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Why can't you tune your guitar? (2019)

2 days ago
  • #music-theory
  • #harmonics
  • #guitar-tuning
  • Prime numbers and harmonics explain why guitars can't be perfectly in tune.
  • Strings vibrate in whole lengths and subsections (halves, thirds, etc.), producing harmonics with different pitches.
  • Harmonics are useful for tuning and form the basis of Western tuning systems.
  • The first five harmonics (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) produce notes C, C (octave), G, C (2nd octave), and E.
  • Tuning systems based on harmonics (just intonation) create pure intervals but conflict when changing keys.
  • 12-tone equal temperament (12-TET) is a compromise where all intervals are slightly out of tune but consistent across keys.
  • Guitars use 12-TET, making some intervals (like fifths and thirds) slightly off from pure harmonics.
  • Alternative tuning systems (e.g., Harry Partch's 43-tone scale) explore just intonation with larger primes.
  • Blues music may use just intonation, bending 12-TET notes back to pure harmonics.
  • Guitarists struggle with tuning due to physical limitations and the inherent imperfections of 12-TET.