First off, I know little/nothing about bass guitar. Our bassist (a former classical guitarist who has never played bass before) recently picked up a 5 string bass. To my knowledge, a 5 string bass is tuned BEADG right? We need to tune it to Drop C, which I think is the low b tuned up a half step and everything else dropped a whole step. My question is should be have bought a 4 string and if this works with a 5 string, what gauge should be we using?
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tuning a 5 string bass up to drop C
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130 gauge for the "b" string on a 5 string. Not many 4 strings do well with tunings below D, (in my opinion) due to string "floppiness" or lack of tension. Unless they're made for detuning (BEAD) like the ESP/LTD DF-404 (now discontinued) or the Schecter Scorpion bass.
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tune the bass down 1 whole step...... then tune the E string down 1 more step"Now remember, things look bad and it looks like you're not gonna make it, then you gotta get mean. I mean plumb, mad-dog mean. 'Cause if you lose your head and you give up then you neither live nor win. That's just the way it is. ":JOSEY WALES
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jesus just transpose it should be that hard instead of playing the c on the low E just play it on the b on the first fret no way could you tune the whole bass down a whole step then another step on the e floppie central"slappy, slappy" bill sings, happily, as he dick slaps random people on the streets of Cleveland.
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Originally posted by HoWheels View PostWhy bother? He should have no problem playing in standard tuning (BEADG). It just means he frets the low C instead of playing open.
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Tune the bass strings from low to high G-C-G-C-F. Anything else will be a mindfuck for the bassist with the lead guitarist tuned to Drop-C.Ron is the MAN!!!!
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For bass, you'd actually want the higher tension of either fretting the notes or tuning up so the strings don't waddle about.
If the guy knows Classical, he should know where the notes are and be able to transpose.I want to depart this world the same way I arrived; screaming and covered in someone else's blood
The most human thing we can do is comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.
My Blog: http://newcenstein.com
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Originally posted by Newc View PostFor bass, you'd actually want the higher tension of either fretting the notes or tuning up so the strings don't waddle about.
If the guy knows Classical, he should know where the notes are and be able to transpose.
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To me, if the guitarist is tuned to Drop C, it stands to reason that a lot of the riffs are going to utilize riffs off of the bottom 3 strings. So even if your bassist is a super classical guitarist, you put him at a real disadvantage if he is supposed to play those riffs without the same benefit of working off of open strings. You guys seem to assume the bass is playing straight 8th notes on root chords, wheras I think when drop tunings are used the bass is ofteh playing that same riff with the guitarist.
Heavier strings will let you tune down without being too floppy, just as with guitar. Tuning higher makes it hard on the bassist and is more likely to warp the neck. It just doesn't make a lot of sense to me.Ron is the MAN!!!!
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