2013年6月26日星期三
Playing Guitar 3 Tuning The Guitar
When I first started to play guitar, I found tuning to be the proverbial “royal
pain.” I had a difficult time with it, and thought it would keep me from
becoming a good player. You know what? The same thing happens to everyone else
who starts playing guitar.Being able to cheap nfl jerseys tune
a guitar requires that you're able to hear the subtle differences in pitch
between two different notes. You can even FEEL the difference by an oscillation
– or vibration – that's present when two notes aren't at the same pitch. These
little cues you learn the more you play and tune your guitar become very obvious
over time, and tuning becomes something that you can do quickly and easily. Of
course, there's a short stretch of time before these things become clear, but
now that you know about them, you know what to look for. Here are some
suggestions for tuning:• Take your time and relax. If you're tense or rushed,
you will get frustrated and tuning becomes more difficult.• Always bring the
string up to the pitch; never tune down to the pitch. If you tune down to the
pitch, you have extra slack behind the nut, and when you play, this gives and
you'll find yourself flat and out of tune.• Except the idea that new strings
need to stretch out before they become stable. With steel strings this takes
roughly a day; with nylon strings it can take as long as a week.The tuning
method described here is the easiest and the most commonly used. Most of us who
have played for a while use a combination of methods as well as other things we
have learned along the way. You will do the same eventually.Standard Open String
TuningOver the years, a standard developed on how the six open guitar strings
were going to be tuned relative to one another.• 6th string (and the thickest)
is tuned to E• 5th string is tuned to A• 4th string is tuned to D• 3rd string is
tuned to G• 2nd string is tuned to B• 1st string (and the thinnest) is tuned to
ENote that the two E strings are tuned two octaves apart.Notes on the
FretboardHorizontal frets are set into the fingerboard down its length and
perpendicular to the strings. These frets are spaced so that they evenly divide
the tones produced along the strings into half-steps. Some guitars have 19
frets, some 22, some even as many as 24 frets.One thing that should stick out
for you, though, is that no matter what type your guitar is, the 12th fret is
the octave. That means that the name of the note on the 12th fret is the same as
the name of the note of the open string. The 12th fret tells you when the note
names repeat, and that way, you can easily learn the notes and where they are on
the guitar. The sequence of the notes in alphabetical order is as
follows:A-[A#/Bb]-B-C-[C#/Db]-D-[D#/Eb]-E-F-[F#/Gb]-G-[G#/Ab]-AOne thing you
will want to remember is that the notes with two names - A#/Bb, for example –
are the same note. When a note has two names, the names are called enharmonic,
meaning two notes that sound the same and differ from each other only in
name.TuningThis is the method everyone learns first. It's very simple and
straightforward.• Begin with the Lo E, or 6th, string (the thickest) at or near
the correct pitch• Play the 5th fret of the Lo E string. This note is A, and is
the same pitch as the open A, or 5th, string. Match pitches.• Play the 5th fret
of the A string. This is D, and is the same pitch as the open D, or 4th, string.
Match pitches cheap
oakley sunglasses.• Play the 5th fret of the D string. This is G,
and is the same pitch as the open G, or 3rd, string. Match pitches.• Play the
4th fret of the G string. This is B, and is the same pitch as the open B, or
2nd, string. Match pitches.• Play the 5th fret of the B string. This is E, and
is the same pitch as the open Hi E, or 1st, string. Match pitches.Good luck to
you and your future guitar adventures!
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