Interestingly, the density of fourth between a-d in A standard is pretty much the same as the density of fifth between a-e in Drop A. So yeah, both will pretty much rock it. But isn't it intriguing? You got the interval of fourth vs fifth and they sound identical in terms of sound density! Even though we're talking a whole step difference.
the 1900s were the 20th century, not the 19th as you said in the video. You start counting from 0, so 0-100 AD were the first century. Meaning 2000+ is actually the 21st century, 1900+ is 20th... and so on
Bro, you are so right, I made a typo. I should have typed 1892, and not 1982 like I did. So yeah, Tarrega did publish his piece in the 19th century, I said it correctly, but I filled in the wrong year. Thx for pointing it out, I'll be more careful. Still one of my first videos 🤘
I'm sure that Dimebag played Walk in Drop D, bro. There's live footage proving it. One doesn't exclude the other, he could as well have played it in D standard.
@@darkindustry I've seen dime play walk riff in person at damageplan show in 2004 it's D standard go to the music video 1:23 shows him doing standard power chords not dropped bar chords, Man I miss that band I thought they were just as good as Pantera
If we wanna get super technical he played it at weird 432hz roughly at d standard. Both vulgar display and great southern are roughly there. It's between d and c#
@@TheEpicLinkFreeman Amen🤘🏼 thank you wait there will be more to tell you that it's D standard 🤘🏼bro Dime fans know he's our guitar god , In Dime we trust now excuse me I have to make me a black tooth grin 😏Dime fans know Rip Darrell Lance Abbott(Dimebag) and Vincent Paul Abbott (Vinnie Paul) world not same without y'all 🤘🏼🤙
Loving your videos, man.. Keep it up! \m/
Thanks, brother, it means a lot! \m/
You don't have to be in drop tuning to be heavy A standard is just as heavy as Drop A
Interestingly, the density of fourth between a-d in A standard is pretty much the same as the density of fifth between a-e in Drop A. So yeah, both will pretty much rock it. But isn't it intriguing? You got the interval of fourth vs fifth and they sound identical in terms of sound density! Even though we're talking a whole step difference.
But it does make chords easier
the 1900s were the 20th century, not the 19th as you said in the video. You start counting from 0, so 0-100 AD were the first century. Meaning 2000+ is actually the 21st century, 1900+ is 20th... and so on
Bro, you are so right, I made a typo. I should have typed 1892, and not 1982 like I did. So yeah, Tarrega did publish his piece in the 19th century, I said it correctly, but I filled in the wrong year. Thx for pointing it out, I'll be more careful. Still one of my first videos 🤘
@darkindustry I didn't bother fact checking what you said, and I wasn't familiar with the work you were referring to, anyway.
Wrong walk is in D standard not a drop D
I'm sure that Dimebag played Walk in Drop D, bro. There's live footage proving it. One doesn't exclude the other, he could as well have played it in D standard.
@@darkindustry I've seen dime play walk riff in person at damageplan show in 2004 it's D standard go to the music video 1:23 shows him doing standard power chords not dropped bar chords, Man I miss that band I thought they were just as good as Pantera
If we wanna get super technical he played it at weird 432hz roughly at d standard. Both vulgar display and great southern are roughly there. It's between d and c#
i mean he played the riff totally wrong regardless if you want to be anal about something
@@TheEpicLinkFreeman Amen🤘🏼 thank you wait there will be more to tell you that it's D standard 🤘🏼bro Dime fans know he's our guitar god , In Dime we trust now excuse me I have to make me a black tooth grin 😏Dime fans know Rip Darrell Lance Abbott(Dimebag) and Vincent Paul Abbott (Vinnie Paul) world not same without y'all 🤘🏼🤙