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My YouTube Channel
http://vinic.free.fr/strings/
you can always take the CGDGCD Orkney tuning up a semitone
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Then there are guitarists who play a 12 string and change a lot of open tunings, be prepared to wait when they play live!
I'll be honest, some open tunings can really get a bit samey after a while. But it's fun and I don't plan to focus 100% on any one tuning. I'm also singing to bring together a whole musical package (now that I'm not in a band, I want to do an interesting acoustic act). So I'm going to focus on maybe 3-4 tunes in other tunings for variety. I don't want to just learn those and be done with it, though... seems a waste. I'd want to really get used to one tuning and understand where the chords are etc - right now I feel like I'm just parroting (learning notes of songs in one key without understanding what's going on) but I don't think I'd go to the extremes of learning the modes in another tuning...!
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My electrics/amp/FX haven't been touched for ages!!
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I've never tried them but have noticed partial capos advertised which allow a DADGAD tuning a full tone higher by capoing (is that a word?) the 3rd, 4th and 5th strings at the second fret and leaving the other strings open - just like playing a guitar tuned to DADGAD with an ordinary capo on the 2nd fret, but without moving from standard tuning.
A nice book I came across is "Irish Music for Guitar" - (John Loesberg). It includes 27 arrangements in ordinary notation and tab - with an accompanying CD. Most are in standard tuning although a few use dropped-D and one uses the 3rd string down to F#. The arrangements are intermediate standard generally and I've found they give a good platform for further elaboration and development.
It can found on Amazon at £10.95
It depends on how you use the open tuning. I'm in agreement it's good to focus on one or two open tunings. IMO, I find it good to focus on a few modal tunings (eg DADGAD, CGCGCD) and changing a string by a semi tone or two for their major/minor variants.
As for learning modes, I've found certain modes work better in certain tunings and so on.
My YouTube Channel
My YouTube Channel
My YouTube Channel
It sounds a lot sweeter than a banjo!
I got a Blueridge one, which was very good for the money
I recommended to Richard Durrant that he should try a tenor, since he used to play Bach on a tenor banjo on stage, now he has a lovely custom-order tenor guitar
https://www.lewismclaughlinmusic.com/
Mind you I have a Fender Mando-strat
And if it’s confession time I have a Mando-SG....
I tuned my 29 inch Alan Arnold Baritone in 5ths for a while
IMO, this tenor guitar playing some Celtic music sounds truly wonderful
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SI503cjOgaY
My YouTube Channel