I use Drop D and DadGad and open D major tuning a lot.

I really recommend open major and open minor chord tunings, and creating your own versions of these.

The thing to do with open tunings, in my view is to find patterns that are moveable that sound interesting to you and are different than the usual cowboy chords and cowboy licks. For example, the use of open strings which are allowed to resonate while you form a three fret chord on three of the six strings, leaving up to three of the other strings to be played open, in any order you like, is incredibly fun and can yield some really interesting textures.

There are many stringed instruments in the world that have drone strings, so why shouldn't some guitar styles involve drone strings. For any piece where the home 1 chord is your six open strings, you can spice up the 1 chord with any number of voicings of chords that are not available to any human guitarist in ordinary tunings.

This guy is doing some pretty basic stuff and I like this type of lick, but I feel like something is off in the audio recording of his guitar. Maybe it's just that it's a tiny parlour guitar and I'm playing a dreadnought sigma .... But these are the same licks I'm playing and they are positively thunderous here with my big dread.

Start with Droup D which is only one string out of standard tuning and enjoy that big fat 1 chord in your blues in D. Then go all the way to drop D and try some fingerstyle and maybe some day, some slide guitar in open D.


Last edited by Warren P; 10/16/23 10:03 AM.

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