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  How do you tune your guitar? (Page 1)

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Author Topic:   How do you tune your guitar?
David Friedlander
Member

From: New York, New York, USA

posted 07 December 2003 10:15 PM     profile     
I just got "tunitupA Guide for the adjusted tuining of the E9 tuning"- it's by Jeff Newman.
Basically, it tells you to tune B's E'S F#'s D varying degrees of sharpness ( between 6 and nine cents) and the G#'s and D# 4 cents flat.
Funny thing, the guitar soundes perfectly in tune if you do this.
Opinions?
Eric West
Member

From: Portland, Oregon, USA

posted 07 December 2003 10:50 PM     profile     
Straight up all the way across. Always have. No reason to stop now.

It's called "Just Because" Tuning.

YRMV

EJL

Dave Horch
Member

From: Frederick, Maryland, USA

posted 07 December 2003 11:53 PM     profile     
Duck!!!

David - Make your ears happy. Just like Jeff, I sharp and flat strings so that they line up with the E and B strings which are tuned straignt up to a tuner. Other folks have other opinions, but this is the most "musical" way I've found.

Your mileage may vary. Best, -Dave

------------------
Mullen (See! No "S") D-10
Photo page


Drew Howard
Member

From: Mason, MI, U.S.A.

posted 08 December 2003 07:15 AM     profile     
On E9 I tune E's, B's and D straight up 440 and everything else by ear. On C6 I tune everything 440. On E9 I would love to be able to tune the strings AND pedal/levers 440 like I assume Eric means, in fact I just attempted that last night. But it throws the whole guitar out of wack. I'm wondering if at the very least Eric tempers his G#'s a little flat?

Cheers,
Drew

------------------
www.newslinkassociates.com
www.drewhoward.com

Bob Carlson
Member

From: Surprise AZ.

posted 08 December 2003 07:34 AM     profile     
Just like the Emmons Tempering Tuning Chart that came with my steel recommends which is the same way Buddy recommends on his Web Site. Works fine.

Bob

Nicholas Dedring
Member

From: Brooklyn, New York, USA

posted 08 December 2003 09:04 AM     profile     
I found that the Newman chart sounded really crummy on my instrument when I tried it out. I kind of mix and match. Some things by ear... some things just on the tuner, and I try to get pulls to compromise between straight up by themselves, and straight up in the combinations I actually use them in. F#->G# raise is tuned to match up to the third or sixth string, F lever is tuned up in conjunction with the A pedal and so on. It's better to just do it by ear, and sounds nicer, but I suffer from a serious lack of patience.
Larry Bell
Member

From: Englewood, Florida

posted 08 December 2003 09:09 AM     profile     
Bob, FYI
Just because the Emmons Guitar Co. Tuning charts are on buddyemmons.com, I would hesitate to assume Buddy endorses or tunes that way. In fact, he tunes very close to 'straight up' (aka 'Equal Temperament').

And, FWIW, I tune my guitar as close to Equal Temperament as I can stand, which is probably close to what my buddy Drew describes. There are many reasons for all this that have been hashed and rehashed to death. THERE IS NO SINGLE ANSWER FOR EVERYONE. How you tune your guitar is personal and it contributes to your own musical personality.

------------------
Larry Bell - email: larry@larrybell.org - gigs - Home Page
2003 Fessenden S/D-12 8x8, 1969 Emmons S-12 6x6, 1971 Dobro, Standel and Peavey Amps

Ricky Davis
Moderator

From: Spring, Texas USA

posted 08 December 2003 10:02 AM     profile     
On E9th Pedal Steel>
Our open tuning is an E tuning with no pedals and a "A" tuning with pedals down.
We are so used to tuning to E 440 but the rest of the world is tuned to A 440.
So if you tune your guitar to E 440 and play an open A chord with pedals down; than you are out of tune with the rest of the world because you "A" note(chord) will be flat (Mainly because of the pull on the guitar when pushing pedals; will drop notes).
So since I and the rest of us are used to tuning to the E note on a Pedal steel guitar from the start; what I would suggest is to push "a" and "b" pedals down and while down; pick your "E" note(highest open "E") and tune it to 440 on your tuner. Now let off your pedals and play that "E" note again and look at where it now lays on your tuner(usually sharp to 440); and that is your "NEW" E note and go ahead and retune the rest of your guitar to that E note reference like your used to(and now with pedals down; your "A" note will be in tune to E440 because your pedals down "E" note is 440.
So the way it turns out for your particular guitar is how much difference there is in the way your guitar re-acts to the pedals pushed.
So now in all probability your open E reference is sharp to E 440; but your "A" chord is now tuned to "A" 440 and you will play in better tune than you ever have; if your not already doing this. It is ok to the ear to be slightly sharp.....but it is never ok to be flat. Sharp adds excitement; and Flat adds Death>to the music.
I alway tune my guitar by ear; as Tom Brumley once told me: "Ricky if you always practice on tuning your guitar by ear; than you are practicing on playing in tune and that is the goal here"!!!.
I do have the notes somewhat memorized where they lay on my tuner for my guitar, for the times that I don't get to make any noise at the gig or don't have time or can't hear. But finding out how your guitar tunes to "A" 440 is VERY important.
Another little practice thing I do at home when I ever practice; is I never practice with reverb and after tuning my steel; I will turn on my metronome that has a "A" 440 pitch to it; and I just warm up and play along with that "A" pitch going and you can play in key of A or E or D or C and I really listen to playing in tune with that pitch while I warm up or work on what ever.
-------------------------------------------------

E9th Pedal steel tuning proceedure

First you tune your "A" note to 440 then with
pedals down tune your "E" note to that "A" 440
note. Now you have the new "E" note reference to
"A" 440.
Tuning the open tuning.
Tune the other E note(4and8)
Tune the G#'s (3and6)to E
Tune the B's (5and10)to E
Tune the F#'s (1and7)to B
Tune the D# to B(2nd string)
Tuning the pedals and knee levers
Tune the A pedal(5and10) to the E note
Tune the B pedal(3and6)to the E note("A"440)
Tune the C pedal(4and5)to the A note
Tune E lower knee(4and8)to the B note
Tune E raise knee(4and8) to the A pedal
Tune D note(9th string) to and "A" note
Tune D# lower 1/2 tone to 9th string
Tune D# lower whole tone to A pedal
-----------------------------------------
Ricky www.mightyfinemusic.com
sshawaiian@austin.rr.com

[This message was edited by Ricky Davis on 08 December 2003 at 10:05 AM.]

Bobby Lee
Sysop

From: Cloverdale, North California, USA

posted 08 December 2003 10:38 AM     profile     
I use an electronic tuner and tune everything to the 5 cent tickmarks. It ain't equal or just, but it sounds good to me and it's not hard to remember:
1                F# 0
2 C# -5 D +5 D# -5 E +5
3 G +5 G# -5 A 0
4 D# -5 E +5 F -10 F# -5
5 B +5 C# -5
6 G +5 G# -5 A 0
7 F# -5 G +5 G# -5
8 D# -5 E +5 F -10
9 C# -5 D +5
10 B +5 C# -5
I also raise my 7th string F# to +10 on the lever that lowers the E's to D#.

------------------
Bobby Lee - email: quasar@b0b.com - gigs - CDs, Open Hearts
Sierra Session 12 (E9), Williams 400X (Emaj9, D6), Sierra Olympic 12 (C6add9),
Sierra Laptop 8 (E6add9), Fender Stringmaster (E13, A6),
Roland Handsonic, Line 6 Variax

[This message was edited by Bobby Lee on 08 December 2003 at 10:44 AM.]

Dale Bessant
Member

From: Gatineau, Quebec, Canada

posted 08 December 2003 11:08 AM     profile     
I used to tune every string (opens and raises , lowers) with a tuner when I first started and for the first few years as a matter of fact but lately I tune my "E"s to A440 and then tune everything by ear, seems to me to be the best way for me to sound acceptable as I play along with C.D.s and do some home recordings,but I suppose it depends on your ears doesnt it..Havent heard any dogs howlin' yet anyways....and it sounds good to me....
Bob Hoffnar
Member

From: Brooklyn, NY

posted 08 December 2003 11:43 AM     profile     
I do the same thing as Ricky.
If you can't hear it just do the Newman thing untill your ears adjust.

Bob

Allen Peterson
Member

From: Katy, Texas

posted 08 December 2003 12:28 PM     profile     
I tune using Ricky's method for the most part. I tune my A's to A440 and then tune my E's to A440, pedals down. Then I tune the rest by ear. The problem I have is with the G#'s. By ear I can get my 6th string to sound good, but when I harmonically tune my 3rd string to the 6th, the 3rd almost always sounds flat with the open 4th and 5th strings. Maybe it is just my ear. Maybe I should be tuning my 3rd and 6th strings with the pedals down.
Eric West
Member

From: Portland, Oregon, USA

posted 08 December 2003 12:30 PM     profile     
Drew. No I actually don't tune the G#s down at all.

I just don't.

My Dad tuned pianos, and I remember very well his tuning to "beats". I'd give anything th hear him run thru the thirds/fifths etc...

I learned my "lesson" when I worked with a guy named Harlan that used to tune his Yamaha MiniGrand to an "E chord". It SUCKED on anything but tunes in E. We used to sneak in and retune it.

I think that if I played a lot of open strings I'd probably "ear it" a little more.

I can't help but think that given the tensile qualities of metal strings, that once you got all the way through your "rack" you'd have to start all over again.

If you want to go nuts, here's why. The "pivot point" of metal string is not a perfect point. there is a "swivel" because of the diameter and molecular cohesion. It is only an infintesimal fraction of the diameter, but it is operative. If a string was a perfect "line" it would behave perfectly. It would behave independent of quantum physics. They aren't, and they don't.

Here's how I keep my sanity: Eighteen words:

quote:
Straight up all the way across. Always have. No reason to stop now.

It's called "Just Because" Tuning.


Once you are out of the open position, tuned tempered or not, your bar is automatically "Fishtailed™" by your between-the-ears mainframe, (or it isn't). You tend to learn how to adjust your bar for the "A pedal/E raise" or you don't.

There's no way to play these things visually and be in tune. It's from one tip of one ear to the other tip of the other one. Blind people can play these things. Sadly, deaf people can't.

They go for pianos and guitars and drums I think. Some fiddlers..

Hmm...

EJL

[This message was edited by Eric West on 08 December 2003 at 12:32 PM.]

C Dixon
Member

From: Duluth, GA USA

posted 08 December 2003 12:37 PM     profile     
On E9th I tune all the firsts and sevenths to straight 440. I tune all the 3rds, forths, fifths and sixths so they are harmonically pure on E9th. Harmonically pure means NO beats. Or Just Intonation OR "JI".

I do this because I play at home by myself at it sounds great to me.

If I played in a band, I would make two changes. I would tune the firsts and sevenths (open tuning) to 442.5 and then JI everything else.

How come?

For the same reason Jeff Newman and Ricky Davis do it. Cabinet drop and JI tuning dictate it IF one wants to be in tune with the band and play right over the frets.

On C6 I tune it the same way as E9th, except for the 5th and 6th pedals where I tune the F#'s and Eb to 440 (442.5 if in a band). JI everything else.

Finally, if my ears and brain were as cultured (musically) as Buddy Emmons, I would do precisely what he does. I would tune everything straight up 440; which is called equal temperament or "ET". Plus, I would insist on playing nothing but a guitar with Zero cabinet drop. This would negate the need for having to tune the E's to 442.5.

carl

Brad Sarno
Member

From: St. Louis, MO USA

posted 08 December 2003 01:44 PM     profile     
I've been happiest with the tempered tuning chart on the Buddy Emmons website. Seems to be the best of all the comprimises.

Brad Sarno

Darvin Willhoite
Member

From: Leander, Tx. USA

posted 08 December 2003 02:36 PM     profile     
I'm with Eric. When I first started trying to play, I had no teacher to show me how it was supposed to be done, so I did it the way that made the most sense. Moving the bar ever so slightly, changes the pitch anyway. Just moving the bar the width of the fret marker can make a lot of difference, so it seems to me that playing in tune is all in the ears, once you get away from the open position.

------------------
Darvin Willhoite
Riva Ridge Recording

Garth Highsmith
Member

From:

posted 08 December 2003 04:07 PM     profile     
.

[This message was edited by Garth Highsmith on 09 January 2006 at 08:32 PM.]

Bernie Straub
Member

From: Folly Beach, South Carolina, USA

posted 10 December 2003 03:09 PM     profile     
Do any of you use a chromatic tuner?
Bobby Lee
Sysop

From: Cloverdale, North California, USA

posted 10 December 2003 04:05 PM     profile     
I use a chromatic tuner, yes. Most pedal steel players do. The exceptions are those who tune by ear.

------------------
Bobby Lee - email: quasar@b0b.com - gigs - CDs, Open Hearts
Sierra Session 12 (E9), Williams 400X (Emaj9, D6), Sierra Olympic 12 (C6add9),
Sierra Laptop 8 (E6add9), Fender Stringmaster (E13, A6),
Roland Handsonic, Line 6 Variax

Jody Carver
Member

From: The Knight Of Fender Tweed~ Dodger Blue Forever

posted 10 December 2003 04:47 PM     profile     
Eric has the answer for those who can hear what a beat sounds like...quote Eric West.


My Dad tuned pianos, and I remember very well his tuning to "beats". I'd give anything th hear him run thru the thirds/fifths etc... un quote,,,,,who knows better than a piano repair man? Huh?

Harold Rhodes lived by that theory as did Herbie Hancock and Joe Zawunol..no pianist ever used an electronic device as far as I know. It was "EARS" and BEATS. OH I forgot
Chick Corea as well,,,BEATS AND EARS.

[This message was edited by Jody Carver on 10 December 2003 at 04:51 PM.]

Ron Randall
Member

From: Dallas, Texas, USA

posted 10 December 2003 05:57 PM     profile     
FWIW.
"Tuning to beats" and "tuning out the beats" are different methods of tuning. Tuning out the beats will give Just Intonation (JI).One can tune to the correct number of beats per second to get ET, or to stretch a piano's tuning. Professional tuners know that the beats are there, and listen to the frequency of the beats to bring the instrument into tune. There are tables of beat frequency from note to note.

Hope this helps.

Mark van Allen
Member

From: loganville, Ga. USA

posted 11 December 2003 11:05 AM     profile     
Over a lot of time experimenting, I've evolved a tuning chart (for me!) that's fairly similar to the Newman offsets. I think it works because all of the guitars I've had have some cabinet drop, and I do like to be in tune with the band at various open (unfretted) chords, so it's a compromise. I'm very grateful for today's accurate tuners- so many of the gigs I play just do not allow for tuning by ear- nosiy backstage conditions, mulitlple acts and festivals where it's "set-up-and-go", soundchecks hours before the show in a completely different temperature environment, etc., not to mention broken strings on stage. I've tried, and for the life of me, I don't see how anybody manages to play tuned "straight up" across the neck- if by that they mean every string to "0" or the 440 mark on a tuner. Is that what you guys are actually doing?

------------------
Stop by the Steel Store at: www.markvanallen.com

jlsmith48
Member

From: blackwell ok usa

posted 11 December 2003 11:34 AM     profile     
Jeff Newman also had an earlier tuning chart that had the Es at 440. Did not like that one. I have used his new one since 95 and have never looked back.
David Doggett
Member

From: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA

posted 11 December 2003 12:57 PM     profile     
I tune my Es to 440 and everything else by ear (JI) to the common chords I play (not to beats or harmonics). While cabinet drop will cause my A with pedals down to be a little off, it is hardly noticeable, because I don't play with pedals down at the nut much, and everywhere else my ears adjust the pitch to the band (within my humble abilities), whether the pedals are up or down. With the Es right on, I can play them for guitar players to tune their Es to if they don't have a tuner (but you can do the same thing with straight up pedal-down A).

One of the benefits of playing through a POD is the built in tuner (which mutes the output to the amp), and the earphone jack, which lets me tune quickly by ear and play a few warm up licks to myself. If I don't have the POD or earphones, I have a chromatic tuner and know approximately where to tune each string on the meter. Basically tonics and 5ths can be straight up, thirds are around 438 (JI that errs on the side of sharp).

If I had a C6 neck, I would probably tune it straight up or very close. The uni I play presents a problem in that if it is tuned JI to the open E9 mode, it is neither JI nor ET for the B6 mode. But this does not seem to matter, because most of the chords I use in the B6 mode are dissonant anyway, which is the same reason people can tolerate ET for C6.

I've tried ET for E9 and can't stand it. ET sounds fine on keyboards, but the pedal steel is not a keyboard. It is an open tuned fretless instrument with an instantaneously movable capo (the bar) that helps avoid (at least on E9) some of the problems JI causes fixed pitch instruments like keyboards.

Chris Schlotzhauer
Member

From: Colleyville, Tx. USA

posted 11 December 2003 01:22 PM     profile     
I do the same as Ricky. I chime all the combinations he mentions.
Buck Dilly
Member

From: Branchville, NJ, USA

posted 11 December 2003 02:03 PM     profile     
After trying all the above methods, I decided to go back to keyboards.
Charlie Moore
Member

From: Deville, Louisiana, USA

posted 11 December 2003 05:14 PM     profile     
If you tune straight up 440 you will be out of tune with the rest of the band especially piano's and reed instrument's, sorry!!!!!!!why do you tune your 6string with out adjusting bridge?CM.......
Ray Montee
Member

From: Portland, OR, USA

posted 12 December 2003 02:04 AM     profile     
Me..........I prefer to tune accurately and in tune.
Ron Bryson
Member

From: Bonifay, Florida, USA

posted 12 December 2003 03:47 AM     profile     
I'm with Eric West. If you don't like how a Sho-Bud sounds tuned "straight up", just wait a few minutes...
Gordon Titcomb
Member

From: Torrington, Connecticut, USA

posted 12 December 2003 05:58 AM     profile     
My process is quite simple really.......
First I just pick all of the strings to determine which one is MOST out of tune,
then I tune all the rest of them to that one!

------------------
Best regards-Gordon
http://www.gordontitcomb.com

C Dixon
Member

From: Duluth, GA USA

posted 12 December 2003 06:18 AM     profile     
"If you tune straight up 440 you will be out of tune with the rest of the band especially piano's and reed instrument's"

--------------------------------------------------------------

Really?

carl

David Doggett
Member

From: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA

posted 12 December 2003 06:33 AM     profile     
All keyboards are normally tuned straight up in the middle octaves (but stretched for the higher and lower octaves). Reeds, like all horns, are tuned A=440 to a single concert pitch, typically A or Bb, and all the rest of the notes are played by the lips to ear, which means mostly JI. The double reeds (oboe, English horn, bassoon) are a little different in that the pitch can't be varied as much by the lips.

[This message was edited by David Doggett on 12 December 2003 at 06:35 AM.]

Charlie Moore
Member

From: Deville, Louisiana, USA

posted 12 December 2003 07:03 PM     profile     
Yeah really !!


Charlie

Graham Griffith
Member

From: Glebe, N.S.W., Australia

posted 13 December 2003 02:41 AM     profile     
"How do you tune your guitar?"

My BMI is keyless and so I use a male Allen key for the strings and a female for the pedals/knee levers.

Graham

[This message was edited by Graham Griffith on 13 December 2003 at 02:42 AM.]

Eric West
Member

From: Portland, Oregon, USA

posted 13 December 2003 07:59 AM     profile     
So then when "we" fret this "changed tuning" say with pedals down, at the 7th fret, how much off the fret are we to place the bar? is this automatic or is there a chart?

EJL

Bill Stafford
Member

From: Gulfport,Ms. USA

posted 13 December 2003 08:09 AM     profile     
For all you "universal" E9/B6 players who have to tune per all the various temperment charts, the new EXCEL will allow you to temper both tunings on an individual basis. The lock lever that lowers the Es to Eb on this new instrument model has incorporated individual changer tuning adjustments rods that will allow you to tune your Eb lever for your E9 tuning, and then it will allow you to tune the B6 when you utilize the lock device. Works great, but in my case, I have always tuned straight up to A440 on both tunings and in complete disagreement with Carl Dixon as to being out of tune etc..Merry Christmas to all..(This individual tuning capability is only one result of the five raise and five lower capability of the changer mechanism).

Bill Stafford

Bill Llewellyn
Member

From: San Jose, CA

posted 13 December 2003 08:23 AM     profile     
Am I supposed to tune this thing? Hmmm, maybe that's my problem....

Gene Jones
Member

From: Oklahoma City, OK USA

posted 13 December 2003 08:59 AM     profile     
"How do you tune your guitar?"

....so it doesn't "clash" with the guitar player!....

www.genejones.com

Richard Sinkler
Member

From: Fremont, California

posted 13 December 2003 09:16 AM     profile     
I tune so it does "clash" with the guitar player and convince him that HE is out of tune.
Ray Montee
Member

From: Portland, OR, USA

posted 13 December 2003 09:29 AM     profile     
Bill.......you shouldn't have to tune it.
Didn't it come "tuned" from the factory? If not, give em a ring and complain about it.
Don't mention your age however, as they will likely categorize your the nature of your complaint.

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