Tunings/Guitar/Major Thirds (E G# C E G# C)
Guitar TuningAdvanced

Major Thirds (E G# C E G# C)

Experimental tunings break from conventional patterns. Some create dissonant or unusual intervals. Others explore microtonal music (quarter tones, non-Western scales). DADGAD, while sometimes called modal, shares experimental DNA; it creates a suspended, ambiguous harmonic space. Players like Sonic Youth and Michael Hedges have made careers exploring unconventional tunings.

experimental6 strings440 Hz

Tuner

Major Thirds (E G# C E G# C)6 strings • 440 Hz

Detected

--
Ready to tune

Target

E2

82.4 Hz

Select String

Click to select • Tap play to hear reference tone
1E282 Hz
Play
2G#2104 Hz
Play
3C3131 Hz
Play
4E3165 Hz
Play
5G#3208 Hz
Play
6C4262 Hz
Play

Ready to tune?

Click "Start Listening" and play any string. The tuner will automatically detect which string you're playing and show you how to adjust it.

Note Layout

1String 1
E2
2String 2
G#2
3String 3
C3
4String 4
E3
5String 5
G#3
6String 6
C4

Notation

E2 G#2 C3 E3 G#3 C4

How to Tune

1

Click "Start Listening"

Allow microphone access when prompted.

2

Play Each String

Auto-detect will find the string, or click to select manually.

3

Adjust Until Green

Center the needle and watch for the green "In Tune" indicator.

Tips for Experimental tunings

Be prepared for unfamiliar territory

String tension may vary significantly

Great for finding unique sounds and inspiration

Experiment with different gauge strings for unusual pitches

About experimental tunings

History & context

DADGAD was popularized by British folk guitarist Davey Graham in the 1960s. Sonic Youth defined the 80s-90s alternative scene with dozens of custom tunings. Modern fingerstyle players continue to push boundaries.

Common genres

ExperimentalNoiseAmbientAvant-gardeCelticWorld Music

Famous artists

Sonic YouthMichael HedgesNick DrakeJimmy PageDavey Graham

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