What is Drop D Tuning? When we use Drop D tuning, the low E string is tuned a whole step down to D. This means instead of the 6th string sound being an E, it sounds a D. It is one octave lower than the open 4th string D.
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Read More »Strings have a “memory” of their home pitch. Once your sixth string is tuned to Drop D, the string will tend to go sharp (up in pitch). Tuning up from below helps reduce this, but it still happens. So if you play a piece of music in any alternate tunings, assume that you will need to adjust your guitar tuning often. It’s all part of the game. We can see that a piece of music uses Drop D tuning in a number of ways. Most often, we see the text 6 = D, or 6 = re (another name for D) A number within a circle refers to the string number. 6 = the low e string. “Re” is another name for D. This is from the Fixed Do Solfege system (Do Re Mi etc.). Here, the E string is to be tuned to D, written “E in D” We can also see lower-than-usual notes in the music itself. When we see these impossible (in standard tuning) notes, it’s a clue we’re in a different tuning. Notes out of the usual range are a good clue we may be in Drop D tuning.
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