Anyway, I built a 4 string tenor-style quitar, but I didn't like the high-strings and the open C tuning (cgCG) that you fall to from the default tenor tuning (CGDA, I think), so I shifted the strings to wider gauge and started to play around with an open G tuning, but then wondered if it would be possible to mimic a tenor tuning (5ths all the way across), but starting with a G root (disclosure: I have *no* music theory background, so I don't know if I'm even using the right words). I did this, and discovered that I could use all the old tenor chord shapes with the guitar tuned GDAE (I think).
My questions are these: 1) is this stupid? Does this make any sense to anyone? 2) how do I transpose from the standard tenor tuning to my modified tuning? In other words, in a standard tenor tuning a given shape produces an "E"chord; what does it produce in my modified tuning?
Did any of this make any sense to anyone? After my time on the line w/"Sylvia" regarding my new Tracfone, I have to wonder if I'm making sense to anyone....
You need to be a member of Cigar Box Nation to add comments!
Replies
Keni Lee Burgess said:
Keni Lee Burgess said:
This is a really great chart for an octave mando tuned GDAE. It is organized based on the key you are playing in, so the arrangement on the page is very handy.
www.folkofthewood.com/PDF/octavechordchart.pdf
And you can use this to get the chords if you decide to go CGDA:
http://chordfind.com/4-string/