Thursday 15 December 2011

It Is Quite Simple Learn To Tune Your Guitar By Ear

By Robert Scott


Those who are new to playing the guitar are often so anxious to get started that they don't learn to tune properly. Certainly you should take the time to learn to tune your guitar by ear for many reasons. One of these is that there are times when tuners are not available. Ear tuning is actually quite simple and often times much faster too. Sometimes this type of tuning is necessary to make small adjustments quickly. It takes very little time and effort to learn.

After playing the instrument for a while, most people get pretty good at using their ear to determine whether or not a string is in tune. Of course tuning each string based on its expected tone for a given tuning can be a bit much to ask at first. Instead, getting the low E tuned is a good place to start, and most newcomers are pleased to find they can get pretty close, even without a tuner.

With the sixth string providing the proper pitch, all the other strings can be tuned relative to the sound of the string directly above it. For example, the fifth string should be an A. Picking the sixth string on the fifth fret also results in an A. This means string 5 can be tuned to the sound of string six when played five frets up.

Follow this same procedure for the fourth string. Its pitch is the D note, and it should sound the same as the fifth string played in the fifth fret when strummed open. Moving down again, the third string, when played open, is G. This is the note the fourth string produces when played on the fifth fret.

The second string, also known as B, is where the pattern changes. To play a B on this string it must be picked at the fourth fret. For standard turning this is the only time fret five isn't used.

Return to the fifth fret on the second string to produce the high E note. Tune the first string to this pitch. Next, check the first string and the sixth string to confirm they each produce E. These are the same notes, only they are separated by a single octave. If they don't ring true, make adjustments, beginning again with the sixth string and working down to the first.

Over time this method of tuning will become quite simple. When you learn to tune your guitar by ear in this way you will find getting in tune and saying in tune is fairly simple. And, since each string is relative to the same note from the fifth or fourth fret above it, the guitar will sound great even if it is not perfectly tuned as a whole.




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