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Getting used to drop tunings

Andrew Chung

Music Theory Bragger
Nov 11, 2019
36
40
Yesterday, an Amazon order arrived with my first pedals, a Donner noise gate and the Digitech Drop—a huge thank you to those who chimed in on the thread here, by the way. Had a very fun time trying out the Drop for songs in Drop C# and Drop C, such as playing rhythm to "Hail to the King" without pitch-shifting the recording—so much fun! But what tripped me up was finding notes for some other songs I'm still working on, like one that could be played in Drop D (which I was doing), but is technically in Drop C#.

I'm going to guess I'm going to have to re-learn the fretboard to some extent for each tuning. Any tips, aside from going through the process for learning it the first time in E Standard? I really want to stick to standard notation as much as possible and stay away from simply using tab as a crutch.
 

Ed Seith

Supreme Galactic Overlord
Staff member
Legend+
  • Nov 11, 2019
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    Most guitarists - at least rock and metal guitarists - still think in terms of E or Drop D, unless they go down as far as baritone tuning (B). In other words, even if the guitar is tuned to D standard (1 whole step down), they still think of this as an E power chord:

    x
    x
    x
    2
    2
    0

    Even though sonically, it's a D. IIRC, for most its the same when they use a capo.
     
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