B Standard Tuning Guitar

Free online guitar tuner from Fender. Tune your acoustic, electric or bass guitar, select from standard tuning, 12 alternate tunings or customize your own! 20 of the heaviest B standard riffs! Subscribe for more covers/originals here Check out my new band TERMINA here: https://youtu.be/n9.

  1. B Standard Tuning Guitar Notes
  2. B Minor Chord Guitar Standard Tuning

B Standard Tuning Guitar Notes

Hello! You have found the fastest and right way to tune your guitar 🎸. The tuning will be done using the free online guitar tuner, working through a microphone on your device. This tuner is suitable for acoustic and for electric guitar.

Standard Guitar String Notes

  • 1 string - E4 (the thinnest)
  • 2 string - B3
  • 3 string - G3
  • 4 string - D3
  • 5 string - A2
  • 6 string - E2

How to tune a guitar?

Press the 'Turn on' button under the tuner. Your device will ask for permission to record sound from a microphone - allow recording ⏺. So the online tuner will have the opportunity to hear the sounds of your guitar.

Play any string - the chromatic guitar tuner will show what note it is, and how accurately it is tuned. If the tuner shows a deflection, twist the peg, try to change the sound of the string. As soon as the note on the tuner turns green, you can be calm, the string sounds right πŸ‘!

Your task is to tune all the strings to the right notes. The notes for each string are shown in the list above.

Guitar tuning does not end here. After you have tuned all the strings in order from the first to the sixth (or vice versa), we recommend checking their sound in the reverse order. The fact is that the total tension of the guitar neck changes if the tension of an individual string is greatly changed. For example, if you tuned the first string, but the others were not very tight, then after setting up all the strings, the first one will be 'below' the required level.

Guitar tuning quality

B Minor Chord Guitar Standard Tuning

The analysis of the frequency of sound will allow you to fine-tune each string. The tuning quality strongly depends on the frequency response of the microphone, from external noise. Especially for rare cases when there are problems with the microphone, the page contains the sounds of the strings for tuning by ear πŸ‘‚.

How often do you need to tune the guitar

Guitar requires periodic tuning. Active play, changes in ambient temperature, humidity, long-term storage - all this can ruin the sound. As a rule, 1 hour of continuous play is enough to make it necessary to correct the sound. Even if you play a little, but have not tuned your guitar for more than a week, most likely, it will require tuning.

πŸ”– Bookmark this site and tuning your guitar will no longer be a problem for you. Have a good playing!

Baritone tuning

B Tuning or B Standard Tuning is the standard tuning for a seven string guitar, where the strings are tuned B-E-A-D-G-B-E. B tuning can also be achieved on a six-string guitar, when the strings are tuned B-E-A-D-Fβ™―-B, known then as Baritone Tuning. This tuning is popular among several different types of metal bands.

The following is a list of musical groups who use this tuning on six-string or seven-string guitars:

  • Aeon (7-string guitars)
  • Aghora (7-string guitars) (on the album Aghora (album))
  • Allegaeon (7-string guitars)
  • Amaranthe (since Massive Addictive)
  • Amon Amarth (on most albums)
  • Angel Vivaldi (7-string guitars)
  • Animals as Leaders (On most of their first album, 7-string guitars)
  • Arch Enemy (On their first three albums: Black Earth, Stigmata and Burning Bridges; and a few songs from their more recent albums)
  • Arcturus on the album The Sham Mirrors
  • Attack Attack! on the album self-titled Album
  • Avatar (from Black Waltz onwards)
  • Biomechanical (7-string guitars) on the album Cannibalised
  • Black Label Society On '13 Years of Grief' from the album Stronger than Death
  • Blood Red Throne on the album Altered Genesis
  • Cannibal Corpse (7-string guitars)
  • Cavalera Conspiracy (on the album Blunt Force Trauma and some songs on the album Inflikted)
  • Carajo (B flat tuning)
  • Cathedral (on the albums Forest of Equilibrium, The Ethereal Mirror, Statik Majik, and The Garden of Unearthly Delights)
  • Celtic Frost (on 'Monotheist' and live performances during 2000s)
  • Coal Chamber (BEADGB, although some songs are dropped to A)
  • Coheed and Cambria (Key Entity Extraction II: Hollywood the Cracked, Key Entity Extraction V: Sentry the Defiant)
  • Dave Matthews Band (On 'You Never Know')
  • Decapitated (On the Blood Mantra album)
  • Divine Heresy (7-string guitars)
  • DragonForce (7-string guitars)
  • Dream Theater (7-string guitars) (used on many songs, including 'Lie', 'Caught in a Web' and 'The Mirror' from Awake; the 1994 version of 'To Live Forever'; 'A Change of Seasons'; 'Just Let Me Breathe' from Falling into Infinity; 'Scene Seven: I. The Dance of Eternity' from Metropolis Pt. 2: Scenes from a Memory, and most songs from the Twelve-step Suite)
  • Edenbridge (7-string guitars) (on some songs from their first five albums)
  • Electric Wizard on the album Dopethrone
  • Eluveitie (on many songs)
  • Emperor on the album Prometheus: The Discipline of Fire & Demise
  • Engulfed (7-string guitars)
  • Entombed (on their album Left Hand Path)
  • Fallujah (7-string guitars)
  • Fear Factory (used B on a six-string prior to Dino Cazares' 1995 switch to Ibanez, from whom he began 7-string guitars.)
  • Godflesh (used on the Godflesh EP and the Streetcleaner, Us and Them, and Hymns LPs
  • HIM (on many songs)
  • Hypocrisy (On all albums up from The Fourth Dimension until The Arrival, after which A# Standard and Drop G# are used)
  • Illdisposed (All albums up until Burn Me Wicked)
  • John Prine (on 'The Late John Garfield Blues' and 'Fish and Whistle' since 1998)
  • King's X (on the album Black Like Sunday)[1]
  • Kreator (some songs on the album 'Renewal')
  • Kyuss (some songs on Wretch (album))
  • Lacuna Coil (7-string guitars)
  • Lead Belly was rumored to use this tuning in a 12-string variation.
  • Linkin Park (BEADGB. Used on live performances of the songs 'Runaway' and 'With You' from 2003 onwards; originally recorded on standard tuned 7-string guitars)
  • Massacre (on Back from Beyond)
  • NegurΔƒ Bunget (7-string guitars)
  • Nekrogoblikon (7-string guitars)
  • Pain of Salvation (7-string guitars)
  • Pomegranate Tiger (7-string guitars)
  • Profiles in Terror (7-string guitar and 6 guitar B tuned)
  • Raintime (7 string guitars)
  • Satariel (7-string guitars)
  • Scar Symmetry (7 string guitars, on Symmetric in Design and Pitch Black Progress; have since switched to Drop A tuning)
  • Sepultura (from Roots onward)
  • Sleep (on their new single 'Leagues Beneath')
  • Spawn of Possession (6- & 7-string guitars; Jonas Bryssling plays a 6 string, while Jonas Karlsson and Christian Muenzner's parts are written for 7 strings)
  • Steve Vai (7-string guitar)
  • Sun Caged (7-string guitars)
  • Textures (7 string guitars)
  • Theory of a Deadman (on their song 'No Surprise' and recent live performances of 'Bad Girlfriend')
  • Tremonti (on the title track of the album A Dying Machine, and on live performances of songs originally recorded in C tuning)
  • Trivium (7-string guitars, on some songs from The Crusade and all songs on Shogun)
  • Type O Negative (on some songs)
  • Unearth (7-string guitars)
  • Whitechapel (7-string guitars, only on a few songs)
  • Wicked Sisters
  • Winterfylleth (also use Drop A)
  • Within Temptation (lead guitarist Ruud Jolie uses 7-string guitars, while Robert Westerholt downtunes a six-string to B)
  • Yanomamo
  • Brightside to kill (Along Journey)

See also[edit]

B Standard Tuning Guitar

References[edit]

  1. ^'Ty Tabor – Kings X – 2008'. GuitarGeek. Archived from the original on 27 August 2016. Retrieved 8 September 2016.
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