Thank you, Joachim! As an older player with high frequency hearing loss, I am always looking for more definitive methods of tuning. I have found that the Peterson StoboClip tuners offer a "sweetened" tuning for classical guitars (CLA) which has been a big help to me as a good starting point and for frequencies that I no longer can hear.
Certainly clip tuners can help and make tuning easier, at least for obtaining a good intonation. I don't know the tuner you mentioned: thanks for the information.
This is a great video, I agree that the guitar is extremely difficult to tune. And as we develop a very sensitive ear the slightest out of tune note can hurt. I subscribe to you and will look at your other videos
Ja, das ist schön tricky auf der Gitarre. Stimmst Du Deiner Schuhe eigentlich auch irgendwie? Gibt's da Sound-Unterschiede oder kommt es eher auf den Tanzboden an?
@@joachimgeissler614 Tanzboden und Resonanzraum ist ein Thema aber tatsächlich „stimme“ ich die Schuhe- der Sound ändert sich, je nachdem wie fest die Schrauben angezogen sind…. auch ein Thema für sich aber längst nicht so komplex wie bei Euch 🤗
As an amateur and beginner you can very well use digital tuners: they work quite fine. When your ear gets more and more trained add octaves to check the tuning, preferably using one string as main reference. ;-)
The tuner in the video does his job perfectly: it shows how two distinct notes combine to an imaginary fundamental. That's all I wanted. Thanks for your feedback anyway. Let us know what tuners you recommend and if that one gives a similar result.
Thank you for this fresh view on this old topoc! 😊
Such an old topoc, it didn't make the "i"! 😀 Thank You very much!!!
Nice explanation. I enjoyed your discussion on the tuning quirks of our beloved instrument! ☺️
Thanks! 😊
Thank you, Joachim! As an older player with high frequency hearing loss, I am always looking for more definitive methods of tuning. I have found that the Peterson StoboClip tuners offer a "sweetened" tuning for classical guitars (CLA) which has been a big help to me as a good starting point and for frequencies that I no longer can hear.
Certainly clip tuners can help and make tuning easier, at least for obtaining a good intonation. I don't know the tuner you mentioned: thanks for the information.
Yes, having more than one way to tune is very helpful.
Right! Tuning is tricky, so it's good to have an arsenal of answers to the problem. 😊
This is a great video, I agree that the guitar is extremely difficult to tune. And as we develop a very sensitive ear the slightest out of tune note can hurt. I subscribe to you and will look at your other videos
@@dalesparks7647 thank you very much! So enjoy the other videos (not all of them are in perfect tune, though... ;-) )
Sehr interessant!!
Ja, das ist schön tricky auf der Gitarre. Stimmst Du Deiner Schuhe eigentlich auch irgendwie? Gibt's da Sound-Unterschiede oder kommt es eher auf den Tanzboden an?
@@joachimgeissler614 Tanzboden und Resonanzraum ist ein Thema aber tatsächlich „stimme“ ich die Schuhe- der Sound ändert sich, je nachdem wie fest die Schrauben angezogen sind…. auch ein Thema für sich aber längst nicht so komplex wie bei Euch 🤗
Da habe ich wieder was gelernt. :-) Danke dafür.
I need to learn more , this video more difficult to understand for amateur like me
As an amateur and beginner you can very well use digital tuners: they work quite fine.
When your ear gets more and more trained add octaves to check the tuning, preferably using one string as main reference. ;-)
Why didn t you use a proper tuner instead of a phone toy?
I use my ears, actually. Old school. Tuning fork and listening. ;-)
@@joachimgeissler614 I use my ears too. But that s not what i asked. you should have used a proper clip tuner on the guitar and not that crap
The tuner in the video does his job perfectly: it shows how two distinct notes combine to an imaginary fundamental. That's all I wanted.
Thanks for your feedback anyway. Let us know what tuners you recommend and if that one gives a similar result.
@@ezst.busker Better microphone than what? Headstock tuners are based on vibration, they don t have a microphone
@@ezst.busker Is it fuck.....ask that to your car alarm