Must start proofreading more...........So. ------------------------------------------------------------ How many people use ghosting as a regular tuning technique? I went through a phase lately of chasing ghosts. I concluded, not on account of any knowledge beyond experience, that ghosting the bass sends things a little flat. I presume on account of the whole string not being in "normal" motion, stretching it slightly sharper?? So I stopped "pure ghosting" and started amplifying harmonics within normal sounding octaves by striking the appropriate notes to "excite" ghosts sympathetically above normal levels.. How many use the coincidental partial notes just to amplify the "ghost" being examined as a regular technique. I even tried what I call "reverse ghosting" , i.e.: depress c4-c5 without sounding the notes use sostenuo to hold c4-c5 open staccato hit c6 loud enough to make harmonics speak on c4-c5 repeat c6 normally and tune to harmonics sounding on lower strings Go ahead & tell me I'm nuts. Don't do this much in regular tuning, but find it interesting from time to time to see what it gives me as a reference compared to what I'm actually doing at the time. Do find ghosting useful for the lowest few notes.It may send me a little flat, but I know where I'm am, it's close, and can fish for a compromise from there. For theses lowest few notes I've recently got into the habit of almost always voicing them a bit making the fundamental more dominant so I can stand not having to stretch beyond tolerable limits to accommodate sharp harmonics. Haunted by conflicting ghosts Dave Renaud RPT Canada
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