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Home » piano chord generator online » Does anyone know who i can go to or what i can do to get my guitar tuned?

Does anyone know who i can go to or what i can do to get my guitar tuned?

Q. I tried every online tuner there is...and i ended up snapping my low e chord every time...i don't know what else to do i had my guitar since christmas and i cant play it cause its not tuned and it dosent sound right...does anyone know what i can do or who to go to? please and thanks :)

A. We use the piano to generate the note tone sounds and tune in the strings in this order: E (low), E (high), B, A, D, G.

IT IS IMPORTANT to keep going back to the string before the last to make sure it is still in tune BEFORE going on to the next as you do the procedure. So you tune E (low) then E (high) and then recheck E (low) then go on to B and then recheck E (high) and then go on to A... and so on.

If you don't have a piano, use a tuning pipe or an electronic tone generator.

It occurs to me that you may be stringing (putting a new string on the guitar) incorrectly. The Elixir (as in Elixir Nanoweb guitar strings: www.elixirstrings.com) website has a great video that will show you how to properly string the guitar.

( http://www.elixirstrings.com/products/howtostring_acoustic.html )

If the strings are improperly attached you will break them more often than if they are installed properly. We buy our strings and parts at a store called The Guitar Center.

( http://www.guitarcenter.com/Default.aspx?source=4WWRWXGT)

May be there is one near you.

The guys there are great help in buying replacement parts and they are always willing to help my daughter with the little things....like tuning the Yamaha Acoustic guitar she has. She's in high school and they take/make time to help her with what she calls the "stupid" questions she has...

good luck and great strumming!

Original Question

Where can I find a program that will reproduce any sound frequency?
Q. Is there a program (or is it possible to make a program) in which you type in a frequency (say, 440 Hz for A) and it will be played for you. And then if you typed 450 (not an actual note) it would still play the exact sound (a slightly sharp A). I'm trying to see how it would sound if instead of musical octaves being separated into 8 equal parts when creating a major scale (as in, containing 8 distinct pitches/notes), octaves had some other number of separated parts (pitches/notes). Are major scales even divided equally? Are all the frequencies between the notes in a major scale the same interval?

A. Hi!

First off a program to explore frequencies :

http://pages.globetrotter.net/roule/sa/accord.htm

Is a Java program that allows you explore frequency online.

Otherwise you could use a sound editing suite. I have MAGIX MP3 maker and I can create an MP3 by adding add simple frequencies, together. like 1 second of 440Hz, 1 sec of 500Hz, etc.,

Your question about major scales is more complicated. How to divide the octave into parts to make a scale is a question that has been debated for 2000 years! Pythagoros, the famous triangle man, was one of the first people to start on it,

A major scale is not evenly divided.

Imagine a piano keyboard. As we play up a C major scale, we will just use the white keys. So from C to D skips a black key. So that interval is a Tone. From D to E skips D#, so that interval is a tone. Then from E to F, there is no black key, so that is only a semitone.

So the way a major scale is divided is T-T-sT-T-T-T-sT

If you now play it and listen carefully, you will hear that the major scale is not equal divided. It is just that we are so conditioned to listening to music in the major key that we just don't hear it, unless we listen carefully.

Now, next, what frequencies will you need to put into your tone generator to generate a major scale.

So if A is at 440Hz
A the octave above is twice the frequency = 880Hz

(This is always the case you always go up an octave by doubling the frequency)

Now the 'modern' way of dividing this frequency range is called equal temperament. It is called equal temperament because every semitone is the exact same ratio of frequencies. Knowing this we can mathematically work out exactly what the frequencies need to.

There are 12 semitone steps in an octave. An octave doubles the frequency, so the ratio between a frequency of a note and that of the semitone above needs to be the 12 root of 2! (1.0535)

So we can write out the frequency for an a major scale, using equal temperament.

NoteIntervalFrequency
A440.0Hz
BT493.9Hz
C#T554.4Hz
DST587.3Hz
ET659.3Hz
F#T740.0Hz
G#T830.6Hz
A'ST880.0Hz

Equal temperament is very useful, because it means that a piano can be a transposing instrument, that means you can play any key signature equally on it. And the chords you make on it will sound equally good in any key.

There is a disadvantage though. There are some particular ratios of frequencies that sound very good together, there are very pure harmonies.

For example a pure fifth, the interval between A and E for example, if it was tuned exactly would have the exact geometric ratio of 3:2 or a ratio of 1.5.

So if we tuned our piano this way to give this very pretty 5th, E should be 440*1.5 = 660Hz. But our equal system has put it at 659.3. Very close but not a perfect interval. The fourth is even worse. That is why some people say the equal temperament is equally out of tune :)

You look up more on temperament on sites like :

http://www.terryblackburn.us/music/temperament/stoess.htm

Hope this has been some help. But the subject you are just entering is quite complicated, but fascinating.

Original Question




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Title : Does anyone know who i can go to or what i can do to get my guitar tuned?
Description : Q. I tried every online tuner there is...and i ended up snapping my low e chord every time...i don't know what else to do i had my guit...

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