

This comes with experience and, yes, practice.

The first and most important thing to note about tuning is to use your ear: listen to the sound of pitches that are in tune and become accustomed to the sound of pitches that are even slightly out of tune. It’s a compromise we can at the very least expect, even if it’s not something some are also willing to accept. So, fixed-pitch equal temperament is a compromise, but it allows us to play in any key relatively in tune. You can account for this of course by making those intervals sound perfectly in tune in one key (so that some chords sound glorious), but when changing keys other chords will sound. What this means practically is that, while some intervals (like octaves and unisons) will be perfectly in tune on a guitar tuned to equal temperament, other intervals (especially major and minor thirds) will be slightly out of tune (at least out of tune in terms of “pure temperament”). This means as guitarists we cannot play any pitch frequencies between one semi-tone and another (as you are able to on fretless instruments) unless we actually bend a fretted plucked string. On the guitar these semitones are all fixed pitches, each semi-tone represented by one fret. The modern baseline for the tuning of all twelve pitches in equal temperament is the pitch A at the frequency of 440Hz (typically your standard tuning fork is tuned to this frequency). Equal temperament divides pitches into twelve, mathematically equal semi-tones (or half-steps) and dates back to around the sixteenth century. The guitar is tuned with what is known as “equal temperament” (or to get more technical, “twelve-tone equal temperament”).
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This guide will help walk you through how to make tuning an easy and painless process, but because of the very structure and nature of the instrument itself you cannot expect to ever get the guitar purely in tune. The first thing to know about tuning on the guitar is that it’s actually a somewhat complex matter and it’s also not something we can do perfectly. So we’re going to take a look at how to tune the guitar, from the basics up to more advanced tuning concepts.
Us etuner to tune to e flagt full#
The most technically impressive performance, or one that is full of emotion and expression, or, even better, one that pulls off both at once, will all be let down by a badly tuned guitar. rather, this all-important technique is tuning. We’re not talking about speed, or musical expression, or stage presence. There is one technique on the guitar that is more important to master than any other, that separates good players from great players, and without which will make a stunning performance fall flat.
