Query failed: connection to localhost:9312 failed (errno=111, msg=Connection refused).
It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
Subscribe to our Patreon, and get image uploads with no ads on the site!
Base theme by DesignModo & ported to Powered by Vanilla by Chris Ireland, modified by the "theFB" team.
Comments
So you could look at it as Drop D interval-wise except with the 2nd string tuned up a tone and a half.
again two crappy recordings - Jeanies Tune was a tune that came too me thinking about my mother - a highland traveling woman in the first half of last century.
switched the computer on and ’saved’ it so your listening to me ‘thinking it through in the first take.
Second is why I use this tuning, it’s a harp tune by Rory Dall Mor Morrison - from the 16 hundreds - it’s called The Lament for the Hark Key - the Key was what tuned the harp to its various tunings and Rory Dall (Blind Rory Mor = great) was lamenting the passing of the old Gaelic Bardic tradition that had been in existence for 1,000 years - he was the last harper to the MacLeod’s Of Dunvegan Skye
if you mean CGCGCD Lewy i came to it in the later ’80’s as a means of mimicking the larger spread of notes on the clarsach ( Scots / Irish small harp) which interestingly use ’tunings’ - going back 1 Millenia !!
https://myspace.com/geordieadams/music/song/tree-of-strings-16862281-16663466
I found adding the ‘D’ introduced interesting ‘modern’ sounding (suspended) so stuck with that.
I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.
The 9 on the top string is a really interesting suspension, but also experimenting with the tuning, having the first and second notes of the scale on adjacent open strings makes for some fun revisiting of more melodic country blues (like Mississippi John Hurts' drop d tunes).
Further exploration with this tuning reveals that Tom Waits piano ballads positively fall out of the guitar with it.
Which is nice.
Handled with care, the 4th on the open 3rd string is very handy for those parts of an arrangement where you want to go a little lighter and take it into a higher register.
Apart from the "classic" open tunings that I use for country blues (so, G/A & E/D) this is the first altered tuning that's kept my interest after a few days, and my Collings OM2H really seems to like it tuned up to D (DADGDE) with .012s - which means I probably won't move that guitar on like I was planning to. Plus with that arrangement I only need to retune two strings to be in standard. So fairly practical on gigs.
So CGCGCD not CGCFCD.
Having thought about it a little, I seem to recall part of the CGCFCD reminded me of an Appalachian banjo tuning - which I played 50 yrs ago. Same sets of intervals IIR, memory is not reliable now so cant remember the actual tuning - anyone?.
And isn't it kinda 'dadgadie' ?
But this sus4+9 tuning is instantly gratifying for a much broader range of material it seems.