Explore alternate tunings
A guide to alternate tunings and partial capos, with song examples and playlists
Alternate tunings open up all sorts of new territory on guitar—and partial capos, which hold down some strings and leave others open, offer a way to explore similar sounds without even retuning.
Here’s a guide to common tunings (including lowered versions of standard tuning) and partial capo setups, with song examples and Spotify playlists. I’ve also included lists of my own songs and arrangements released on albums, singles, and videos, with links to where you can hear the songs.
See Beyond Strumming for intro lessons on several tunings (dropped D, G6, dropped C) as well as using a five-string partial capo.
The Guitar Sessions series includes video lessons on open D, open G, DADGAD, partial capos, and more.
The Homespun video How to Learn Songs from Recordings includes an extended section on learning to identify alternate tunings by ear.
Songs with alternate tunings
Songs in dropped D (D A D G B E)
Dropped D is the first stop on the journey into alternate tunings, heard in all styles of guitar music. I use it extensively in both original songs and arrangements, and in many keys aside from D.
Teach Your Children / Graham Nash
Country Road / James Taylor
Fishin’ Blues / Taj Mahal
Embryonic Journey / Jorma Kaukonen
Wondering Where the Lions Are / Bruce Cockburn
Daughters / John Mayer
Harvest Moon / Neil Young
The Entertainer / Chet Atkins
Dear Prudence / Beatles
Living in the Country / Pete Seeger
Black Waterside / Bert Jansch
Never Going Back Again / Fleetwood Mac (capo 4)
Everlong / Foo Fighters
Something in the Way / Nirvana (lowered a half step, to C# G# C# F# B D#)
JPR originals
Almost There (capo 3)
The Day After Yesterday (capo 4)
Hippie Hair (for the First Time) (capo 3)
Only One (capo 7)
Turn Away (partial capo 2, strings 1–5)
JPR arrangements
Angel from Montgomery / John Prine (capo 5)
Angels We Have Heard on High / Traditional
Brokedown Palace / Grateful Dead (capo 3)
Deep Elem Blues / traditional/Grateful Dead
If I Had the World to Give / Grateful Dead (capo 5)
Lady Madonna / Beatles
New Speedway Boogie / Grateful Dead
O Holy Night / Adolphe Adam
Old Brown Shoe / Beatles (capo 2)
Slow Burn / Kacey Musgraves (capo 7)
Stella Blue / Grateful Dead
Teach Your Children / Graham Nash
Touch of Grey / Grateful Dead (capo 4)
You Really Got Me / Kinks (capo 5)
Songs in double dropped D (D A D G B D)
Lower the first and sixth strings to D for an even bigger D drone sound. Double dropped D, aka D modal, is a favorite tuning of Neil Young.
Going to California / Led Zeppelin
Black Water / Doobie Brothers
Cinnamon Girl / Neil Young
Ohio / Neil Young
One of These Days / Neil Young
Ballad of Hollis Brown / Bob Dylan (capo 1)
The End / The Doors
The Chain / Fleetwood Mac (capo 2)
Bryter Layter / Nick Drake (capo 3)
Free Man in Paris / Joni Mitchell
Andrew York / Sunburst
Running Blind / Michael Hedges
Satellite / Elliott Smith
Bluebird / Buffalo Springfield
Black Queen / Stephen Stills (lowered one whole step to C G C F A C)
Let the Bad Air Out / Bruce Cockburn
Song for George / Eric Johnson
JPR arrangements
The Boxer / Paul Simon (capo 4)
Songs in DADGAD
DADGAD is a staple of Celtic guitar but also heard in other styles, often with a bluesy flavor. It gives you lots of opportunities to play octaves, since three strings are tuned to D and two are tuned to A.
See this video lesson introducing DADGAD.
Black Mountain Side / Led Zeppelin
Kashmir / Led Zeppelin
Ragamuffin / Michael Hedges
Santa Monica / Pierre Bensusan
Strong Chemistry / David Wilcox
Travis / Béla Fleck, Edgar Meyer, Mike Marshall (capo 5)
Mirage / Alex de Grassi
Blind Mary / Larry Campbell
Tango / Patty Larkin (capo 2)
JPR originals and arrangements
Till I’m Alone with You / JPR
Bird Song / Grateful Dead*
Cassidy / Grateful Dead*
Wish You Were Here / Pink Floyd (capo 2)*
*All of these arrangements can also be played with an Esus partial capo setup in standard tuning.
Songs in open D (D A D F# A D)
Open D gives you a D major chord on the open strings and, naturally enough, lends itself to playing in D major. It’s also one of the most common slide guitar tunings, along with open G.
For an introduction to open D, see this video lesson teaching basic shapes and how to play Mumford and Sons’ “The Cave.”
This list also includes songs in open E (E B E G# B E), which has the same intervals as open D one step higher. You can match open E by tuning to open D and adding a capo at the second fret.
The Cave / Mumford and Sons (capo 2)
Prayer in Open D / Emmylou Harris
Guitar Peace / Billy Strings
Little Martha / Allman Brothers (open E)
Big Yellow Taxi / Joni Mitchell (open E)
Both Sides Now / Joni Mitchell (open E)
Alive in the World / Jackson Browne
Paris, Texas / Ry Cooder
Center Stage / Indigo Girls
Bella Donna / Peppino D’Agostino
Songs in open G (D G D G B D)
Open G gives you a G major chord on the open strings, with the fifth (D) on the bottom rather than the root. See this video lesson introducing the tuning and teaching how to play “Wild Horses.”
The Circle Game / Joni Mitchell (capo 4)
Wild Horses / Rolling Stones (Keith Richards part, with sixth string removed)
Water Song / Jorma Kaukonen
A Pirate Looks at Forty / Jimmy Buffett
Arthur McBride / Paul Brady
Steamboat Gwine ’Round de Bend / John Fahey
Penny for Your Thoughts / Peter Frampton
Daughter / Pearl Jam
Vaseline Machine Gun / Leo Kottke (tuned down two whole steps to Bb)
JPR arrangements
Quite Early Morning / Pete Seeger
Wild Horses / Rolling Stones
Songs in lowered standard tuning
Lowering all the strings by a half step, a whole step, or more creates a dramatically different guitar sound without your needing to adapt your fingerings, since the intervals between open strings are the same as in standard tuning.
In this list, Eb standard means all the strings are tuned down a half step, to Eb Ab Db Gb Bb Eb. D standard is a half step lower (D G C F A D), and C standard is a whole step further (C F Bb Eb G C).
Yesterday / Beatles (D standard)
Across the Universe / Beatles (Eb standard)
The Boxer / Simon and Garfunkel (Eb standard, Simon guitar part)
Fortunate Son / Creedence Clearwater Revival (D standard)
Proud Mary / Creedence Clearwater Revival (D standard)
Like Fire / Joan Armatrading (D standard)
Waiting on an Angel / Ben Harper (D standard)
Say Yes / Elliott Smith (D standard)
Life According to Rachael / Madison Cunningham (C standard)
Songs in other tunings
Some additional tunings I’ve used in my original songs and arrangements.
G6 (D G D G B E)
Bones / JPR
Silent Night / Franz Gruber
C A D G B E
Dear Prudence / Beatles (partial capo 5, strings 1–5)
Dropped C (C G D G B E)
Notably, this is also the tuning Richard Thompson uses for “1952 Vincent Black Lightning” (capo 3).
Higher Ground / Stevie Wonder (capo 4)
My Bad / JPR
C G D G B D
Within You Without You / Beatles (partial capo 5, strings 1–5)
E G D G B E
Wasting Time No More / JPR
Partial capos
Partial capos hold down some of the strings and leave others open, and they can give you an alternate-tuning-type sound without your having to actually retune your strings.
Below are some songs that use five-string and three-string partial capos, the most common types.
Songs with five-string capo
The most common use of the five-string capo covers strings 1–5 at the second fret. This is sometimes called a dropped-D capo, because with the sixth string open, you get a sound very similar to dropped D, except a step higher (sounding in E).
You can buy a capo especially made for this use, but you can also try it out with any standard capo that doesn’t wrap around the neck. Just place it slightly off center to leave one string open.
Roving Gambler / Harvey Reid and Joyce Anderson (partial capo 2, strings 1–5)
Turn Away / JPR (dropped-D tuning; partial capo 2, strings 1–5)
Other JPR arrangements
He’s Gone / Grateful Dead (partial capo 2, strings 1–5)
Dear Prudence / Beatles (sixth string to C; partial capo 5, strings 1–5)
Within You Without You / Beatles (tuning C G D G B D; partial capo 5, strings 1–5)
Songs with three-string capo
The most common uses of the three-string capo are covering strings 3–5 at the second fret (holding down an Esus4 chord shape), and covering strings 2–4 at the second fret (holding down an A chord shape).
Jerusalem / Dan Bern (capo 2, strings 2–4)
Fly / JPR (capo 2, strings 2–4)
Missed the Show / Phil Henry (capo 2, strings 3–5)
Cassidy / JPR (capo 2, strings 3–5)
What I Never Said / JPR (D standard tuning; capo 2, strings 3–5)
Other JPR arrangements
Attics of My Life / Grateful Dead (partial capo 2, strings 3–5)
River / Joni Mitchell (partial capo 2, strings 3–5)