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Topic: Big List of Eighty 8-String Tunings with Degrees |
Kyle Jester
From: Martinez, California
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Posted 3 Nov 2023 9:59 pm
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I spend more time building learning tools than practicing slant bar so this is a compilation of data and tools.
This forum seems to be more populated by older pros, but just in case someone finds any of this useful......
tl;dr update: All of the tools and ideas in this thread are freely available at this website I compiled them all into: SlantFinder.Pro
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CHORD/NAME TUNING ALL DEGREES UNIQUE DEGREES NOTES
A Diatonic D F F♯ G♯ A B C♯ E (4 ♭6 6 7 1 2 3 5) (1 3 5 2 ♭6 6 7) John Ely
A♯6 A♯ D F G A♯ D F G (1 3 5 6 1 3 5 6) (1 3 5 6) High 6th
A♯6 G A♯ D F G A♯ D F (6 1 3 5 6 1 3 5) (1 3 5 6) Western Swing
A11 A A C♯ E G B D F♯ (1 1 3 5 ♭7 2 4 6) (1 3 5 2 4 6 ♭7) Hanawahine 1
A11 A G C♯ E G B D F♯ (1 ♭7 3 5 ♭7 2 4 6) (1 3 5 2 4 6 ♭7) Hanawahine 2
A6 A A C♯ E F♯ A C♯ E (1 1 3 5 6 1 3 5) (1 3 5 6) Herb Remington
A6 A C♯ E F♯ A C♯ E F♯ (1 3 5 6 1 3 5 6) (1 3 5 6)
A6 C A C♯ E F♯ A C♯ E (♭3 1 3 5 6 1 3 5) (1 3 5 ♭3 6)
A6 E A C♯ E F♯ A C♯ E (5 1 3 5 6 1 3 5) (1 3 5 6) Low E
A6 F♯ A C♯ E F♯ A C♯ E (6 1 3 5 6 1 3 5) (1 3 5 6) Leon McAuliffe
A7 A C♯ E G A C♯ E G (1 3 5 ♭7 1 3 5 ♭7) (1 3 5 ♭7) Low A
A7 E G A C♯ E A C♯ E (5 ♭7 1 3 5 1 3 5) (1 3 5 ♭7) Low E
Amaj7+E9 G♯ B D F♯ A C♯ E G♯ (7 2 4 6 1 3 5 7) (1 3 5 2 4 6 7)
Amaj9/E6 A C♯ E G♯ B C♯ E G♯ (1 3 5 7 2 3 5 7) (1 3 5 2 7)
B11 A B C♯ D♯ F♯ A C♯ E (♭7 1 2 3 5 ♭7 2 4) (1 3 5 2 4 ♭7) Frank Baum
B11 B A B D♯ F♯ A C♯ E (1 ♭7 1 3 5 ♭7 2 4) (1 3 5 2 4 ♭7) Henriques
B11 B A C♯ D♯ F♯ A C♯ E (1 ♭7 2 3 5 ♭7 2 4) (1 3 5 2 4 ♭7) Drop-string A6th
B11 B F♯ B D♯ F♯ A C♯ E (1 5 1 3 5 ♭7 2 4) (1 3 5 2 4 ♭7)
B11 F♯ A B D♯ F♯ A C♯ E (5 ♭7 1 3 5 ♭7 2 4) (1 3 5 2 4 ♭7)
B6 B D♯ F♯ G♯ B D♯ F♯ G♯ (1 3 5 6 1 3 5 6) (1 3 5 6) High 6th
B6 G♯ B D♯ F♯ G♯ B D♯ F♯ (6 1 3 5 6 1 3 5) (1 3 5 6) Western Swing
C11 C G C E G A♯ D F (1 5 1 3 5 ♭7 2 4) (1 3 5 2 4 ♭7)
C13 A♯ C E G A C E G (♭7 1 3 5 6 1 3 5) (1 3 5 6 ♭7) Junior Brown
C13 C A♯ C E G A C E (1 ♭7 1 3 5 6 1 3) (1 3 5 6 ♭7) Slim Yamaguchi
C13 G A♯ C E G A C E (5 ♭7 1 3 5 6 1 3) (1 3 5 6 ♭7)
C6 A C E G A C E G (6 1 3 5 6 1 3 5) (1 3 5 6) Standard-8
C6 G A C E G A C E (5 6 1 3 5 6 1 3) (1 3 5 6)
C6+A7 A C C♯ E G A C E (6 1 ♭2 3 5 6 1 3) (1 3 5 ♭2 6) Jerry Byrd
C6+A7 B A C♯ E G A C E (7 6 ♭2 3 5 6 1 3) (1 3 5 ♭2 6 7) Joaquin - High E
C6+A7 B C♯ E G A C E G (7 ♭2 3 5 6 1 3 5) (1 3 5 ♭2 6 7) Joaquin - High G
C6+A7 b A C♯ E G A C E (7 6 ♭2 3 5 6 1 3) (1 3 5 ♭2 6 7) (hi 8 str)
C6+D9 F♯ A C E G A C E (♭5 6 1 3 5 6 1 3) (1 3 5 ♭5 6) Joaquin Murphey
C♯m11/F♯9 f♯ d♯ A♯ C♯ E G♯ C♯ E (4 2 6 1 ♭3 5 1 ♭3) (1 ♭3 5 2 4 6) Joaquin Murphey's "C♯m"
D♯6 A♯ C D♯ G A♯ C D♯ G (5 6 1 3 5 6 1 3) (1 3 5 6) Low A♯
D11 D A D F♯ A C E G (1 5 1 3 5 ♭7 2 4) (1 3 5 2 4 ♭7)
D6 A B D F♯ A B D F♯ (5 6 1 3 5 6 1 3) (1 3 5 6)
D6 F♯ A B D F♯ A B D (3 5 6 1 3 5 6 1) (1 3 5 6)
D9 D A C E F♯ A C E (1 5 ♭7 2 3 5 ♭7 2) (1 3 5 2 ♭7) John Ely
D9 D F♯ A C E F♯ A D (1 3 5 ♭7 2 3 5 1) (1 3 5 2 ♭7)
D9 F♯ A C D F♯ A C E (3 5 ♭7 1 3 5 ♭7 2) (1 3 5 2 ♭7)
D9 (no root) F♯ A C E F♯ A C E (3 5 ♭7 2 3 5 ♭7 2) (3 5 2 ♭7) Drop-string C6th
D9 (no root) F♯ A C E G A C E (3 5 ♭7 2 4 5 ♭7 2) (3 5 2 4 ♭7) Joaquin Murphey
E13 B G♯ D E G♯ B C♯ E (5 3 ♭7 1 3 5 6 1) (1 3 5 6 ♭7)
E13 D E F♯ G♯ B C♯ E G♯ (♭7 1 2 3 5 6 1 3) (1 3 5 2 6 ♭7) High G♯
E13 E B D E F♯ G♯ C♯ E (1 5 ♭7 1 2 3 6 1) (1 3 5 2 6 ♭7) C♯min9
E13 E B D E G♯ B C♯ E (1 5 ♭7 1 3 5 6 1) (1 3 5 6 ♭7) Harry Brooker
E13 E B D F♯ G♯ B C♯ E (1 5 ♭7 2 3 5 6 1) (1 3 5 2 6 ♭7) Western Swing
E13 E D E G♯ B C♯ E G♯ (1 ♭7 1 3 5 6 1 3) (1 3 5 6 ♭7) Don Helms, Little Roy Wiggins
E13 E G♯ B D E G♯ C♯ E (1 3 5 ♭7 1 3 6 1) (1 3 5 6 ♭7)
E13 E G♯ B D F♯ G♯ C♯ E (1 3 5 ♭7 2 3 6 1) (1 3 5 2 6 ♭7)
E13 E G♯ D F♯ G♯ B C♯ E (1 3 ♭7 2 3 5 6 1) (1 3 5 2 6 ♭7) Leon McAuliffe, Bobby Koefer
E13 G♯ B D E G♯ B C♯ E (3 5 ♭7 1 3 5 6 1) (1 3 5 6 ♭7) Low G♯
E13/C♯♭7 E G♯ B D E G♯ C♯ E (1 3 5 ♭7 1 3 6 1) (1 3 5 6 ♭7)
E6 B C♯ E G♯ B C♯ E G♯ (5 6 1 3 5 6 1 3) (1 3 5 6)
E6 G♯ B C♯ E G♯ B C♯ E (3 5 6 1 3 5 6 1) (1 3 5 6)
E6/Amaj9 A C♯ E G♯ B C♯ E G♯ (4 6 1 3 5 6 1 3) (1 3 5 4 6)
E7 E B D E G♯ B E G♯ (1 5 ♭7 1 3 5 1 3) (1 3 5 ♭7) Low E
E7 E G♯ B D E G♯ B E (1 3 5 ♭7 1 3 5 1) (1 3 5 ♭7) Hawaiian And Country
E7 G♯ B D E G♯ B E G♯ (3 5 ♭7 1 3 5 1 3) (1 3 5 ♭7) Low-High G♯
E7+A6 E G♯ B D F♯ A C♯ E (1 3 5 ♭7 2 4 6 1) (1 3 5 2 4 6 ♭7) Scott Martin
E9 B G♯ D E F♯ G♯ B E (5 3 ♭7 1 2 3 5 1) (1 3 5 2 ♭7)
E9 E B D E F♯ G♯ B E (1 5 ♭7 1 2 3 5 1) (1 3 5 2 ♭7)
E9 E G♯ B D F♯ G♯ B E (1 3 5 ♭7 2 3 5 1) (1 3 5 2 ♭7)
E9 G♯ B D E F♯ G♯ B E (3 5 ♭7 1 2 3 5 1) (1 3 5 2 ♭7)
Emaj13 E G♯ B D♯ F♯ B C♯ E (1 3 5 7 2 5 6 1) (1 3 5 2 6 7)
F♯13 f♯ d♯ F♯ A♯ E G♯ C♯ E (1 6 1 3 ♭7 2 5 ♭7) (1 3 5 2 4 ♭7) Herb Remington
F♯9 G♯ C♯ F♯ A♯ E G♯ C♯ E (2 5 1 3 ♭7 2 5 ♭7) (1 3 5 2 ♭7) Jerry Byrd
F6 D F A C D F A C (6 1 3 5 6 1 3 5) (1 3 5 6)
F9 F C D♯ G F A D F (1 5 ♭7 2 1 3 6 1) (1 3 5 2 6 ♭7) Kayton Roberts
Fmaj9 F A C E G A C E (1 3 5 7 2 3 5 7) (1 3 5 2 7)
G D G B D G B D G (5 1 3 5 1 3 5 1) (1 3 5)
G13 E G B D G B D F (6 1 3 5 1 3 5 ♭7) (1 3 5 6 ♭7)
G13 G B D E F B D E (1 3 5 6 ♭7 3 5 6) (1 3 5 6 ♭7)
G13 G B D E F G B D (1 3 5 6 ♭7 1 3 5) (1 3 5 6 ♭7)
G13+9/11 E G B D F A C E (6 1 3 5 ♭7 2 4 6) (1 3 5 2 4 6 ♭7)
G6 B D E G B D E G (3 5 6 1 3 5 6 1) (1 3 5 6) High G
G6 G B D E G B D E (1 3 5 6 1 3 5 6) (1 3 5 6) High 6th
GDobro/6 E G B D G B D G (6 1 3 5 1 3 5 1) (1 3 5 6)
Gmaj13 G B D F♯ A D E G (1 3 5 7 2 5 6 1) (1 3 5 2 6 7)
Gmaj7+C C G E G B D E F♯ (4 1 6 1 3 5 6 7) (1 3 5 4 6 7) Dick Sanft
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Last edited by Kyle Jester on 17 Nov 2023 9:40 am; edited 9 times in total |
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Kyle Jester
From: Martinez, California
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Posted 4 Nov 2023 10:45 am String Gauges from Jack Byrd and John Ely
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Jack's Gauges:
E 015
C# 018
C 018
B 018
A 022
G 024
F# 024
E N30
D# N34
D N34
C# N34
C N34
Bb N38
A N38
G# N56
Low C C60
LowA C65
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From this post by Jack Byrd: https://steelguitarforum.com/Forum2/HTML/003330.html
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John's Gauges:
Pitch Gauge Range My Choice Notes
A .009 to .011 .010
G#/Ab .010 to .011 .011
G .011 to .012 .012
F#/Gb .012 to .013 .013
F .013 to .015 .013
E .013 to .015 .014 Guitar High E
D#/Eb .014 to .016 .015
D .015 to .017 .016
C#/Db .016 to .018 .017
C .016 to .018 .017 Middle C
B .017 to .019 .018
Bb/A# .018 to .020 .020
A .020* to .022* .021
G#/Ab .024* to .026* .024w
G .024* to .026* .024w
F#/Gb .024w to .026w .026w
F .026w to .030w .028w
E .028w to .032w .030w
D#/Eb .028w to .032w .032w
D .032w to .036w .034w Guitar D String
C#/Db .034w to .038w .036w
C .034w to .038w .036w
B .034w to .038w .038w
Bb/A# .034w to .038w .042w
A .040w to .044w .042w
G#/Ab .042w to .046w .046w
G .044w to .048w .048w
F#/Gb .048w to .052w .052w
F .052w to .056w .054w
E .054w to .058w .056w Guitar Low E
D#/Eb .056w to .060w .058w
D .060w to .064w .060w
C#/Db .060w to .068w .064w
C .064w to .068w .068w
B .064w to .068w .068w
Bb/A# .068w to .072w .072w
A .068w to .072w .072w
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From this piece by John Ely: https://www.hawaiiansteel.com/learning/gauges.php
And finally, this was uploaded here to the forum by Bob Lee over 10 years ago:
Last edited by Kyle Jester on 4 Nov 2023 11:35 am; edited 1 time in total |
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Kyle Jester
From: Martinez, California
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Posted 4 Nov 2023 11:08 am A6 - F♯AC♯EF♯AC♯E - Fretboard w/ degrees of progression
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I wanted to make a Fretboard that showed the degrees of other chords that I might be sliding by, so I have a spreadsheet too that I will probably share at some point.
This is a screenshot of 8-string A6 tuning F♯AC♯EF♯AC♯E showing the degrees of all the progression chords and highlighting the one chord.
All of this info is based on the KEY OF A. If you have a request of a tuning and key just holler and I'll grab a screenshot for you, it's all auto-generated in a spreadsheet.
This first one assumes the 2, 3, & 6 chords are minor and shows maj7 rather than dom7....
This one assumes all chords in the song are major and includes the dom7 rather than the maj7....
Last edited by Kyle Jester on 8 Nov 2023 8:38 am; edited 2 times in total |
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Kyle Jester
From: Martinez, California
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Posted 4 Nov 2023 11:16 am Chord Structures w/ extensions
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Sticking with the key of A for continuity.
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Kyle Jester
From: Martinez, California
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Posted 4 Nov 2023 11:25 am Piano Keyboard w/ Gauges, Frequencies, & Ranges
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Turns out that MXR 10-band EQ only has 6 useful faders for guitar/steel (approx 62.5 to 2k).
The highest 2 faders on that pedal (8k & 16k) don't even show up when mapped over a piano keyboard.
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Bill McCloskey
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Posted 4 Nov 2023 5:34 pm
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Wow, tremendous amount of work and a great resource. I love my spreadsheets. |
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Landon Jarrel
From: Space
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Posted 5 Nov 2023 6:59 pm
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Fantastic! Thanks a bunch! |
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Tim Whitlock
From: Colorado, USA
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Posted 5 Nov 2023 7:38 pm
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Terrific resource! Thanks for sharing!! |
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Kyle Jester
From: Martinez, California
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Posted 6 Nov 2023 10:19 pm Auto-Generate Copedent based on Any Tuning
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Thanks for chiming in guys, much appreciated. Everyone's so nice here and it's just a goldmine of stories and info, I'm happy to donate the time/tools.
This weekend's tool is a very minimal and quick-loading webpage that will auto-generate a copedent based on your choosing of any of the 80 tunings above.
It also displays the scale degrees based on whatever key you choose.
More options/features coming to that soon.
And just below that is the big list of tunings, sortable and filterable.
HERE'S THE LINK: https://kylejester.nfshost.com/steel |
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Joe A. Roberts
From: Seoul, South Korea
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Posted 7 Nov 2023 12:10 am
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Good work! Some things I noticed:
This is listed twice:
F♯13 F♯ D♯ F♯ A♯ E G♯ C♯ E (1 6 1 3 ♭7 2 5 ♭7) (1 3 5 2 4 ♭7) Herb Remington
E13 f♯ d♯ F♯ A♯ E G♯ C♯ E (2 7 2 ♭5 1 3 6 1) (1 3 5 2 ♭5 6 ♭7) Herb Remington
and should be:
F#13 f♯ d♯ F♯ A♯ E G♯ C♯ E (1 6 1 3 ♭7 2 5 ♭7) (1 3 5 2 4 ♭7) Herb Remington
Also I continue to question the existence of this tuning as written. Are the string 8 and 7, G# and C#, respectively, low bass strings or re-entrant?
F♯9 G♯ C♯ F♯ A♯ E G♯ C♯ E (2 5 1 3 ♭7 2 5 ♭7) (1 3 5 2 ♭7) Jerry Byrd
A copedent is a diagram that shows what the pedals and knee levers do on a pedal steel. What you are calling copedents are more of a fretboard diagram.
How are the "Unique Degrees" ordered? Some seem to be ordered in line with their appearance from lowest string to highest string, then others are not.
Finally, while often disregarded by guitar players who come to the instrument, steel guitar tunings are traditionally written from the highest string to the lowest string.
This is undoubtedly the logical way to write tunings as why should one count DOWN from string 8? Why not call it string 1 then?
John Ely recognized this, and being sympathetic to both sides has a toggle has a button to toggle the string order displayed, to the users preference. |
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Kyle Jester
From: Martinez, California
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Posted 7 Nov 2023 8:57 am
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Hey thanks for the feedback.
Most of this data was sorted out with algorithms so I'm still cleaning it up by hand.
F#13 is fixed, the other deleted.
There may be another duplicate if it's a tuning know by 2 different names.
And thanks for the copedent definition, I'm so new to all this.
Looks like that F#9 tuning came from this page (not that it's correct): https://www.hawaiiansteel.com/tunings/master.php
Unique degrees are shown with 1 3 5 first, then any additions/extensions since nearly all have 1 3 5.
Interesting idea to switch the order of tunings. I went with lo to hi as that's how I've seen 90% of tunings. might add that today if it's easy enough.
EDIT/P.S.: I was able to add a checkbox to switch the order of the tuning and degrees for the tuning list, now to apply it to the dropdown fretboard part :]
Last edited by Kyle Jester on 7 Nov 2023 11:01 am; edited 2 times in total |
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Mike Harris
From: Texas, USA
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Posted 7 Nov 2023 10:40 am string order
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FWIW keyboard instruments and bowed strings instruments have gone low-to-high for centuries. Violin, viola, etc. list 4th string to 1st string. |
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Kyle Jester
From: Martinez, California
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Posted 7 Nov 2023 10:49 am
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Yeah just like guitar. I've been hearing "DADGAD" for my entire guitar playing career.
I do agree with Joe that it's confusing as hell to have strings numbered from high string to low string.
But I added an option to view the tuning list either way so all good for now. |
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Landon Jarrel
From: Space
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Posted 7 Nov 2023 11:52 am
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Regarding Joaquin Murphey's tunings, the C6maj7/A9 tuning he used beginning in 1953 was, at first "b C# E G A C E G" (7 b2 3 5 6 1 3 5) where the "b" string is pitched between the C and A (strings 3 and 4). As of now, there's a tuning which is this one but the "b" is capitalized which gives the impression of it being pitched below the low C#; I have never heard of him using it from recordings or otherwise.
Murphey used this re-entrant tuning too: "f# d# A# C# E G# C# E" which he called C#min and is technically either C#min11 or F#9. Strings 7 and 8 are the same pitches as what Remington used in the F#13 tuning discussed above.
Once Again, fantastic job on the site! |
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Tony Oresteen
From: Georgia, USA
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Posted 7 Nov 2023 12:27 pm
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Fantastic! This qualifies you for a PhD in Steel Tunings for sure!
Thank you for your research Doctor! _________________ Tony
Newnan, GA
Too many guitars, not enough time to play
'72 Sho-Bud 6139, '71 Marlen 210
'78 Fender Stringmaster Quad black
PedalMaster D8 |
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Kyle Jester
From: Martinez, California
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Posted 9 Nov 2023 9:40 am Final Product: free web tool
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Over the last week I managed to get the most useful tools from above into a simple website using PHP.
It's got:
- The fretboard visualizer tool with customizable key/degrees and highlighting, and 80 tunings to choose from.
- The chord builder grid which displays degrees and notes based on chosen key mentioned above.
- The sortable/filterable list of tunings.
- All degree colors/highlights are consistent.
- There is an option to reverse how tunings are displayed (low to high-->high to low)
- hand-coded 1-page site, no database connections, no cookies, no newsletter signup requirement.
Probably going to add:
- Second fretboard under the first one where each string is customizable to create a tuning for comparisons against known tunings in the fretboard above.
- A tool that is like: The "♭3" of the "Ⅵ" chord is the ?? of the "Ⅱ" chord :: where the site calculates the ??
https://kylejester.nfshost.com/steel/
UPDATE: All of the tools and planned options mentioned
in this thread are now freely available and functional at this website: http://www.slantfinder.pro/
(hey, the URL was $3 so what the hell)
I still plan on leaving it completely FREE into the future for learners like myself,
if it gets decent/costly traffic I'll add a donation button or something.
Cheers, k |
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