I got my new CBG done last night and I got to playing it, and man am I rusty!

Anyhow, I was going to tune to open G, but I could not get the top string to tune into G, I felt like I was going to snap it. So I went to my old, open D, so I tuned it DAD, using the top strings for a pack of six. Anyhow, when I strum the open D, on my guitar tuning app on my phone, I get A chord.  Why is that? is that because the A string is the root note? Not well rounded on music theory, so any help would be great, thanks, and if anyone can lead me to some good, one finger chords using the open D tuning, that would be awesome too. I am wanting to change up my  playing style and polish it a bit more, and mix in some sliding with some finger work.

Views: 1084

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

I knew it! And one of the first things I thought while typing that was 'Somebody's gonna say that because the frequency is doubled, that's technically a different note!" Yeah yeah yeah.

But I get yer point. I'm used to having my chain yanked.

Yeah man, I couldn't resist. I usually avoid any talk of numbers or theory when it comes to music. Especially when responding to someone just getting started. I was forced to learn this stuff at an early age by my classical/jazz piano playing mom. (Happy Mother's day in Heaven Mom) but I honestly believe you can be very happy just knowing how to tune up and where to put your fingers. No more chain yanking - I promise!

As a beginner myself, I'm liking this kinda talk, LOL.

Yup, red dots = root on the chart above. Mind you, those aren't chords, they're notes of the major scale. Several good one finger chord tutorials are out there and Glenn Watt's are excellent. Here's one
https://youtu.be/ydfH69uqJ9Q

But if you play them with one finger across the particular fret, and sound all the notes in unison, and because g2 and G3 are two different frequencies, then you have...a chord.

Never yank a yanker. :-E

I feel like I been yanked! But seriously Jerry here's another useful video. It's just a segment from Justin's full DVD but contains good stuff.

https://youtu.be/4xdtK7ic4s4

Oooo, that makes you a...yank-ee! ;-)

But seriously, Jerry, the charts show you where to put your fingers. Kinda. They don't actually show you which fingers to place where to form the chords, which is why Glenn Watt's one finger chord song vids are good for beginners.

Here's the Search results for them:

http://www.cigarboxnation.com/main/search/search?q=Glenn+Watt+one+f...

you could go to CBGitty  and get the chord chart...

https://www.cbgitty.com/gift-ideas/three-string-open-g-chord-poster...

Thank you all for being so helpful. I was just so frustrated at first because I could not find a strait answer on what strings to use for open G. Now, I know.  This is good talk.  Yes, I have history in playing stringed instruments, but I am very rusty and only learned the basic chords on a 6 string, I only later in life learned one blues scale and that was about it. I got really bored with the 6 string standard tuning and I hated it when music got so complicated, It sucked the joy out of it for me, that is why later in life I moved to cigar box guitar. To me it seemed way more simplified than a standard six string and most of the time you can get the same sounds from a box than you can a guitar. 

So to simplify things even more, someone list the note strings that will make up the open chords, chart them out like from a basic set of Ernie balls, what strings make up what tuning, or blog and paste a site that will tell us all.  Not just string gauges.  Just more of a just beginner approach. I think when most build their first CBG they are not worried about guages of strings, just what they have or can obtain and what to play. That way, with what ever they have as far as strings go, they can look at this forum post and get good guidance.   Believe it or not but walmart used to carry Ernie Balls in my brick and mortar store, but now they don't, and since I live in the armpit of the United States, I have to order strings if I need them, or drive almost an hour away to get to a music store, just to buy them.  No real music shops around here any more.

Anyhow, if anyone can list the 6 string strings by their notes and what combo will give you what tunning, that would be amazing.  Thanks again.

On a 6-string guitar, starting from the thickest/heaviest string, they are:

6th string = "Low" E

5th string = A

4th string = D

3rd string = G

2nd string = B

1st string = "High" E

But, the above is standard tuning ON A GUITAR (not a CBG). The strings though are just strings. You can take that 6 string set, in proper order of thickness, and modify the tuning any way you want. It's not set in stone.

Know this - just because you are pulling those strings from a standard 6-pack set DOES NOT mean that when you put them on your CBG that you have to tune them to what they should be tuned at on a standard guitar tuning. Once they are on your CBG, you can pick whatever CBG tuning you want - ex. GDG, AEA, EEB, CGC, etc, etc. In other words, the 6th string (Low E) can be put on a CBG and tuned to Low G!

BUT, do yourself a big favor and just start off tuning to Open G...which is Low G, D, and High G. Make it easier on yourself!

From the above standard guitar string set, if you like a lower, bluesier sound on your CBG then use:

6th as your Low G - 5th as your D - 4th as your High G

If you prefer a higher, banjo-type sound, than use:

4th as your Low G - 3rd as your D - 2nd as your High G.

You're going to have to experiment to find the sound you like. Just make sure that whatever strings you pull from the 6 string set, they are sequential....meaning, don't just randomly pull any of them...they should be ascending in thickness from the group 6/5/4, 4/3/2, 3/2/1. You can tune any of these to whatever tuning you want.

I'm just as new to all of this as you...maybe someone can come in and better explain it than me.

Maybe this will make it easier to understand:

That 6th string doesn't have to be tuned to a Low E when it is placed as the lowest string on your CBG. You can tune it to a Low G. Ignore the "notes" on the 6 string set, period. Just make sure you pull 3 strings from that set that are ascending in thickness...then tune accordingly...to whatever 3-string tuning you like.

RSS

The Essential Pages

New to Cigar Box Nation? How to Play Cigar Box GuitarsFree Plans & How to Build Cigar Box GuitarsCigar Box Guitar Building Basics

Site Sponsor

Recommended Links & Resources


Forum

crossover guitar.

Started by Timothy Hunter in Other stuff - off topic, fun stuff, whatever. Last reply by Timothy Hunter Mar 21. 11 Replies

Tune up songs

Started by Ghostbuttons in Building Secrets, Tips, Advice, Discussion. Last reply by Timothy Hunter Mar 9. 5 Replies

Duel output jacks

Started by Justin Stanchfield in Building Secrets, Tips, Advice, Discussion. Last reply by Taffy Evans Mar 8. 6 Replies

How to Get Your Own Music on Spotify

Started by Cigar Box Nation in Feature Articles. Last reply by Southern Ray Feb 21. 2 Replies

CB Bass Guitar

Started by Mi Rankin in Building Secrets, Tips, Advice, Discussion. Last reply by Justin Stanchfield Jan 27. 5 Replies

Music

© 2024   Created by Ben "C. B. Gitty" Baker.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service

\uastyle>\ud/** Scrollup **/\ud.scrollup {\ud background: url("https://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/963882636?profile=original") no-repeat scroll 0 0 transparent;\ud bottom: 25px;\ud display: inline !important;\ud height: 40px;\ud opacity: 0.3 !important;\ud position: fixed;\ud right: 30px;\ud text-indent: -9999px;\ud width: 40px;\ud z-index: 999;\ud}\ud.scrollup:hover {\ud opacity:0.99!important;\ud}\ud \uascript type="text/javascript">\ud x$(document).ready(function(){\ud x$(window).scroll(function(){\ud if (x$(this).scrollTop() > 100) {\ud x$('.scrollup').fadeIn();\ud } else {\ud x$('.scrollup').fadeOut();\ud }\ud });\ud x$('.scrollup').click(function(){\ud x$("html, body").animate({ scrollTop: 0 }, 600);\ud return false;\ud });\ud });\ud \ua!-- End Scroll Up -->