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#16
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Martin Sc-13e 2020 |
#17
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Fortunately for me I play with myself (don't tell anybody!), and my Martin has a built in tuner.
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Martin Sc-13e 2020 |
#18
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I mean, I'm an elderly untrained singer too ![]() If the top note of a song is too high for me - even if only by a half-step - I'm going to be lowering the key a lot more than a half-step, so as that top note is well within my range; which usually means transposing the shapes, and maybe using a capo. Sometimes I will keep the same shapes (if they are important to the song) and use a capo, taking the vocal down an octave - e.g., capo 5 frets up, vocal 7 half-steps down. (That's not common though.) I guess, for me, I prefer to stay with EADGBE as much as possible, partly out of habit, mainly because it suits the band I play in (they tune to standard too). But I have no problem transposing chords to other keys, and I understand that some do. Quote:
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"There is a crack in everything. That's how the light gets in." - Leonard Cohen. |
#19
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You may be thinking of Yesterday, where he played his Epiphone Texan, tuned down a whole step. I think he permanently kept the Texan down a step. |
#20
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Put simply it's going to sound a little different apart from just being down, in this case, a half step. Sometimes jarringly so even though it's the right chord in the transposition. It's a wonderful boon of the current age that I've been able to instantly transpose many songs down into my range, but I have five or six that I only perform live on my detuned second guitar. In a couple cases they're originals that are easier to sing down there and have detailed fingerpicking riffs I'd never even try to reconstruct in a lower key. |
#21
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Malcolm |
#22
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#23
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I keep one guitar in Eb. There are a handful of songs that have distinctive guitar parts that sound best in their original voicings, but down a half step are much easier to sing. I'm usually hitting an Ab (or there abouts) in those songs. I can hit the A, but I'm at the very top of my range and it just sounds much better with the throttle back a bit.
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Mike 2018 Furch D31TSR 2008 Martin OMCRE 1992 Takamine EAN20C 1996 Fender Telecaster w/ Barden Nashville set 1986 Charvel Model 5 2005 Art & Lutherie Ami 1980ish Hohner copy of a 'burst |
#24
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Okay this may be odd to some people, but sometimes, I tune a guitar a whole step down and then capo it on the second fret to bring it back up to standard pitch. I don't do it to lower pitch, I do it for the slack sound the guitar gets when tuned down.
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#25
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I found that all my guitars seem to like being tuned down a 1/2 step. This especially holds true for when using medium gauge strings.
It's easier on the hands too and probably better for the guitar because it decreases tension.
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https://soundcloud.com/99ben99/sets/solo-guitar |
#26
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Creative people mess around with stuff, if for no better reason than to see what happens.
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#27
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Ed Gerhard says he tunes his six string guitars down a half-step, partly because it means no mandoliners will try to play along with him.
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Joe 1948 Martin D18 1999 Martin HD28 2015 Northwood R-80 MJ |
#28
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So whatever song I want to sing, I'll bring it down (very rarely up!) to within that range. But if a song covers two octaves, that's obviously too wide for me in any key. I think the only singer whose songs I never have to transpose is Leonard Cohen! I could probably manage some Johnny Cash in the original key, but I've never tried (given my vocal quality, even if the range is OK, I would just sound ridiculous). I can manage most Bert Jansch songs in his key, but sometimes prefer to lower those a half-step or two (easy when he uses a capo).
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"There is a crack in everything. That's how the light gets in." - Leonard Cohen. |
#29
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I used to keep a guitar strung with medium strings tuned down a full step. A capo at the 2nd fret put me back in standard tuning. The fretboard dots lined up similarly and the width at the 2nd fret mimicked 1 3/4" compared to 1 11/16' open. Gave me options.
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#30
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But that's a useful range you have, most folk pop blues songs are no more than an octave, the more interesting melodies are an octave +1 and some traditional songs have variations that might go octave + 2 scale tones but really most songs sung by untrained singers are no more than an octave. So you can pretty much sing any vernacular type song you want and for the vast majority you get a choice of more than one key. You might even be able to sing the Star Spangled Banner which unfortunately is beyond most Americans ( why did they choose that one?) My useable range is an octave + 1 tone and that's after a lot of effort over a few years to stretch it beyond the octave. A semitone either way makes a real difference to the degree I can make notes resonate or not so for any song over an octave I mostly don't get a choice of key that works for me. I don't think you should judge people who alter the tuning of their instrument to suit their voice. We don't all have your options. |