Open D tuning
Open D tuning is an alternate guitar tuning in which the open strings form a D major chord, producing the notes D–A–D–F♯–A–D from lowest to highest string.[1][2] This configuration allows the guitar to ring out as a complete chord without fretting any strings, facilitating techniques such as slide playing and barre chords.[2][3] Historically, Open D tuning, also known as Vestapol tuning, derives its name from the 19th-century parlor guitar instrumental "The Siege of Sevastopol," composed around 1854 and inspired by the Crimean War's siege of the Ukrainian city of Sevastopol.[4] The piece, originally in open D major, popularized the tuning in Victorian-era music before it was adapted by African American blues musicians in the early 20th century, including figures like Mississippi John Hurt and Elizabeth Cotten.[4] Over time, the name evolved from "Sebastopol" to "Vestapol" through oral tradition among players, becoming a staple in Delta blues and folk traditions.[4] Open D tuning is particularly valued in blues, folk, and rock genres for its resonant, drone-like quality and ease in forming major chords by simply barring across the fretboard.[1][2] It enables straightforward slide guitar techniques, as all open strings are notes of the D major chord, supporting smooth glissandos without dissonance and open-string harmonies.[2][3] Notable examples include Elmore James's "Dust My Broom" and Joni Mitchell's "Big Yellow Taxi," showcasing its versatility across acoustic and electric styles.[1][2]Fundamentals
Tuning Configuration
Open D tuning, denoted as DADF♯AD, sets the six guitar strings from lowest pitch (sixth string) to highest (first string) to the notes D2, A2, D3, F♯3, A3, and D4, respectively.[5][6] This configuration allows the open strings to form a complete D major chord when strummed together, consisting of the root D, fifth A, and major third F♯, with additional octaves and repetitions for resonance.[1][7] The structure emphasizes the D major triad in root position, enhanced by doubled roots and fifths across the strings. The interval pattern between consecutive strings in Open D tuning is a perfect fourth (P4) from the sixth to fifth string (D2 to A2), P4 from the fifth to fourth (A2 to D3), major third (M3) from the fourth to third (D3 to F♯3), minor third (m3) from the third to second (F♯3 to A3), and P4 from the second to first (A3 to D4).[8] This sequence—corresponding to chord tones of root (1), fifth (5), root (1), third (3), fifth (5), and root (1) in D major—creates a symmetrical yet varied voicing that facilitates easy major chord formation via barre techniques.[9] Compared to standard EADGBE tuning, Open D maintains the pitches of the fifth and fourth strings unchanged while lowering the sixth string by a whole step (E2 to D2), the third by a minor second (G3 to F♯3), the second by a whole step (B3 to A3), and the first by a whole step (E4 to D4).[6] Using typical medium-gauge strings (e.g., .012–.053), this results in comparable overall tension to standard tuning on the lower strings but decreased tension on the higher strings due to the downward adjustments, which can yield a slightly looser feel for bending and slide work.[10] For visualization, the open fretboard layout in Open D tuning can be represented as follows, showing the pitches on each string at the open position and select frets (assuming standard 12-note chromatic scale per string):| Fret/String | 6 (D) | 5 (A) | 4 (D) | 3 (F♯) | 2 (A) | 1 (D) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Open | D | A | D | F♯ | A | D |
| 1st | D♯/E♭ | A♯/B♭ | D♯/E♭ | G | A♯/B♭ | D♯/E♭ |
| 2nd | E | B | E | G♯ | B | E |
| 3rd | F | C | F | A | C | F |
Tuning Process
To achieve Open D tuning on a six-string guitar starting from standard E-A-D-G-B-E tuning, an electronic tuner is recommended for accuracy, such as a clip-on model attached to the headstock or a smartphone app like Fender's online guitar tuner.[13] These tools provide visual feedback on pitch, allowing precise adjustments by plucking each string and turning the corresponding tuning peg counterclockwise to lower the pitch or leaving it unchanged as needed.[13] Begin with the sixth string (lowest E): detune it one whole step down to D by slowly turning the tuning peg until the tuner displays D. The fifth string (A) remains unchanged at A. The fourth string (D) also stays at D. Next, lower the third string (G) a half step to F♯, matching its pitch to the fourth fret note on the fourth string (D). Detune the second string (B) one whole step to A, aligning it with the open fifth string (A). Finally, lower the first string (highest E) one whole step to D, matching it to the open fourth string (D) in a higher octave.[13] After all adjustments, strum the open strings to verify they ring clearly together, producing a resonant D major chord sound.[13] For relative tuning without an electronic device, start by tuning the sixth string to D by ear (using a reference pitch if available, such as a piano or another instrument). Then, tune the other strings by fretting to match the open notes of the reference strings: tune the fifth string open to a perfect fifth above the sixth (A above D, no beating when played together); tune the fourth string open to match the fifth-fret note on the fifth string (both D); tune the second string open to match the open fifth string (both A); tune the first string open to match the fifth-fret note on the second string (both D); and tune the third string by fretting at the fourth fret of the fourth string (F♯) and matching that pitch open on the third string.[14] Strum openly after each adjustment to check for consonance, and fine-tune by ear to eliminate beats between similar notes. During the process, monitor for string slippage, which can occur when loosening strings rapidly; gently stretch each adjusted string by pulling it upward at the bridge to settle it, and inspect nut slots for binding, as worn or undersized slots in materials like bone may require lubrication or replacement with self-lubricating composites like Graph Tech Tusq to prevent tuning instability.[15] Intonation may shift due to changed string tension, causing notes higher on the neck to sound sharp or flat; after tuning, check by comparing the open string to the twelfth-fret harmonic and adjust the bridge saddle if necessary.[15] On a twelve-string guitar, apply the same adjustments to each string pair (course), tuning the octave or unison pairs together to maintain balance, though the doubled strings may amplify any slippage—proceed methodically to avoid over-tensioning.[13] For guitars with different scale lengths, such as shorter-scale acoustics (around 24.75 inches versus the standard 25.5 inches), the reduced tension from lower pitches can lead to floppier feel; slight tweaks like using slightly heavier gauge strings or fine-tuning the intonation saddle can optimize playability without altering the core tuning steps.[16]Historical Development
19th-Century Origins
Open D tuning, known historically as Vestapol or Sebastopol, emerged in the mid-19th century within the American parlor guitar tradition, offering simplified access to major chords through its configuration (D-A-D-F♯-A-D). This tuning was popularized by English-born composer and guitarist Henry Worrall (1825–1902), who composed and published Sebastopol: A Descriptive Fantaisie for the Guitar around 1856 in Cincinnati.[17] The piece employed open D to evoke the rhythmic pulse and distant echoes of military bands, using harmonics to mimic bugle calls and full ensembles.[17] Worrall's work drew direct inspiration from the Siege of Sevastopol (1854–1855), a pivotal event in the Crimean War (1853–1856) that captured global attention through wartime reporting.[18] By imitating the "boom" of cannon fire and martial cadences, Sebastopol transformed a geopolitical conflict into accessible domestic music, spreading via guitar instruction books like Worrall's Guitar School (1856, republished 1882).[17] This publication helped establish open D as a staple for amateur players, emphasizing its utility for harmonic resonance without barre chords or advanced technique.[19] During the mid-19th century, open D tuning saw widespread adoption among parlor and folk guitarists in the American South, where mass-produced guitars became affordable through mail-order catalogs and local shops.[19] Its open-string major chord facilitated easy accompaniment for songs and dances in home settings, predating the advent of blues recordings by decades and focusing on non-slide fingerstyle techniques.[20] These early applications highlighted the tuning's role in everyday music-making, from family gatherings to informal social events, rather than professional performance.[17]20th-Century Evolution in Blues and Folk
In the early 20th century, Open D tuning, often referred to as Vestapol, gained prominence in the Delta blues of the Mississippi region during the 1920s and 1930s, where it facilitated slide guitar techniques that produced resonant, chordal sounds with minimal fretting.[4] This tuning allowed players to employ a single-finger barre with a slide—such as a bottleneck or knife edge—across the strings to form complete major chords effortlessly, enabling expressive, vocal-like melodies over a droning harmonic foundation characteristic of the genre.[21] Its adoption marked a stylistic shift toward raw, emotive acoustic performances that captured the hardships of rural Southern life.[22] The tuning's roots in African-American folk traditions, including call-and-response patterns and field hollers, were carried northward during the Great Migration (1916–1970), as millions of Black Southerners relocated to urban centers like Chicago and Detroit seeking industrial jobs.[23] This movement transformed Delta blues into urban styles, where Open D continued to underpin slide work but adapted to ensemble settings with amplified instruments, blending rural authenticity with city rhythms.[24] Early adopters, such as Blind Willie Johnson, exemplified its potent use in pre-war recordings that preserved these traditions.[25] By the 1960s folk revival, Open D integrated into acoustic fingerstyle approaches, enhancing songwriting with its rich overtones and movable chord voicings that supported introspective narratives and social commentary.[26] This era saw the tuning's blues heritage influencing a broader acoustic movement, emphasizing intricate picking patterns over slide dominance. Pre-war 78 rpm recordings from the 1920s and 1930s, captured on labels like Paramount and Vocalion, solidified Open D as a blues cornerstone, while post-World War II electric adaptations in urban scenes amplified its sustain and intensity for band contexts.[25][24]Notable Applications
Key Musicians
Open D tuning has been embraced by numerous influential guitarists across genres, each leveraging its resonant qualities to define their signature sounds. In the blues tradition, pioneers like Elmore James, Blind Willie Johnson, and J.B. Hutto played pivotal roles in establishing the tuning's intensity and expressiveness, particularly through slide techniques that amplified raw emotional delivery.[27][25][28] Elmore James, a cornerstone of electric blues, utilized Open D to craft his aggressive slide guitar style, infusing recordings with a piercing, urgent tone that influenced generations of players seeking high-energy expression.[29][30] His approach emphasized the tuning's ability to produce sustained, vocal-like slides, marking him as a trailblazer in urban and Delta blues electrification.[31] Blind Willie Johnson, a pre-war slide master, employed Open D for its spiritual depth, creating intricate phrasing that blended gospel fervor with blues melancholy through bottleneck techniques on acoustic instruments.[25][2] His work highlighted the tuning's resonance for evoking transcendent, otherworldly atmospheres in early 20th-century recordings.[12] J.B. Hutto brought urban blues vitality to Open D, channeling the tuning's open-string drones into energetic, percussive riffs that captured the hustle of Chicago's postwar scene.[32] His style infused the tuning with a rhythmic drive suited to amplified ensemble playing, expanding its appeal beyond solo acoustic contexts.[33] Shifting to folk and rock, artists such as Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, and Keith Richards adapted Open D for introspective and experimental purposes, showcasing its versatility in chordal complexity and harmonic exploration. Joni Mitchell's adoption of Open D facilitated her distinctive fingerstyle approach, allowing for intricate, flowing patterns that mirrored the emotional nuance of her songwriting.[31][27] She frequently tuned to variations of Open D to accommodate her left-hand limitations from childhood polio, enabling richer voicings without excessive fretting strain.[34] Neil Young harnessed Open D for harmonic innovation, experimenting with its drone-like qualities to build layered, atmospheric textures in his solo and band work.[12][30] His use often involved detuning elements for a looser, more improvisational feel, contributing to his reputation for sonic unpredictability.[31] Keith Richards, of the Rolling Stones, incorporated Open D into his riff-based playing, drawing on its full-chord resonance to create gritty, riff-heavy foundations that defined the band's blues-rock edge.[27][34] He favored the tuning for its simplicity in achieving open-voiced power chords, enhancing the raw, unpolished energy of rock performances.[29] Beyond these core genres, musicians like Ry Cooder, John Fahey, and Bob Dylan further diversified Open D's applications through fusion and compositional innovation. Ry Cooder integrated Open D into world music explorations, blending slide elements with non-Western scales to evoke cinematic and cross-cultural narratives.[35][36] His technique emphasized the tuning's adaptability for hybrid rhythms, bridging American roots with global influences.[33] John Fahey elevated Open D in acoustic instrumental music, using it to construct complex, narrative-driven pieces that combined folk, blues, and avant-garde elements.[29][37] His fingerpicking patterns exploited the tuning's symmetrical structure for intricate polyphony, influencing the American primitive guitar movement.[38] Bob Dylan employed Open D to enhance his songwriting flexibility, particularly during periods of acoustic introspection, where the tuning supported modal shifts and lyrical accompaniment.[35][33] It allowed him to layer simple strums with harmonic depth, aligning with his evolution from folk protest to more experimental forms.[39] Open D's cross-genre reach is evident in the adaptations by Richie Havens and Barry Gibb, who tailored it to festival folk and pop contexts, respectively. Richie Havens adapted Open D for dynamic folk performances, using barre chords across the neck to generate propulsive, rhythmically charged accompaniments suited to large audiences.[30][2] His style transformed the tuning into a vehicle for improvisational energy, emblematic of 1960s counterculture stages.[12] Barry Gibb harnessed Open D for lush pop harmonies, employing its open voicings to craft layered, melodic textures in Bee Gees arrangements.[30][2] He often combined it with orchestration to achieve a bright, expansive sound, demonstrating the tuning's potential in commercial music production.[12]Iconic Songs and Recordings
Open D tuning has been instrumental in shaping the raw, resonant sound of numerous blues classics, where its open chord foundation facilitates powerful slide techniques. Elmore James's 1959 recording of "Dust My Broom" exemplifies this through its driving slide riff structure, built around a repetitive, ascending-descending pattern on the low strings that propels the song's urgent rhythm, emphasizing the tuning's harmonic clarity for bottleneck slide work.[40] Similarly, Blind Willie Johnson's 1927 instrumental "Dark Was the Night, Cold Was the Ground" employs haunting slide drones, with sustained notes across the open strings creating an ethereal, vocal-like moan that captures profound emotional depth, leveraging Open D's sympathetic resonances for its sparse, improvisational feel.[41] In folk and rock contexts, Open D tuning enables rhythmic complexity and layered textures. Mumford & Sons' "The Cave" (2009) highlights banjo-guitar hybrid rhythms, where the tuning's drone-like open D chord underpins driving alternate bass patterns and percussive strums, blending folk drive with rock energy through capoed variations.[42] The Allman Brothers Band's "Little Martha" (1972), often adapted to Open D for solo arrangements, features dueling fingerstyle lines that interweave melodic phrases across the strings, showcasing the tuning's suitability for intricate, contrapuntal acoustic interplay originally conceived in a similar open configuration.[43] Other standout recordings demonstrate Open D's versatility in simpler forms. Bob Dylan's "Buckets of Rain" (1975), often adapted to Open D in covers and lessons (original recording in Open E), relies on straightforward strumming patterns, with the open tuning allowing thumb-alternating bass lines to support lyrical introspection, creating a folk-blues intimacy through minimal chord voicings.[44][45] Likewise, Blind Blake's 1929 "Police Dog Blues" showcases pre-slide fingerpicking agility, employing rapid single-note runs and partial chords in Open D to mimic ragtime complexity on acoustic guitar.[46] In more recent applications, Open D continues to appear in contemporary music; for example, Taylor Swift's "ivy" from the 2020 album evermore uses the tuning for its intricate fingerstyle and resonant chords, highlighting its ongoing relevance in indie-folk.[29] Recording techniques in Open D often enhance its sonic qualities, particularly for slide work. Reverb is frequently applied to amplify slide resonance, as heard in Johnson's drones where natural room echo extends note sustain for atmospheric effect.[47] Multi-tracking for layered chords appears in later folk-rock applications, like Mumford & Sons' productions, where doubled guitar parts build rhythmic density without overpowering the open tuning's clarity.[48]Techniques and Voicings
Basic Chord Shapes
In Open D tuning (D-A-D-F♯-A-D), basic chord shapes leverage the open strings to form a D major chord, allowing for simple static and movable forms that emphasize the tuning's resonant qualities. These shapes are primarily constructed using barre techniques or minimal finger placements, facilitating easy transposition across the fretboard for keys like D, E, G, and A. Major chords form the foundation, with variations for minors, sevenths, power chords, and suspended voicings expanding harmonic options without requiring complex fingerings.[49][50] Major chords in Open D are straightforward, often using a single barre or open position. The open D major chord is played by strumming all open strings (fret positions: 0-0-0-0-0-0), producing the notes D, F♯, and A across multiple octaves for a full, ringing sound. To form E major, apply a full barre with the index finger across all strings at the 2nd fret (2-2-2-2-2-2), shifting the root up a whole step while maintaining the major third and fifth relative to the tuning. G major uses a barre at the 5th fret (5-5-5-5-5-5), and A major at the 7th fret (7-7-7-7-7-7), both employing the index finger for movability and allowing the pinky or ring finger to anchor if partial voicings are preferred. These barre shapes are effective in slide playing, where a slide bar replaces the index finger for smooth transitions.[49][50][51] Minor chords require adjustments to flatten the major third (F♯ to F) present in the open tuning, often involving partial barres or selective fretting to avoid the major third. For D minor, one basic shape frets the 3rd and 4th strings at the 3rd fret (0-0-3-3-0-0), producing notes D, A, F, A, A, D for a voicing centered on D, F, and A. Relative minors like B minor can be formed in open position with adjustments, such as fretting the 2nd string at the 2nd fret (0-2-0-0-0-0) for notes D, B, D, F♯, A, D. Movable minor shapes follow similar patterns, using a barre at the root fret with strings 3 and 4 fretted three frets higher (e.g., 2-2-5-5-2-2 for E minor).[1] Seventh chords build on major forms by adding the dominant seventh (♭7) note, typically C for D-based chords. The D7 chord is formed by adding the 3rd fret on the 2nd string to the open D major (0-3-0-0-0-0), introducing the C note for a bluesy tension. Movable dominant seventh shapes use the standard barre with an additional finger, such as barring at the 2nd fret for E7 and fretting the 5th fret on the 2nd string (2-5-2-2-2-2). Major seventh voicings, like DMaj7, employ similar extensions, often fretting the 4th fret on the 4th string (0-2-0-4-0-0) for the major seventh (C♯). These are movable by transposing the entire shape.[49] Power chords and suspended fourth (sus4) voicings provide simplified, ambiguous harmonies suitable for rock and blues progressions. Power chords focus on root and fifth, using two-finger forms like the open D5 (0-0-0-0-x-x or 0-0-0-x-0-0, emphasizing D and A). Movable power chords barre the 5th and 6th strings at the desired root (e.g., 5th fret for G5: 5-x-5-x-x-x). Sus4 voicings suspend the third for an open sound, such as Dsus4 by fretting the 1st fret on the 3rd string (0-0-0-1-0-0), adding G to the D and A. A common Asus4 uses a barre at 7th with adjustment, such as lowering the 3rd string to the 6th fret (7-7-7-6-7-7) to add D. These two-finger approaches allow quick changes in progressions like I-IV-V.[49][51] The following table summarizes fretboard positions for common keys (low to high strings: 6-5-4-3-2-1; x = muted):| Chord | D (Open) | E | G | A |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Major | 0-0-0-0-0-0 | 2-2-2-2-2-2 | 5-5-5-5-5-5 | 7-7-7-7-7-7 |
| Minor | 0-0-3-3-0-0 | 2-2-5-5-2-2 | 5-5-8-8-5-5 | 7-7-10-10-7-7 |
| 7th | 0-3-0-0-0-0 | 2-5-2-2-2-2 | 5-8-5-5-5-5 | 7-10-7-7-7-7 |
| Power | 0-0-0-x-x-x | 2-x-2-x-x-x | 5-x-5-x-x-x | 7-x-7-x-x-x |
| sus4 | 0-0-0-1-0-0 | 2-2-2-3-2-2 | 5-5-5-6-5-5 | 7-7-7-8-7-7 |