@Kane The Nerd , @bubbs , and @Jayce ledet all of their songs are in G# Standard, not Drop G#. Confusing at times, yes, but just incase yall didn't figure it out
E Standard to Drop B is all you can go for on a six string, unless you have a bartone guitar, but the catch to bartone is that you can only go from E Standard to Drop A. A 7 String in "Standard Tuning" is B E A D G B E. It has low open B string to go with other normal guitar strings.
How do you turn to drop g#? When I do it it isn't all sharps. Noob question and I don't care. I'm legitamently asking. And I supposed to just tune 16 cents sharp on everything?
Mendozer01 I'm saying, when I do that not all my notes are sharp. I was wondering if I'm using the wrong hertz setting on my tuner or if people just tune to drop g and tune as close to being sharp without tuning to the next note. I tune to 440 hz.
Aaron Morgan 440 hz man. Some of the notes on the tuner might read flat. The tuning Ab Eb Ab Db Gb Bb Eb. Its the same thing as G# seven string tuning. This is only for seven string this will be different for a six string mainly in the high B string.
@@AaronMorgan666 bruh the "next note" is what you want to be tuning to, thats G# also known as Ab Youre not literally supposed to be playing a sharp note lol
@@ilikeheavymuzic135 I just accepted that ppl like to call the notes whatever they want to call them for dumb reasons. Like I've heard/seen ppl call F# Gb, C# Db. I know how drop tuning works I was just confused on why ppl make up notes just so it looks good. Sounds dumb on their part but whatever. Like for example drop G# or "Ab" is actually G# Eb G# C# F# Bb Eb.