Tunings/Ukulele/Ukulele Low G (G C E A)
Ukulele TuningBeginner

Ukulele Low G (G C E A)

Downtuned tunings lower all six strings by the same interval. Half-step down (Eb tuning) is popular among blues and classic rock players; it reduces string tension slightly and darkens the tone. Full-step down (D standard) is common in metal. The advantage of downtuned over drop tunings is that all your chord shapes remain the same; everything sounds lower.

downtuned4 strings440 Hz

Tuner

Ukulele Low G (G C E A)4 strings • 440 Hz

Detected

--
Ready to tune

Target

G3

196.0 Hz

Select String

Click to select • Tap play to hear reference tone
1G3196 Hz
Play
2C4262 Hz
Play
3E4330 Hz
Play
4A4440 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
G3
2String 2
C4
3String 3
E4
4String 4
A4

Notation

G3 C4 E4 A4

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 Downtuned tunings

Expect looser string tension, consider heavier gauge strings

Chord shapes stay the same, everything sounds lower

Recheck intonation if you tune down significantly

Popular for matching lower vocal ranges

About downtuned tunings

History & context

Eb tuning became a standard for many blues and rock players in the 1960s-70s, with Hendrix and SRV helping popularize the slightly slinkier feel.

Common genres

BluesClassic RockMetalGrunge

Famous artists

Jimi HendrixStevie Ray VaughanGuns N' RosesAlice in Chains

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