.

Production idea: Try placing stronger accents around the kick or snare pattern. This can help the chords lock into the groove instead of floating over the track.
6

Match the chord rhythm to the bassline

Play the chords with the bassline and listen to how the rhythms interact. The chord pattern does not need to copy the bassline, but the two parts should feel like they belong together.

If the low end feels crowded, simplify the chord rhythm or move some chord hits away from the bass movement.

7

Choose a sound that supports the rhythm

The sound you choose affects how rhythmic the chord part feels. A short pluck will make the pattern feel tighter and more percussive, while a pad will feel smoother and more sustained.

Try different sounds before deciding whether the rhythm needs more editing.

8

Export the final chord rhythm

Once the chord part has the right movement, export it as MIDI or WAV and continue arranging it in your DAW.

Export MIDI if you want to keep editing the notes, velocity, timing, and instrument. Export WAV if you want to capture the sound and move quickly.

Tips

Tips for better chord rhythm

Do not change the chords too early

If the harmony fits but the track feels boring, try changing rhythm, accents, and sound before replacing the progression.

Leave space for the vocal

If the track has a vocal, avoid chord rhythms that are too busy. The best rhythm often supports the vocal without competing with it.

Use sound choice as part of the rhythm

A short, tight sound makes rhythmic patterns more obvious. A long pad can smooth out the same pattern and make it feel less busy.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Yes. Wingman includes rhythm tools that help you turn static chord progressions into more rhythmic musical parts.

Rhythm presets let you quickly audition different chord patterns so you can find a groove that fits your track faster.

Yes. You can adjust the rhythm and accents to make the chord part feel more connected to your drums, bassline, or vocal.

If the chords fit your track but feel boring, try changing the rhythm first. A better rhythm can make the same progression feel much more energetic.

Yes. You can export the chord part as MIDI or WAV and continue editing it in your DAW.

Ready to try it?

Make your chords move.

Use Wingman to add rhythm, bounce, accents, and energy to chord progressions that feel too flat.

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