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| The Art of Slide Guitar This is the place to discuss and ask questions about anything related to Slide Guitar. |
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How to Play Slide Guitar in Standard/Dropped-D DVD by Kirk Lorange
If you really want to spice up your playing, slip a slide over your pinkie and add it to your musical vocabulary. There's no need to re-tune your guitar to an open tuning, just stay in standard or lower that bass string down to D. Kirk shows you how in this 70 minute DVD, talking and playing you through the basics, vibrato, muting, playing single note lines, finding all the chord flavors (they're all there!) and mixing it all into one very neat hybrid style of playing guitar. To order or to find out more, click here. |
Click on the screenshot for
an excerpt from the DVD |

August 18th, 2005
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Site Founder
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Join Date: Jan 2004
Last Online: 2 Hours Ago 01:24 AM
Location: Tamborine Mountain, Australia
Posts: 3,049
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The thing about standard tuning ...
I've been plugging away at my How to play Slide in Standard tuning DVD ... it struck me why I love it so much: Standard is in fact a bunch of open tunings all rolled into one; the 2-3-4 stringset is major; the 1-2-3 stringset is minor, major 7th and 9th; the 2-3-4-5 stringset is 11th; the 1-2-3-4 stringset is open minor 7th; the 3-4-5 strinset is sus4 ... drop the low E to D and you've got a maj5 chord on stringset 4-5-6. They may not be six strings wide, but who says they have to be?
Back to work!
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August 18th, 2005
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Newcomer
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Join Date: Jun 2005
Last Online: June 7th, 2006 09:39 AM
Location: Memphis
Posts: 48
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excellent point!
I guess you could mess someone up telling them that "yeah, I play slide guitar in open A11th...."
Are you working on a new instructional DVD?
I'm getting ready to do one myself on slide in standard tuning with behind the slide technique.
grace & peace & cool tones,
Randy
"Impossible" is just someone else's opinion.... its a dare, not a fact.
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August 18th, 2005
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Site Founder
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Join Date: Jan 2004
Last Online: 2 Hours Ago 01:24 AM
Location: Tamborine Mountain, Australia
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Yes randy_mc, I'm well into it now. Big, big job.
Kirk
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August 19th, 2005
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Last Online: June 7th, 2006 09:39 AM
Location: Memphis
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Good luck with it!
I'll be looking forward to checking it out.
Are you back in Australia now?
RHM
"Impossible" is just someone else's opinion.... its a dare, not a fact.
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August 25th, 2005
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Last Online: August 25th, 2005 11:42 PM
Location: Colonia NJ
Posts: 57
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Yea, I've been playing is standard more and more lately.
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August 26th, 2005
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Site Founder
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Location: Tamborine Mountain, Australia
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by randy_mc
Are you back in Australia now?
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Yes Randy, been back since May 16 ... it's like I never left now!
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September 1st, 2005
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Last Online: 3 Weeks Ago 05:19 PM
Location: Russia
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Good luck, Kirk!
We all look forward to this DVD 
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November 16th, 2005
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Member
Playing guitar for over 10 years.
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Last Online: 3 Weeks Ago 02:59 PM
Location: Wixom, Michigan, USA
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No Doubt 
six strings bangin' on a board, (makes it sound simple)
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December 15th, 2005
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Last Online: 3 Weeks Ago 02:59 PM
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Kirk,
I hope all is well down under. I'm here up top and freezing with too much snow. Is there any new word about your upcoming DVD?
thanks again for hosting this forum
Jourdan
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December 18th, 2005
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Working on it right now, Jourdan.
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January 21st, 2007
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The thing about standard tuning or drop D is as mentioned before, you don't loose your mental fret board map. I've had the DVD now for some weeks and I cant tell you what an eye opener it is. The chords section is a real treat. I'm now playing with the different voicings of chords.
When you standard/drop d tuners are sliding around, do you visualize the chord when your playing it (like the chord forms for specific string sets Kirk listed above) ?
can you re-learn songs from open tunings and get the same tone, or does that "natural" chorus effect get lost in standard tuning? I've been hot on the trail of some more ragtime tunes but many are in open tunings and there again I'm lost. With more practice I'm sure I could find the "lined up" chords to play the songs but the phrase by phrase licks will they work out the same? Mainly, I was listening to Harlem Slims stuff and Bill Broonzy
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January 30th, 2007
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Playing guitar for what seems like forever.
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I don't think my reply particularly addresses the idea of transposing stuff from open tuning, but your post reminds of how much open tuning has really thrilled me over the years. However, I think there are not too many guitarists including myself out there who have moved over to open tuning and play all their stuff in all keys in one open tuning. So the open tuning tends to quickly sound much the same from song to song and even with a capo, the properties are much the same. Nevertheless, I have to say that open G or D or Dadgad are great tunings and have a warmth to them that is more difficult to get out of standard.
I think Pierre Bensusan lives in one open tuning and can play in any key in open tuning, but I don't know anyone else who does. Sonny Landreth plays almost exclusively in open tuning but he uses a lot of different tunings - and he is an awesome slide player.
I like Kirk's approach because he not only teaches us to play in regular tuning, he shows that slide in regular tuning when played right can sound awfully like an open tuned guitar. I believe that muting the strings is not only good for a clean sound, it actually improves tone 150% -- gives it a richness one cannot get if not muting. I have no idea about the musical physics of what happens when we mute out the other strings, but maybe if the pickups are only dealing with essentially one or two strings at a time, then we get that nice fat slide sound? I think also that being able to isolate single strings really helps us focus on vibrato -- at first Kirk's muting style in standard slowed me down a lot, and I am still a long way from being to play slide in any way fast, but the slowing down process has allowed me to really appreciate the quality of the sound and to really explore the range of tonal possibilities a little more.
Anyway I am off on a ramble here....
Thanks
Bearz
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February 26th, 2007
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very interesting thread..
part of the problem as I see it regarding tuning open or standard, or a combination of the two  is that some songs...IF they are to be played accurately require the specific
tuning they were written in..
Now, I know that sounds stoopit...but an example would be most of Page's work-and his
'secret' open tunings...HA HA
More specifically, (i am going to have trouble describing this, because I lack the training and vocabulary that goes with the training) on slide songs that use 'fram' notes
(Kirk does this quite a bit) like a lead solo riff, cannot be dupicated in any other tuning.
So, my point is..
If I want to play Done Somebody Wrong exactly like Skydog, I will have to be tuned to open E or I won't be able to use the same finger style (fram notes) although I can find the notes..(if I try hard enough) somewhere...ha ha.. but when it comes time for sustain, or a change..I won't be in the right position, etc. to pull it off.
I don't spend much time trying to duplicate songs, so much as learning how the sound was made that made the song enjoyable. That is where the frustration can be found for me, because sometimes the only way to duplicate the sound is to duplicate the tuning.
Sonny's song "Orphan's of the Motherland" is an example of Sonny's D tuning, that has to be followed to duplicate the riffs. The song can't be played in E or A44
very interesting thread
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February 26th, 2007
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Site Founder
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You're right, of course, csason ... if you want to duplicate a slide tune originally played in an open tuning, you're going to play it in that tuning. You'd probably be able to get a lot of the details right in another tuning, but not all . But, why bother duplicating someone else's rendition? They've already done it! 
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February 26th, 2007
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Member
Playing guitar for over 10 years.
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Last Online: 4 Days Ago 02:24 PM
Location: Florida
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by Kirk Lorange
But, why bother duplicating someone else's rendition? They've already done it! 
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no doubt.. Kirk..
I am so new here.. I am the sort of musician who has spent more time fooling with cool noises, and putting them together for personal enjoyment... than the sort who
has a better understanding of the notes, etc. I guess you'd say the only reason I learn technique or form from replicating someone else would be to incorporate the ability to make the sound(s) into other music..
At some point though..my lack of 'knowing' where I am, or 'what' I am playing..becomes a handicap.
I have a question..(probably should use the search function)
I call dropped D tuning
where the guitar is tuned to open D
and the low E string is tuned to low D
is that correct ?
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How to Play Slide Guitar in Standard/Dropped-D DVD by Kirk Lorange
If you really want to spice up your playing, slip a slide over your pinkie and add it to your musical vocabulary. There's no need to re-tune your guitar to an open tuning, just stay in standard or lower that bass string down to D. Kirk shows you how in this 70 minute DVD, talking and playing you through the basics, vibrato, muting, playing single note lines, finding all the chord flavors (they're all there!) and mixing it all into one very neat hybrid style of playing guitar. To order or to find out more, click here. |
Click on the screenshot for
an excerpt from the DVD |
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