View Single Post
Old June 24th, 2009, 04:00 PM   #1 (permalink)
Tarnisher
Tele-Meister
 
Tarnisher's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Brooklyn
Age: 30
Posts: 401
Using a capo to shorten your scale

I was having some beers and comparing guitars with my neighbor a couple months ago. He's a very nice guy, but we come from very different musical worlds. He lives for Metal. His baby is a PRS, which he tunes down one full step. He does this to allow him to use thick strings for that extra thick metal tone, but still have maximum shredability, and to allow him to bend one and a half steps. He admired my Tele, but said he could never play it because the action was too high.

Anyway, I got thinking about this whole tuning down thing. I love the sound of thick strings on my acoustics, but I prefer the playability of mediums. I think I'd have problems with buzzing and poor tone if I just slackened down the way my neighbor does, but then I had an idea: what if I tuned down a whole step, then put the capo on the first fret? I would essentially be shortening the scale of the guitar, and taking tension off of the strings without changing pitch.

Well, I tried it, and it works pretty well. There's a little more buzzing than usual, but the playability is great, and it sounds fuller than with medium strings. Any one else ever tried this trick?
Tarnisher is offline   Reply With Quote