Anyone tune their Dobro to C6th?
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- John McConnell
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Anyone tune their Dobro to C6th?
I have just purchased a Dobro for an acoustic outing and I was wondering if I should tune it to C6th which I have a little experience with or should I go with the traditional Dobro tuning?
John McConnell
Yuba City, CA
John McConnell
Yuba City, CA
- Brad Bechtel
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WIll you be playing Hawaiian or mostly country? For most country/bluegrass music, open G will give you the sound others use.
I found that C6th tuning on my Dobro® is too weak, but that's only my opinon. Barney Isaacs made a very nice sounding CD with George Kuo called "Hawaiian Touch" using a Dobro® with C6th tuning.
Dobro® is a registered trademark of Gibson Musical Instruments.
I found that C6th tuning on my Dobro® is too weak, but that's only my opinon. Barney Isaacs made a very nice sounding CD with George Kuo called "Hawaiian Touch" using a Dobro® with C6th tuning.
Dobro® is a registered trademark of Gibson Musical Instruments.
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I have not tried C6 on a reso, but like Brad said the smaller gauge strings on a dobro will sound thin. No harm trying though.
Most 6 string reso players use open G for a good reason, it sounds great and is very versatile.
With open G you can play blues, rock, swing, jazz, bluegrass, country, etc.
All the notes are there.
Most 6 string reso players use open G for a good reason, it sounds great and is very versatile.
With open G you can play blues, rock, swing, jazz, bluegrass, country, etc.
All the notes are there.
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I use these gauged strings on my Gold Tone/Beard Squareneck Reso in C6 and it sounds great. Strings are nice and tight. They aren't as tight as a lot of Bluegrass guys in GBDGBD would like though.
.36 .30 .26 .24 .18(p) .16(p)
CEGACE
.36 .30 .26 .24 .18(p) .16(p)
CEGACE
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- Jerry Gleason
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I keep a C6 tuning on my Hound Dog Dobro. It isn't quite as loud as it is with heavier strings and the standard tuning, but I think it sounds fine. I'm not a Dobro player, so I tend to treat it as a lap steel, anyway.
Here's a video of me playing "Under the Double Eagle" on it. I post this with apologies to John Ely, whose excellent arrangement for 8 string electric steel I mostly copped for this:
Under the Double Eagle (quicktime movie ~20MB or so)
Here's a video of me playing "Under the Double Eagle" on it. I post this with apologies to John Ely, whose excellent arrangement for 8 string electric steel I mostly copped for this:
Under the Double Eagle (quicktime movie ~20MB or so)
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I've just started using open G tuning on lap steel again after mostly playing C6th and/or open D tunings. The Martin Bluegrass resophonic guitar strings (nickel wound, .016 to .059) work just great, as do the Asher lap steel strings. Any set of reasonably heavy nickel wound strings should do fine.
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- Dom Franco
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I have my resonator tuned to A6th. With pretty heavy gauge strings, it is amazingly loud and full sounding. Every time I sit in at acoustic jam sessions, musicians are surprised by it's versatility and ask what tuning I am using.
Of course these are not strictly bluegrass songs, so for that situation I would use G6th. My strings are just right so that I can tune down 2 frets to G and still work fine.
Dom
Of course these are not strictly bluegrass songs, so for that situation I would use G6th. My strings are just right so that I can tune down 2 frets to G and still work fine.
Dom
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Thanks Roy, and Bill, for the nice comments on my video. Bill, I'll send you a PM regarding the production details so as not to divert this thread from the original topic.
The string gauges that I use ( .014, .018, .022, .026w, .030, .036) work fine for C6th (CEGACE low to high), A6th ( E on top), or B11.
G6th makes sense if you want to stick to the gauges for standard tuning.
The string gauges that I use ( .014, .018, .022, .026w, .030, .036) work fine for C6th (CEGACE low to high), A6th ( E on top), or B11.
G6th makes sense if you want to stick to the gauges for standard tuning.
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John, I have two Dobros one of which is tuned in the stadard G for bluegrass and one (my most used) is tuned to G6th for a more versatile tuning. With this you can still get the majority of your bluegrass stuff plus swing and jazzy sounding improvisations if you're into that. The tuning is (low to high) B D E G B D. What's also nice about this tuning is that you can retune two strings, the high D to E and the 3rd string G to G# and you've got an E7th tuning which is also very useful. On Chandler six string lap steel I have Keith/Scruggs banjo tuners with presets for this.......JH in Va.
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Yes, I do. In fact I converted an 8-string fretless guitar to a resonator guitar especially so that I could use C6. (Actually, the scale is longer, so I use A6, but the relationship between the strings is the same.)
http://bb.steelguitarforum.com/viewtopi ... +resonator
http://bb.steelguitarforum.com/viewtopi ... +resonator
- Roy Thomson
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I use C6th on a Resonator I built. The Brute!
I have 8 strings on it but I have a slot on the
top to put the high G there. This comes in handy
when I do lessons ...some use high G and others
use traditional "E"
Either way the sound does not bother me at all.
I have a 6 string Dobro strung Bluegrass G Major.
Here is a short clip I just did for this thread.
http://www.mediafire.com/?2kqma1wmix1
I have 8 strings on it but I have a slot on the
top to put the high G there. This comes in handy
when I do lessons ...some use high G and others
use traditional "E"
Either way the sound does not bother me at all.
I have a 6 string Dobro strung Bluegrass G Major.
Here is a short clip I just did for this thread.
http://www.mediafire.com/?2kqma1wmix1
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