Well, I haven't tried that but I HAVE done the opposite - narrow the range of the entire guitar to about a couple of octaves from lowest to highest LOL I borrowed the Sonic Youth trick of using just 3 strings in pairs A,D,G so low to high it would be A's 36 36 D's 26 26 G's 17 17 you can tune these many many ways - go for the octave with GGDDGG or have fun with some dissonance FGCDFG you can get great single and half step apart tunings this way, and when you add just a little distortion, the ethereal sonic bliss is intoxicating!! Sorry to not be able to help with the fiths/ wide orchestration thread but I wanted to add somthing that maybe you all have not run accross in your
travels.
Marc Marshall
"I am human, I am large, I contradict myself"
.....and then some
--- On Tue, 2/24/09, Dennis Moser <sinsofmachaut@gmail.com> wrote:
From: Dennis Moser <sinsofmachaut@gmail.com> Subject: Re: Tuning guitar in fifths for wider orchestration options To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com Date: Tuesday, February 24, 2009, 6:19 PM
Per, Have just begun working in the Crafty tuning of fifths plus a third on top ... have to say that the guitar certainly seems to have more "presence" (an acoustic/electric, not my Godin xtSA!). And I have not used a custom string set, though I may be doing that in the very near future, as I would like to the get the overall tension of the "set" lower and closer to what I have on the Godin. Best, Dennis
On Tue, Feb 24, 2009 at 3:12 PM, Per Boysen <perboysen@gmail.com> wrote:
Anyone here on the list having tried tuning a guitar in fifths for wider orchestration options? Or even wider intervals? Would make sense when looping to get lower bass and higher highs. I guess you have to pick a custom string set for this.
Greetings from Sweden
Per Boysen www.boysen.se www.perboysen.com
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