I don't think Ghost of Perdition would have worked in standard E. How about you? All of Ghost Reveries was in open D (Major? I believe?). Several songs across MAYH-BWP were in drop D. I don't get how Mike has been writing amazing riffs in E standard "as he's been doing all this time" with those counterexamples.
It's in DADFAD, thats an open D minor.
All but three songs (beneath the mire, hours of wealth and atonement, though the latter doesn't really have enough guitar to be sure) are in DADFAE actually. And no, several riffs from it just plain could not have been played in standard tuning unless they completely butchered the sound of it by sticking multiple notes on one string in order when they were supposed to be let rung, to say nothing of the notes that are lower than standard tuning allows for. The guy who's like "wtf you can play anything in standard by switching fingering" obviously doesn't play guitar at much of any level.
i never got what is special about a certain tuning, i mean, the relativety between the notes is still going to be the same anyway
Best tuning ever:
D#
A#
F#
C#
G#
C#
Yeah, it's awesome alright, that drop D half step down. It was used to great effect on most of the songs on Linkin Park's first album, as well as all of Disturbed's cds.
GTFO![]()
For all I care, they could write and record the album in drop B, It's the playing that counts. unconventional tunings are nice because they give a player a different set of notes to work with, and a different way to voice chords and runs. We can thank nu-metal for making your average dumbshit metal fan think that anything other than A440 is blasphemy. Truth is, Opeth is amazing because of their tasteful phrasing and the unique progressions they use.