Brilliant comment at the end and so very true. Put the guitar in a strange tuning and just start exploring. That’s how I started almost sixty years ago. I played for nine months in an open “A” tuning before I came across a guy who showed me what standard tuning was. I thought he was crazy. LOL
@@ClichéGuevara-2814 Those are relatively common open tunings, though, along with open E and A. Open D is pretty common (first in the video), too, especially for disciples of Elmore James and the Delta Blues masters. But I think Joni Mitchell used open D in unique ways.
This is possibly my favorite Reverb video ever. I honestly don’t remember how I got into alternate tunings (I think just fiddling with the tuning heads and growing up on so much blues 🤷🏼♂️), but I’ve found more and more of my very favorite musicians over the years have gone down this road. Keef, of course, Nick Drake and Joni Mitchell as you mention here, Richie Havens. No shortage of these sorts of pure explorers, and as Joe touches on, there’s something very *essential* (in every meaning of the word) to music in just stepping into the unknown and being led. Love it, love it, love it! 😄❤️
I love Fripp's tuning because I come to the guitar from the piano/keyboard and it makes so much sense in terms of layout. I would have had a much easier time learning guitar had I started with new standard tuning. It would have sucked for learning other people's music, but great for exploring compositional ideas of your own (Sweet Child 'O Mine sounded hilariously like something from Larks Tongue in Aspic and not GNR). I also really liked Joni Mitchell's tuning too. BTW that Taylor sounded beautiful.
great video, vestapol (D maj), cross string (D min), and the Drake tunings are in my top 5 tunings. My favorite however, is Guy Clark's tuning. Capo every string on the 2nd fret, except the low E. This allows you to play drop D structures (in E). What makes it better than drop D (besides not having to actually touch your tuning pegs), is being able to still play open G, as well as every barre chord.
Alternative tunings are great! So inspiring 😎👍 My fretless bass is tuned in fifths (low A, E, B, F#), my acoustic has the Nick Drake tuning, and an electric uses Fripp's New Standard Tuning but I'm at a half step lower, as that is literally a lifesaver on your high string! 🤣🤣🤣 Fifths isn't too difficult to get your head around, people have used it for ages when playing drop-D for instance 😉 I was used to it already anyway, as I also play cello and Chapman Stick...
Great job! Very enjoyable video! One word of caution to anyone new to open tunings. When re-tuning from open G back to standard, tighten the high E string VERY CAREFULLY! If you go too fast they break!
I've been using alternate tunings for about 30 years (on acoustic), but I still picked up some helpful insights here. Very well done. Joe, consider linking up with TrueFire or a similar company to do a more extended course on this topic (yes, I'll look on the Reverb blog for more). BTW, top-quality A/V work on the part of the Reverb media team. -Tom
New Standard Tuning is awesome! I used it for a year and expanded my sound a lot. Then I switched a "mirror" tuning (CGDADG) and that symmetry is quite interesting too.
So good to see a decent exploration of alternate tuning . There is so much more to music than standard tuning and the same old junk played over and over, Nice work.
Bit late to this, but thanks for this. Oddly I play in open F# a lot of the time (because I sing in F#) but had no idea that Curtis Mayfield used it. Big fan of the man.
You mentioned about the need to have the guitar setup for a tuning. It would have been nice to have gotten a hint of what that might entail. Thanks! Nice stuff.
Every guitar is a little different, so you'd want to take it to a luthier and ask them about adjusting neck tension and intonation for the string gauge and tuning. Thanks for watching!
I use a LOT of alternate tunings (mainly open tunings). But my faves are DADF#AD (Open D), DADGAD (Dadgad), CGCGCE (Open C), DADF#BE (D6/9, I think?), EADEBE (Idk if this tuning has a name, but its a tuning I picked up from Ed Sheeran), and my all time favorite, DADEAD. Idk, I just love alt tunings.
Thanks for sharing ! I believe you could play songs in any tuning ! Your guitar whichever you choose is like an extension of yourself as it is a veritable part of your musical life and it is obvious you have explored many uncharted journeys musically with guitar in hand through many alternate tunings ! You are an inspiration to all guitarists at any level , I can't wait to try them out ! Thanks again for waking up the guitarist that has fallen asleep in my body !
one alternate tuning that I like is EAEGBE, just taking the D string and tuning it up a whole step. it's not a tuning that anybody that I know plays, I just think it's a sweet one, makes sus2/add9 voicings very accessible while still making more regular voicings a breeze :+) also minor 2nds and lydian chords like C lydian (regular Cmaj shape)
The weirdest tuning I’ve ever heard was from the Potent Pairings - Sonic Youth video, I still have no idea how they get those tunings but they sound awesome
@@ph476 True, that's also important. But when you're using tuning with all 6 strings set to the same note and octave, for example, it's one helluva risk trying to tune thick strings up to that without breaking.
Kyle Tekaucic why would you even use bigger strings if they’re all gonna be tuned to the same not. Just get 6 high E or maybe use an E B G G G and tune them all to the same note so they feel a little thicker.
Joe, congrats on a really well addressed video. Very good, thank you. The Fripp tuning takes the prize for originality, and the Nick Drake tuning sounds so different from it's kissing cousin, DADGAD. Drake's tuning is DADGAD, but all strings down a full step from that. One way to describe those tunings is a sus4. DADGAD is a Dsus4 open chord, and the Drake is Csus4. Try this one - EADGBD. It's called Fake G or Reverse Drop D, also the Memphis Minnie Tuning. It gives you the top four strings of open G while allowing you to play regular chords, power chords and blues shuffles. If you like to drop in and out of slide using open G, this is a real good one. I stumbled on it years ago and thought I "invented" it. Wrong! I saw Erin Harpe (Erin Harpe and the Delta Swingers) use it and she gave me the history. Very useful.
This is a tuning I stumbled upon a couple of months ago and have really enjoyed using every once in a while A#F#C#FA#C (my band plays in drop A, so this is pretty easy to get to from there)
Listening to Bob Dylan's "Blood on the tracks" and Joni's Mitchell's "Both Sides Now" got me into open tunings. I agree with what the guy says at the end. Forget about the theory and just explore the tuning by the sounds. If it caresses your ears, then it's good.
I think that open minor tuning is an excellent idea and I don't know why it isn't more common, because until today I had never given it any thought, and the more I think of it the better the idea sounds. To be able to swap between major and minor chords, and even sus chords with 1 finger and 1 or 2 frets is much easier than attempting to finger a minor chord in open major chord, because to be perfectly honest I don't know how to play a minor chord in open tuning. I know that open minor tuning probably makes slide guitar that bit more difficult but we can't have everything can we? Besides, it's still easier than playing slide in regular tuning. What a revelation open minor tuning is !! 😎👍
I'd say you picked the best people to illustrate open turnings, Joni and Nic in particular. I use open C and open D on and off to get out of a playing rut. The other tuning that's good to try is open E, same intervals as D but somehow sounds and feels very different. Finally I have just set up a guitar with a Nashville string set which is the high six strings of a 12 string set, again this sounds very melodic. Great video and lovely playing.
Great lesson, of course Open G by Keith Richards and Jimmy Page does so much! Stephen Stills has a couple of interesting tunings and Dylan on Blonde on Blonde did Drop C, low E string tuned to C.
Totally different world of music, but when you started to play around with the Fripp tuning (around 10:45-ish), I immediately started to hear Sampha's 'Plastic 100 c', he even had a similar tone set on his keyboard in a couple of his live performances... Love the Nick Drake inclusion, couple of really interesting ones there (also has a couple of BEBEBE-s - what!?:D), many times he uses tunings so he can create some amazing clusters (very under-utilized thing imo). However I found the Fripp one the most beautiful tuning. Loved the math-y sounding thing at 11 mins with those amazing sounding chord!
+Thee Turkey DADGAD begets the "Nick Drake" tuning. Same intervals but all strings down one full step - CGCFGC, as opposed to DADGAD. DADGAD is relatively common (and fun), while Nick's tuning is uncommon. Pierre Ben Susann, the great French acoustic artist, plays only in DADGAD. There are others, also. Page used it frequently and to great effect.
@@larrygeetar9309 DADGAD is close to Nick Drake tuning, though the B and high e strings are tuned to C and E respectively, which gives a more harmonically complex chord, rather than DADGAD which is basically tonics, 5ths and 4th stacked on top of each other giving, admittedly similar intervals to NDT, though slightly more obvious direction than NDT, as well as more places to go, hence its greater use in a wide variety of music. Interesting idea that DADGAD begets NDT. I can certainely see why it would, though I think this might just be coincidence as Nick Drake's various tunings can be more clearly understood as attempts to voice chords in the same (quite clustered) ways his mother, Molly Drake, played on piano.
Every time I think of open tunings I mainly think of Delta Blues guitarists like Robert Johnson, Blind Blake, and Ry Cooder, and Elmore James and Johnny Winter. But when it comes to other alternative tunings, the first person I think about that I believe could have been included is Johnny Rzeznik of The Goo Goo Dolls. Although most wouldn’t consider him a guitarist more than he is a singer-songwriter, I’ve read that a lot of his material had been recorded using many various and unorthodox guitar tunings, even their most famous song “Iris”. Another guitarist I believe should have been included is Jimmy Page. Songs like “The Rain Song”, “Kashmir”, “Traveling Riverside Blues”, “In My Time of Dying”, “Bron Yr Stomp” had utilized different and unorthodox open tunings
It's nice to have something like the Roland vg-99 or later units. You can just set up different tunings on a modeled guitar patch. No guitar setup gymnastics to go through. I hear Joni used one of these so she didn't have to change guitars for every song!!! Also, I understand the modeled guitar sounds leave something to be desired, but you can just use this for experimentation till you find the tunings YOU can utilize and have another guitar setup for that.😁😎
Thanks for a wonderful video - you highlighted different artists than a lot of open tuning demos I've come across and gave some nice sound examples. Could you guys consider bringing in an expert on the incredible world of Hawaiian slack key tunings? Unless Joe or Andy is already an expert... it wouldn't entirely surprise me. Also, I have to give props here to Richie Havens, who only ever used open D tuning and made an entire beautiful career out of it.
Good video, but missed opportunity. If you're gonna talk about Joni Mitchell, I have trouble understanding associating her with a very generic, widely used open D tuning, rather than her most distinctive and most interestingly useful tuning, in Coyote for example: C G D F C E. It's amazing and rich and forces a person to think and hear differently.
Loved these - especially the Nick Drake one - thanks. How about a look at open G? Side two of Led Zeppelin III and a whole heap of Keith Richards tunes come to mind straight off...
I once brought five guitsrs on tour but I had seven tunings! At least I had them in tuning 'families', similar tunings that only require changing one string.
nice video! kinda hurt that you didn't mention Derek Trucks, Duane Allman, Elmore etc when you mention slide playing in Open D, but I get it, it's a rabbit hole of names that you'll have omitted haha Thanks Joe!
Derek and Duane both played in open E. You may or may not realize it, but Derek plays in open E ALL THE TIME! Even when he's not playing slide. It's how he learned. Of course, Elmore James was the king of open D. And Duane played standard tuning when not playing slide, even sometimes when he did but not often. Warren Haynes is total master of standard tuned slide and you'd think it was open E, A, or G. He's awesome at it.
Quick question: after how many years of guitar education would you expect a student to find this useful? After just 1.5 years music school, this sounds way above my head.
I would say that it differs from student to student. But part of the point of this lesson, is that even if the language of it is above your head, it may still be worth exploring simply for the different sounds and colors you can achieve. I encourage you to keep working on whatever you are currently working on with your instrument, and at some point, take a chance on an open tuning :)
So glad that Nick Drake was included. So under appreciated and so many beautiful songs
"What does 'Sweet Child O' Mine' sound like in the New Standard Tuning?"
King Crimson. It sounds like King Crimson.
meaning this video wont exist in a couple days
It sounds a lot different than the King James version.
Ben Bellomy Who cares?
Now we know how he got his sound. Crazy tuning and then just played all the cliches on it. Result = weirdland = King Crimson 😂
@@EpicStuffMan1000 Its still here!
As ever, Nick Drake wins the day. So magickal, even an open strum sounds sublime.
The Nick Drake tuning is the “Pink moon” tuning.
I wouldn't even play any chords in that tuning...just strum the open strings all night long 🤤
Love Nick Drake’s tunings. He also played in BEBEBE tuning for “From the Morning” and “Northern Sky”
From the morning is such a beautiful song.
he also used that tuning for time of no reply
Thanks for the inclusion of Nick Drake. A creative genius, near impossible to replicate.
Brilliant comment at the end and so very true. Put the guitar in a strange tuning and just start exploring. That’s how I started almost sixty years ago. I played for nine months in an open “A” tuning before I came across a guy who showed me what standard tuning was. I thought he was crazy. LOL
Learned in non standards, & still never use E Standard.
That’s awesome! lol BOTH of you! 😄
I started in C# standard and B standard. Just screw around until you find something good.
One of my favourite tunings is what Jimmy Page used on the Rain Song : DGCGCD
Yes!
@@stratdude83 ...and of course, Keef's Open G. Likewise Ronnie Wood with the Faces and Rich Robinson.,
@@ClichéGuevara-2814 Those are relatively common open tunings, though, along with
open E and A. Open D is pretty common (first in the video), too, especially for
disciples of Elmore James and the Delta Blues masters. But I think Joni Mitchell
used open D in unique ways.
@@larrygeetar9309 I completely agree. I think Joni should have multiple eponymous tunings.
same. very much.
Thanks so much for the nick drake, and equally thankful for the Mayfield, such a huge influence on so many great guitar players
This is possibly my favorite Reverb video ever. I honestly don’t remember how I got into alternate tunings (I think just fiddling with the tuning heads and growing up on so much blues 🤷🏼♂️), but I’ve found more and more of my very favorite musicians over the years have gone down this road. Keef, of course, Nick Drake and Joni Mitchell as you mention here, Richie Havens. No shortage of these sorts of pure explorers, and as Joe touches on, there’s something very *essential* (in every meaning of the word) to music in just stepping into the unknown and being led. Love it, love it, love it! 😄❤️
Nick Drake- yes!
Also should check out Tallest Man on Earth
Sam Popkin I had the same thought. Love his alternate tunings + capo on top.
Sam Popkin I couldn't agree more to both of those statements! Have you heard his cover of Bird Flew By?
Yes Joe! Always the best topics!
I love Fripp's tuning because I come to the guitar from the piano/keyboard and it makes so much sense in terms of layout. I would have had a much easier time learning guitar had I started with new standard tuning. It would have sucked for learning other people's music, but great for exploring compositional ideas of your own (Sweet Child 'O Mine sounded hilariously like something from Larks Tongue in Aspic and not GNR). I also really liked Joni Mitchell's tuning too. BTW that Taylor sounded beautiful.
great video, vestapol (D maj), cross string (D min), and the Drake tunings are in my top 5 tunings.
My favorite however, is Guy Clark's tuning. Capo every string on the 2nd fret, except the low E. This allows you to play drop D structures (in E). What makes it better than drop D (besides not having to actually touch your tuning pegs), is being able to still play open G, as well as every barre chord.
Alternative tunings are great! So inspiring 😎👍
My fretless bass is tuned in fifths (low A, E, B, F#), my acoustic has the Nick Drake tuning, and an electric uses Fripp's New Standard Tuning but I'm at a half step lower, as that is literally a lifesaver on your high string! 🤣🤣🤣
Fifths isn't too difficult to get your head around, people have used it for ages when playing drop-D for instance 😉
I was used to it already anyway, as I also play cello and Chapman Stick...
So is there a standard Chapman stick tuning in fifths? I always heard it was guitar standard bass standard but backwards? Educate me please
Hey Joni, put it all behind you
,
Hey Joni, now I've put it all behind me too...
Great job! Very enjoyable video! One word of caution to anyone new to open tunings. When re-tuning from open G back to standard, tighten the high E string VERY CAREFULLY! If you go too fast they break!
I'm a huge fan of the tuning John Mayer uses for "In Your Atmosphere" and "Something's Missing." For those interested, it's E B E F# B E
Thanks for that! God bless!
Andrew Weitz I’ve broken trying to tune up to that lol
The Fripp tuning is a “modified” cello tuning. Lots of fun.
Love the tuning from The Cure’s “Open”
G-Bb-F-G-Bb-Bb
👌👌👌
Pavement, Sonic youth, led Zeppelin...
+ My Bloody Valentine
Sabbath
Sonic Youth, sure...if you want the video to be three hours long
Led Zeppelin used alternate tuning
Pearl Jam & Soundgarden
Midwest emo / math tunings
FACGCE
FACGBE
DAEABE
DAEAF#E
DADF#AD
To name a few
How about Tom Rush!!?
one i made up: DAEG#BF#
Joe. Always bringing the knowledge.
I just posted my version of "My Secret Place" by Joni - Dflat open tuning
I have my seven string tuned to CABBAGE
Ha! That's hilarious. How does it feel? Is it easy to navigate?
That works great for krautrock!
Good for shredding?
@@xmillion1704 hahahahahhaa
Garbage?
I've been using alternate tunings for about 30 years (on acoustic), but I still picked up some helpful insights here. Very well done. Joe, consider linking up with TrueFire or a similar company to do a more extended course on this topic (yes, I'll look on the Reverb blog for more). BTW, top-quality A/V work on the part of the Reverb media team. -Tom
New Standard Tuning is awesome! I used it for a year and expanded my sound a lot. Then I switched a "mirror" tuning (CGDADG) and that symmetry is quite interesting too.
So good to see a decent exploration of alternate tuning . There is so much more to music than standard tuning and the same old junk played over and over, Nice work.
Bit late to this, but thanks for this. Oddly I play in open F# a lot of the time (because I sing in F#) but had no idea that Curtis Mayfield used it. Big fan of the man.
Great choices on Joni, Nick, and Fripp! Steven stills and lee ranaldo would be super interesting for a part 2
Also Leo Kottke
Loved Joe's initial reaction to the Nick Drake tuning. I do the same thing.
Great sound! That Taylor and mic sound incredible!
love the riff in open Dm on "Hard Time Killing Floor Blues" you played there momentarily... awesome song
It's always interesting to hear people's take on new tunings at different skill levels. Nice Reverend.
Thanks.....great job as I am just trying to expand my understanding. Love the Fripp tuning.
You mentioned about the need to have the guitar setup for a tuning. It would have been nice to have gotten a hint of what that might entail.
Thanks! Nice stuff.
Every guitar is a little different, so you'd want to take it to a luthier and ask them about adjusting neck tension and intonation for the string gauge and tuning. Thanks for watching!
I love these minor deviations from standard: "Am9" EACGBE and "6/9" EADF#BE
Joe you are great ,your demos are super interesting,the feeling that comes through is very positive and instructive!!Keep it up!!
Thank you! Thanks for watching, more on the way!
I use a LOT of alternate tunings (mainly open tunings). But my faves are DADF#AD (Open D), DADGAD (Dadgad), CGCGCE (Open C), DADF#BE (D6/9, I think?), EADEBE (Idk if this tuning has a name, but its a tuning I picked up from Ed Sheeran), and my all time favorite, DADEAD. Idk, I just love alt tunings.
update: found a new fave: FACGCE
Wonderful. Do you have loads of music stands ?
That guitar you're playing during the Curtis Mayfield part is really nice! I love the pickguard shape
If you all want some crazy tunings, check out Tim Collis from TTNG. Partial capos, switched G and B strings, you name it.
Daniel Rossen is amazing in using alternate tunings. Especially uncommon.
Great vid!! 3 of my very fave artists...Joni, Curtis, Fripp.
Fripp's tuning makes you sound like Holdsworth without having to learn a bunch of wonky chords.
I also like Alex Lifeson's tuning for the song Hope. He uses DADAAD. Very haunting and melodic. Love it.
Thanks for sharing ! I believe you could play songs in any tuning ! Your guitar whichever you choose is like an extension of yourself as it is a veritable part of your musical life and it is obvious you have explored many uncharted journeys musically with guitar in hand through many alternate tunings ! You are an inspiration to all guitarists at any level , I can't wait to try them out ! Thanks again for waking up the guitarist that has fallen asleep in my body !
Absolutely do more of this please. 😊
Joe your lessons are really great! Thank you
You got it! Thanks for watching
so much great stuff to unpack in this. thank you. this is awesome.
one alternate tuning that I like is EAEGBE, just taking the D string and tuning it up a whole step. it's not a tuning that anybody that I know plays, I just think it's a sweet one, makes sus2/add9 voicings very accessible while still making more regular voicings a breeze :+) also minor 2nds and lydian chords like C lydian (regular Cmaj shape)
The weirdest tuning I’ve ever heard was from the Potent Pairings - Sonic Youth video, I still have no idea how they get those tunings but they sound awesome
I do different tunings allllll the time but I never touch Sonic Youth ones. Guaranteed string breaks o.o
@@eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeo You pretty much have to use custom string sets for those tunings.
@@eddievhfan1984 they set their guitars up specifically for those tunings
@@ph476 True, that's also important. But when you're using tuning with all 6 strings set to the same note and octave, for example, it's one helluva risk trying to tune thick strings up to that without breaking.
Kyle Tekaucic why would you even use bigger strings if they’re all gonna be tuned to the same not. Just get 6 high E or maybe use an E B G G G and tune them all to the same note so they feel a little thicker.
I keep a Richie Havens and a Nick Drake tuned guitar on the ready ;)
I like a variation on the open D of Joni Mitchell/Skip James: open D2 - DADEAD
You are a brave man on that guitar and your skill and understanding afford you that bravery. I'ma listen to you mo'.
I was actually expecting that "Sweet Child o' Mine" would magically turn into "Discipline" in the New Standard Tuning. :)
Great video I tend to use full step down standard D tuning, and DADGAD a lot, always nice to see alternatives and hear what they sound like
The Livingroom Busker Roy Harper and Davy Graham are all over that one...can’t go wrong there!!
Tuned to NST and damn I love it! Especially a half step down so it's B sounds awesome
Joe, congrats on a really well addressed video. Very good, thank you. The Fripp tuning takes the
prize for originality, and the Nick Drake tuning sounds so different from it's kissing cousin,
DADGAD. Drake's tuning is DADGAD, but all strings down a full step from that. One way to
describe those tunings is a sus4. DADGAD is a Dsus4 open chord, and the Drake is Csus4.
Try this one - EADGBD. It's called Fake G or Reverse Drop D, also the Memphis Minnie Tuning.
It gives you the top four strings of open G while allowing you to play regular chords, power
chords and blues shuffles. If you like to drop in and out of slide using open G, this is a real
good one. I stumbled on it years ago and thought I "invented" it. Wrong! I saw Erin Harpe (Erin
Harpe and the Delta Swingers) use it and she gave me the history. Very useful.
4:05 Hard Time Killing Floor Blues :)
Joe is such an incredible player, wow.
Great upload!
I think I fell in love with the last guitar Joe used.
What is the make of that? I too am smitten!
I think it’s a Framus Idolmaker.
Thanks! It's the 5R and I'd have to eat mac and cheese for two years if I wanted one.
That’s pretty much where I’m at too...
This is a tuning I stumbled upon a couple of months ago and have really enjoyed using every once in a while A#F#C#FA#C (my band plays in drop A, so this is pretty easy to get to from there)
Just love your videos Joe, everything about them
Nice! Do John Fahey and Robbie Basho next.
Definitely seconded.
Fahey mostly played in Skip's D minor tuning
dude, do a deep dive into all the alt tunings on Soundgarden's Superunknown. That should make for an hour-long video.
true story!
Such an amazing album..
;)
Listening to Bob Dylan's "Blood on the tracks" and Joni's Mitchell's "Both Sides Now" got me into open tunings. I agree with what the guy says at the end. Forget about the theory and just explore the tuning by the sounds. If it caresses your ears, then it's good.
Great demonstration! Thanx.
excellent demonstration, thx.
I think that open minor tuning is an excellent idea and I don't know why it isn't more common, because until today I had never given it any thought, and the more I think of it the better the idea sounds. To be able to swap between major and minor chords, and even sus chords with 1 finger and 1 or 2 frets is much easier than attempting to finger a minor chord in open major chord, because to be perfectly honest I don't know how to play a minor chord in open tuning.
I know that open minor tuning probably makes slide guitar that bit more difficult but we can't have everything can we? Besides, it's still easier than playing slide in regular tuning.
What a revelation open minor tuning is !! 😎👍
Albert Collins played exclusively in E minor tuning, from what I understand. He also
capo'd up and down so he could use that tuning in every key.
Brilliant - dont know who you are but i like you videos about tunings a lot ❤
I'd say you picked the best people to illustrate open turnings, Joni and Nic in particular. I use open C and open D on and off to get out of a playing rut. The other tuning that's good to try is open E, same intervals as D but somehow sounds and feels very different. Finally I have just set up a guitar with a Nashville string set which is the high six strings of a 12 string set, again this sounds very melodic. Great video and lovely playing.
Amazes me joni and nick never met shed have shagged him no doubt prob cheered him up as well
i’ve been tuning my guitar to CGDGCD it’s one of my favorites
CGCGCD is one of my favorites to mess around with. Then again I'm a sucker for the add9/sus2 tonality.
Yes it's actually a great one!
Great lesson, of course Open G by Keith Richards and Jimmy Page does so much! Stephen Stills has a couple of interesting tunings and Dylan on Blonde on Blonde did Drop C, low E string tuned to C.
I keep a butterscotch Tele in open G in honor of Keith Richards.
I hope you don't forget to throw away the 6th string ( like Keith ) too, haha .
butterscotch ok?
you got a flipped neck humbucker on the neck?
Never used alternative tunings but this is very cool I will explore. Would have loved to hear u explore Phil Keaggy n his tunings. Thanks
Totally different world of music, but when you started to play around with the Fripp tuning (around 10:45-ish), I immediately started to hear Sampha's 'Plastic 100 c', he even had a similar tone set on his keyboard in a couple of his live performances... Love the Nick Drake inclusion, couple of really interesting ones there (also has a couple of BEBEBE-s - what!?:D), many times he uses tunings so he can create some amazing clusters (very under-utilized thing imo). However I found the Fripp one the most beautiful tuning. Loved the math-y sounding thing at 11 mins with those amazing sounding chord!
DADGAD is pretty cool, tuned my acoustics to that lately :)
+Thee Turkey DADGAD begets the "Nick Drake" tuning. Same intervals but all strings
down one full step - CGCFGC, as opposed to DADGAD. DADGAD is relatively common
(and fun), while Nick's tuning is uncommon. Pierre Ben Susann, the great French acoustic
artist, plays only in DADGAD. There are others, also. Page used it frequently and to
great effect.
@@larrygeetar9309 DADGAD is close to Nick Drake tuning, though the B and high e strings are tuned to C and E respectively, which gives a more harmonically complex chord, rather than DADGAD which is basically tonics, 5ths and 4th stacked on top of each other giving, admittedly similar intervals to NDT, though slightly more obvious direction than NDT, as well as more places to go, hence its greater use in a wide variety of music.
Interesting idea that DADGAD begets NDT. I can certainely see why it would, though I think this might just be coincidence as Nick Drake's various tunings can be more clearly understood as attempts to voice chords in the same (quite clustered) ways his mother, Molly Drake, played on piano.
6:30 me:it is not, it is not
My brain: NEVER MEANT
I would have mentioned Kevin Shields.
Every time I think of open tunings I mainly think of Delta Blues guitarists like Robert Johnson, Blind Blake, and Ry Cooder, and Elmore James and Johnny Winter. But when it comes to other alternative tunings, the first person I think about that I believe could have been included is Johnny Rzeznik of The Goo Goo Dolls. Although most wouldn’t consider him a guitarist more than he is a singer-songwriter, I’ve read that a lot of his material had been recorded using many various and unorthodox guitar tunings, even their most famous song “Iris”. Another guitarist I believe should have been included is Jimmy Page. Songs like “The Rain Song”, “Kashmir”, “Traveling Riverside Blues”, “In My Time of Dying”, “Bron Yr Stomp” had utilized different and unorthodox open tunings
This is wonderful. Thank you!
It's nice to have something like the Roland vg-99 or later units. You can just set up different tunings on a modeled guitar patch. No guitar setup gymnastics to go through. I hear Joni used one of these so she didn't have to change guitars for every song!!! Also, I understand the modeled guitar sounds leave something to be desired, but you can just use this for experimentation till you find the tunings YOU can utilize and have another guitar setup for that.😁😎
Thanks for a wonderful video - you highlighted different artists than a lot of open tuning demos I've come across and gave some nice sound examples. Could you guys consider bringing in an expert on the incredible world of Hawaiian slack key tunings? Unless Joe or Andy is already an expert... it wouldn't entirely surprise me. Also, I have to give props here to Richie Havens, who only ever used open D tuning and made an entire beautiful career out of it.
awsome, beautifull, it opens doors for all of us! thanks a lot!
Great video
Excellent video, thank you!
great choices. Great video.
Fantastic.
seasons by chris cornell is in FFCCCF
Good video, but missed opportunity. If you're gonna talk about Joni Mitchell, I have trouble understanding associating her with a very generic, widely used open D tuning, rather than her most distinctive and most interestingly useful tuning, in Coyote for example: C G D F C E. It's amazing and rich and forces a person to think and hear differently.
Loved these - especially the Nick Drake one - thanks. How about a look at open G? Side two of Led Zeppelin III and a whole heap of Keith Richards tunes come to mind straight off...
DADFAE - Opeth in Ghost in Perdition
My fav
analysis of Sonic Youth turnings would be cool... they were the kings of open turnings !
Great work dude!
Nice video. For acoustic, I think Alex De Grassi is the king of alternative tunings.
I once brought five guitsrs on tour but I had seven tunings! At least I had them in tuning 'families', similar tunings that only require changing one string.
nice video! kinda hurt that you didn't mention Derek Trucks, Duane Allman, Elmore etc when you mention slide playing in Open D, but I get it, it's a rabbit hole of names that you'll have omitted haha
Thanks Joe!
Derek and Duane both played in open E. You may or may not realize it, but Derek plays
in open E ALL THE TIME! Even when he's not playing slide. It's how he learned. Of course,
Elmore James was the king of open D. And Duane played standard tuning when not
playing slide, even sometimes when he did but not often. Warren Haynes is total master
of standard tuned slide and you'd think it was open E, A, or G. He's awesome at it.
Joni's open D kept giving me vibes of "light and day " by the polyphonic spree.
Quick question: after how many years of guitar education would you expect a student to find this useful? After just 1.5 years music school, this sounds way above my head.
I would say that it differs from student to student. But part of the point of this lesson, is that even if the language of it is above your head, it may still be worth exploring simply for the different sounds and colors you can achieve. I encourage you to keep working on whatever you are currently working on with your instrument, and at some point, take a chance on an open tuning :)