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John Schjolberg
From: Minnesota, USA
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Posted 10 May 2007 5:29 am
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Last edited by John Schjolberg on 24 Sep 2009 10:05 am; edited 2 times in total |
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John Dahms
From: Perkasie, Pennsylvania, USA
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Posted 10 May 2007 6:26 am
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It is still a very popular tuning though not with contemporary steel players. It is probably the most used tuning by bottleneck players (tuned down 1 whole step to DGDGBD because scale lenth is longer and tension is greater with longer scale). Since I started with that tuning it has always been my point of reference. The intervals on the top 3 strings (1,3,5) are the same as high C6 or A6 so there is something in common there. |
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Danny James
From: Summerfield Florida USA
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Posted 10 May 2007 6:35 am
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I play that tuning sometimes.
I still use it on some hawaiian & classic country songs.
I built a lapsteel guitar that I designed & built a changer into. It has four different tunings. The old hawaiian Amaj. low bass tuning you mention is one of them.
The other tunings are E,--A6th,--& C6th. |
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George Keoki Lake
From: Edmonton, AB., Canada
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Posted 10 May 2007 8:47 pm
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There are still many steelers who enjoy the A Major Tuning...however, most adjust to A6th. FYI: In the early days, (up to around 1942), if you popped into any music store seeking a folio method to learn the Hawaiian Steel Guitar, the ONLY tuning available was the A Major. Nick Manoloff, Kamiki, Wm. S Smith, et al were hot sellers. O'ahu and Bronson and others commenced publishing folios for C#m and E7th during the mid-forties. Today, it is next to impossible to find ANY instruction books in any tuning in any music store...(at least around here!)
http://www3.telus.net/public/lake_r/ |
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John Schjolberg
From: Minnesota, USA
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Posted 11 May 2007 11:28 am
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Last edited by John Schjolberg on 27 Jan 2008 7:48 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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Erv Niehaus
From: Litchfield, MN, USA
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Posted 11 May 2007 1:47 pm
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All my early Hawaiian music was written for the A, high bass tuning. |
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George Keoki Lake
From: Edmonton, AB., Canada
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Posted 11 May 2007 6:15 pm
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"So would you guess that most of the artists on those vintage Hawaiian steel masters CDs are using the low bass A tuning?"
Not necessarily. All depending upon the age of the original recording....ie, very old stuff recorded in the 1920 era, (usually 2 guitars), were probably in the A Major tuning. To my limited knowledge, (also feeble), Sol Ho'opi'i pioneered the C#m during the jazz era.
http://www3.telus.net/public/lake_r/ |
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