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2torial #0853:
Learn2 Tune a Guitar

Tune it again, Sam--before I wrap that guitar
around your neck!
It's true--you can play a lot of great music
without knowing how to tune a guitar. But guitars
naturally go out of tune as you play them for a
while. And if your guitar-tuning friend isn't
around when your guitar starts to go sour, you're
stuck! It doesn't matter how much great music
you've mastered--it'll sound like madness and
confusion on an out-of-tune guitar.
Fortunately for beginning guitar players, guitar
tuning is a pretty easy skill to master. And it'll
improve your ear (your listening skills) which will
become increasingly important as you progress with
the guitar.
Note: This 2torial is for acoustic and electric
guitars, except those electrics with Floyd Rose
whammy bars, in which case you're on your own.

What are notes in tune? No notes are
actually wrong--they just might not work together
for a particular instrument or style of music.
Classical Indian musicians play notes that are
bizzarely out of tune compared to Western music;
yet those notes are entirely correct within that
tradition.
With the guitar, in tune means that all
strings have the proper tension in relation to one
another. The proper tension produces the correct
pitches, or sounds. These pitches sound good when
the relationships are correct, and they sound
dissonant (noisy and disorderly) when they're not.
Understand the fretboard
You probably have one of three types of guitars:
a standard steel-stringed folk guitar, a
nylon-stringed classical guitar, or some variety of
electric guitar.
- All of these types have six strings, and the
strings arranged in size from thickest to
thinnest, with the thickest on the top.
Confused? If you hold the guitar on your lap
horizontally, the thickest string should be
closest to the ceiling. The strings are often
numbered one to six, with six referring to the
thickest string.

- Frets are the thin strips of metal
that are inlaid on the wood of the fretboard,
and the number you have will vary a bit,
depending on your guitar. Folk guitars have
clearance (you can play notes) to 14 frets,
classical guitars to 12, and electrics have up
to 24 frets. Frets are numbered one to 12 (or
14, etc.) starting from the head-end of the
guitar neck.
- Tuning pegs: these are six small,
metal mechanisms located on the head of the
guitar (which is located at the end of the long,
skinny neck). They're responsible for changing
the tension of the strings.
Listen for the wave
Interestingly, the main skill for tuning a
guitar is to listen and identify notes that are
not in tune. By listening for the
out-of-tune notes and then adjusting the tuning
pegs, you can tune those unwanted notes out of
existence.
- What does "out of tune" sound like?
Two strings that are similar in pitch, but not
in tune, do something interesting. When two
out-of-tune notes are plucked one right after
the other, the resulting sound is wavering and
wobbly. Think of it as a siren that's yelling
"I'm out-of-tune, I'm out-of-tune!" Why this
happens is a short lesson in the physics of
sound waves, which you might not want right now,
but you should understand this image:

- Diagram A is the sound of two
out-of-tune strings. They pattern of their sound
waves don't match up, so the wavy pattern is
what results.
- Diagram B is the sound of two guitar
strings in tune and successfully playing the
same note. The sound waves match up, so there's
no interference and a smooth, solid tone
results.
Tune the 6th string
You start the tuning process with the sixth
string (the thickest one). Here you have two
options. Relative tuning is suitable for the
beginner guitarist, or for the intermediate
guitarist who's feeling a bit lazy. Concert, or
absolute tuning, is for more experienced guitarists
who are playing with other musicians, or for the
very keen beginner guitar player. Actually, concert
tuning isn't much more difficult to do, but if a
beginner should avoid taking on too many challenges
and possibly becoming frustrated.
Relative tuning
This method doesn't use an external source to
certify that, for example, the sixth string is
vibrating at exactly the right speed.
- Instead, you pick a tone that sounds and
feels good. It should be a nice deep
tone, but listen for the signs of
excessively low string tension. If a string is
too low, it'll rattle on the frets or make a
buzzing sound. If you hear that, tighten up the
tuning peg for the sixth string until you hear
the pitch rise and the buzz disappear.
- If the string is difficult to press down, or
heaven forbid, the tuning peg is difficult to
turn, you've overtightened the string and you
need to loosen the tension. If you've
overtightened the string, loosen the string
slowly or the sudden change of tension may
cause the string to break.
Concert tuning:
With concert tuning you use a separate device to
determine the absolutely correct tone for that
string, no matter what guitar you play with or
where you are in the world. Examples of such
devices are tuning forks, pitch pipes, or a piano
that is in tune.
- Let's say you're using a tuning fork.
Take a look at it and see what letter is written
on it--usually A but sometimes E. You'll be
producing a tone with the tuning fork and
matching the string to that tone. Use an A
tuning fork to tune the 5th string, or an E fork
for the sixth string.
- Strike the fork on some firm but
soft-edged surface, like your knee. (You
never want to strike a tuning fork on something
rigid like a bookshelf or a chair leg--that'll
eventually ding up the tuning fork and impair
its tone.)

- Quickly do these two actions: place
the base of tuning fork (not the forked part) on
the guitar just by the strings. You should hear
the sound of the tuning fork resonate in the
guitar. Very soon after that, play the string
that matches the pitch of the tuning fork. If
it's an A fork, you're tuning the 5th string
with it. Afterwards you'll go on to tune the 6th
string by matching it with the 5th string. If
it's an E fork, tune the 6th string, and tune
the rest of the strings as you would with
relative tuning.
- And most important! Any time you try
to match two tones (one which is correct and the
other which isn't) start the out-of-tune string
lower than the tuning fork's tone. That
is, loosen the out-of-tune string until it's
lower (much lower, if you're not sure you're
going in the right direction) than the correct
tone. You should always arrive at the right
tone from below (by tightening a string
that's too loose) and not from above (by
loosening a string that's too tight).
Tune three more strings
In this step you'll learn the pattern for tuning
the strings that will work for almost all of the
strings. The one exception, the 2nd string, is
discussed in Step 5.
- Assuming you have a good tone with the 6th
string, you're ready to begin the actual tuning
process. You're going to match the tone of the
6th with the tone of the 5th, and you'll do this
by playing the same note on each string, one
after the other. This is where you listen for
the wave--the wavering, wobbling sound tells you
that the two sound waves aren't together and
aren't in tune.
- For concert tuning: if you have an A
tuning fork, you'll fret the 6th string on the
5th fret as shown in the diagram below--but
you'll adjust the 6th string's tuning peg,
instead of the 5th string's peg. This will match
the 6th string to the 5th string.)
- Which two notes do I compare? you may
be wondering. Place your non-dominant hand's
index or middle finger on 5th fret of the 6th
string. You don't, however, put your finger
exactly on the fret--it should be just behind
the fret on the side closer to the head of the
guitar (i.e., further away from you.)

- Using your dominant hand's thumb (or
a guitar pick) play the 6th string at the 5th
fret. Very soon after that, play the 5th
string open--no fingers on any fret. Listen
to the two tones. Hear the wave? The wobbly
sound?
- Now what? Amazingly, the slightly
obscure theory in Step 2 has a very
practical application to guitar tuning. Try to
change the 5th string to match the sound of the
6th string--you can do this by playing the notes
with your dominant hand, and then very quickly
reaching over to adjust the 5th string's tuning
peg. Listen now for the speed of the wavering
sounds. If the waves seem to speed up,
you're putting the string even further out of
tune. If you hear the waves slow down,
you're getting closer to the right pitch. Once
you hear the waves slow down and gradually
disappear, you've got it. Well done!
- And most important! Any time you try
to match two tones (one which is correct and the
other which isn't) start the out-of-tune string
lower than the string that's in tune.
That is, loosen the out-of-tune string until
it's lower (much lower, if you're not sure
you're going in the right direction) than the
correct one. You should always arrive at the
right tone from below (by tightening a
string that's too loose) and not from above (by
loosening a string that's too tight).
- Repeat this process with the 4th and
3rd strings. Once the 5th string sounds good,
fret it at the 5th fret, and play the 4th string
open. Again, listen for the waves and adjust the
4th string's tuning peg to match the sounds.
Keep going to tune the 3rd string: fret the 4th
string on the 5th fret, and play the 3rd string
open, and match the sounds. You'll tune the
first string the same way: fret the 2nd string
on the first fret and playing the first string
open (but hold off on that for now).
- For concert tuning: if you have an A
tuning fork, you'll fret the 6th string on the
5th fret as shown in the diagram above--but
you'll adjust the 6th string's tuning
peg, instead of the 5th string's peg. This
will match the untuned 6th string to the tuned
5th string.)
Tune the second string
Now all hell breaks loose--prepare for your
world to turn upside-down as you try to tune the
2nd string. Actually, it's not bad at all.

- What's the difference? When you tune
the 2nd string, you have to fret the 3rd string
on the 4th fret (not the 5th, as you have been
doing), and play the second string open, and
adjust the 2nd string's tuning peg. It's that
easy. And remember--any time you try to match
two tones (one which is correct and the other
which isn't) start the out-of-tune string
lower than the string that's in tune. You
should always arrive at the right tone from
below (by tightening a string that's too
loose) and not from above (by loosening a string
that's too tight).So, loosen the out-of-tune
string until it's lower (much lower, if you're
not sure you're going in the right direction)
than the correct one.
- Listen again for the speed of the
wavering sounds. If the waves seem to speed
up, you're putting the string even further
out of tune. If you hear the waves slow
down, you're getting closer to the right
pitch. Once you hear the waves slow down and
gradually disappear, you've got it.
- The final string: Tune the first
string by fretting the 2nd string on 5th fret,
and play the first string open. Match the two
tones, and you're done.
Tune to a chord (optional)
Due to the laws of music theory and the
limitations of guitar construction, a guitar cannot
be tuned perfectly to every chord at the same time.
To tune it perfectly to one chord will make the
guitar slightly out of tune in another chord,
although not offensively so. For this reason, try
out your tuning skills in a chord that you might be
playing in the near future, or just an open chord
that you find easy to play, like the major chords
of A, C, D, E, or G.
- Choose a chord you'd like to play,
and slowly play each note successively.
- Hear any sour notes? If something
doesn't sound right, play all of the notes of
the chord again, and identify which notes are
the bad apples.
- Fix the bum notes. Play the whole
chord again, and quickly reach over with your
dominant hand (which has just strummed the
chord) to the tuning peg of the out of tune
string. Give it a quick twist down to loosen the
string, and turn it back up with the chord still
ringing. You should hear the note match with the
rest of the chord as you bring it up to the
correct pitch. If it still doesn't sound right,
repeat this action as necessary.

- Here's an alternate posture for tuning to a
chord: Push the guitar across your lap so that
the head is closer to your body. It'll be easier
to adjust the tuning peg right after you play
the chord.
-end-
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