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#31
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Generally I don't choose to sing songs which have a big range anyway - because I'm such a bad singer! So I do usually have a choice of keys to move the song to. Sometimes I'll just drop the key by an octave (eg with Neil Young, or any female voice). Quote:
Of course, being British I won't be attempting it! ![]() Quote:
Quite simply - generally speaking - downtuning has nothing to do with your vocal range. As I said, there are exceptions in a small number of cases: where a song only needs lowering a small amount (half-step or whole step), and you want to keep the same chord shapes. Then downtuning is a no-brainer. (For other songs which don't need downtuning), you can use a capo.) Likewise, if you find your range dropping a little as you age, downtuning lets you keep your comfortable chords for the songs you've been singing for years. Otherwise, finding the best key for your voice - however low it is - is about transposing. Songs come in all kinds of registers and ranges. Whatever key you want to sing *any* song in, you can do it in EADGBE by transposing the chords and/or using a capo. Downtuning is a red herring.
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"There is a crack in everything. That's how the light gets in." - Leonard Cohen. |
#32
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I started doing it for playing along with some songs. Like Neil Young playing My, My Hey Hey, is tuned a whole step down, and it suits my voice. Also look for the video of Steve Winwood playing Can't Find My Way Home on acoustic with the crackling fireplace in the background. He's playing a whole step down, Drop C, so that he can hit the notes. I found I can just barely hit it at that tuning. It's a pain to be retuning up and down all the time, so I usually leave a guitar down one step, and capo back up to standard, or only a half-step down for some songs.
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#33
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It's really not your place to lay down the law to other people the way you do, who do you think you are? Last edited by Andyrondack; 12-12-2022 at 07:16 PM. |
#34
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Martin Sc-13e 2020 |
#35
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I've tried but simply couldn't get used to the lower string tension. Now I just use a capo and change the chord shapes to accommodate the desired key. I'll often try out a new song in a couple different capo positions as the textures will vary and naturally, access to bass runs, etc. may be better in one position than another. I realize not everyone will want to bother with this but it works for me.
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#36
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Si Barron is my favourite folkie guitarist gigging the uk clubs today, he plays exclusively in DADGAD which on his latest album he tuned down a whole step to C he informed me to suit his voice, and before someone posts that for this song he could have just tuned to D and moved the capo lower I should point out that down tuning (or up tuning) for Si has to make sense in the broader context of his whole set.
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#37
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As a rock/blues guitarist and veteran of numerous cover bands, I wholeheartedly disagree with the assertion (made several posts above here) that tuning instruments down a half note doesn't help a vocalist who can't reach the higher notes. Of course it does!
If someone can't sing a high C but they can reach B, tuning down a little opens up more set-list possibilities while retaining familiar, easy-to-play open-chord shapes for stage-worn hackers like me. Actually, I was the one who instigated tuning down half a note in my last band, which enabled our "growly" singer to tackle 8-10 new cover songs that we would've ditched otherwise. Trust me, no one on the dance floor noticed any difference - ever. Even easier than slacking the guitars one semitone, our keyboard player simply spun a knob to the left one click on each of his planks. Thus, he wasn't forced to transpose into awkward keys and/or chord shapes either. Said another way - lower is lower for a singer. EADBGe is not carved into a stone tablet anywhere, nor is straying from that any sort of a "red herring." It worked pretty well for Jimi Hendrix and countless others. Further, tuned down like that, my strat (with HSS pickups) sounds positively juicy strung with Power Slinky 11s. Last edited by tinnitus; 01-20-2023 at 10:35 AM. |
#38
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I do it because I have wrist problems
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#39
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Martin Sc-13e 2020 |
#40
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This guy is tuned down to CGCFGC (a whole step down from DADGAD).
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#41
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Good idea! Great way to see if wider nut guitar would work for you before even buying one!
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#42
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simple kind of man was tuned down a half step.
For slide guitar Jimmy Page tuned down an open G tuning for When the Levee Breaks. Makes it real easy to play slide guitar for it. I never thought about it for singing and I am going to try that now that I have read all these comments! |
#43
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Originally Posted by Golffishny View Post
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. Good way to have more options for 'short scale' guitar too, I've toyed with the idea of picking up a cutaway grand auditorium size guitar with a narrow nut and keeping a capo in place as most short scales are OM size. |
#44
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Let me just say for those who are not familiar with my posts that I'm pretty old, I'll be 69 this spring so please bear that in mind and bear with me cause I've been around the block a time or two.
Lately, well since the advent of the internet and my now way better trained 'ear' I've been revisiting some of my hero's from the past. I was and still am a big fan of Ry Cooder among many others including a Canadian such as myself who called himself Leon Redbone. He was a big deal for many years but sadly passed away a few years ago. Anyway Leon was really a great guitar player and as many of you know he put out maybe a half dozen or more LP's. His later LP's were over produced IMO but his earlier ones were pretty amazing as far as his guitar work. Just a wonderful singer as well, the full package. Anyway now that I'm looking at his videos of appearances on talk shows and and concerts I discovered he tuned a full step down. A bit of a shock but there it is. Many of his tunes he did (but didn't write) like "Don't Talk About Me When I'm Gone" and "Big Time Woman(from way out west). He did in the key of F maj. Being tuned a step down let him slide in some notes which you could not do in concert pitch. I like playing tuned down a step, it has a whole different feel. |
#45
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I'm 72 and have been singing live since I was 14 (and still do). In all that time I have always sang songs in the keys that suited my voice. Sometimes the original key is fine, but more often not. I've occasionally horsed around with tuning down a half step, and maybe it's just a mental thing, but my guitars never felt or sounded right. Using a capo with standard G, C, D, A, E key chordings always get me where I need to be. If the tune has an instrumental hook, I've found ways to play it. But I've always been a kind of "do things your own way" kind of singer and player. As long as it feels good, it is.
Now if I was a bluegrass player and needed the G chord for all those awesome licks and runs, that might be a different story. But in the end, if tuning down your guitar down gets you there, it's all good too. ![]()
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2022 Martin HD12-28 2022 Martin HD-28 2022 Gibson J-45 Standard 2022 Taylor American Dream AD27 Mahogany 2007 Breedlove AC250/SM-12 2006 Breedlove AD20/SR Plus 2003 Martin 000C-16SGTNE 2000 Taylor 410ce 1990 Martin Shenandoah (< 1990 a bunch of great old Yamahas I lost track of) My music: https://pro.soundclick.com/dannybowman |