Standard tuning and alternate tuning.

Standard tuning is not the only way to tune your guitar!   You will eventually hear about this topic, so lets talk about alternate tunings today.     Although often considered a more advanced idea for guitar students and players, sometimes alternate tunings can make some things possible for people without the necessary hand strength, or with other problems with standard tuning and standard chords.   Some chord voicings are only possible with a guitar tuned otherwise than standard,  Some also find them a useful tool for compositional ideas.

Here is Wikipedia on the subject of tunings:

Guitar tunings assign pitches to the open strings of guitars. Tunings can be described by the particular pitches that are denoted by notes in Western music. By convention, the notes are ordered from lowest to highest.[1]
The phrase "guitar tuning" also refers to the adjusting of the string-pitches to their desired tuning, which is described in how-to manuals for guitarists.[2]
Standard tuning defines the string pitches as E, A, D, G, B, and E, from lowest (low E) to highest (high E). Standard tuning is used by most guitarists, and frequently used tunings can be understood as variations on standard tuning.


"Nonstandard" tunings are also called "alternative" or "alternate". Some tunings are used for particular songs by professional musicians, and may be called after the song's title. There are hundreds of such tunings, which are often minor variants of established tunings. Fewer alternative tunings are used regularly by communities of guitarists who share a musical tradition.
The hundreds of alternative tunings have been classified into a smaller number of categories: "open", both major and minor ("crossnote"), and "modal"; "dropped"; "instrumental" (based on other stringed instruments); and "regular". Modal, dropped, and many other tunings are mentioned in the supplementary list of guitar tunings.

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