What metal bands play in Drop B?

Bands who have used the Drop B tuning, specifically, include Three Days Grace, Disturbed, Halestorm, Linkin Park, Sevendust, and a slew of other nu-metal and post-grunge rock bands. Unfortunately, this form of the tuning doesn’t present much variance from the familiar Drop D.

Why is metal in drop D?

Drop D is also used in metal because it adds two lower semitones to the bass range of the rhythm guitar, which adds two more low-range power chords (Eb and D) and enables a heavier, deeper sound. The tuning has also been used in many other styles of music, including blues, country, folk, and classical.

Is heavy metal in drop D?

In fact, The Beatles and Led Zeppelin were doing it in the ’60s. Both of those bands were hugely influential and it’s no surprise that drop D (tuning the sixth E string down a whole step to D) is still widely used today. While it has its roots in blues music, it’s in heavy metal where the drop D really shines.

Who uses Drop B?

What is this? Let’s start things off with something heavy – Slipknot is a prime example of nu-metal from the ’00s that made killer use of drop B tuning. Their track ‘Before I Forget’ is a classic example of this. You can really hear the metallic and percussive guitar chugs that are associated with such low tunings.

Why is Drop D so popular?

With drop D tuning, you can quickly and smoothly play them up and down the fret board. You are dropping the lowest note even lower. This makes it sounds deep and more like a bass. That’s partly why it’s used so much for genres such as metal, hard rock, and punk rock.

What tuning is best for metal?

Drop G tuning has been most commonly found in heavy genres of music, creating a dark, foreboding sound. While drop B tuning has been favored by heavy metal bands such as Slipknot, bands that fall into the categories of hardcore, grindcore, death metal, and doom metal are the provinces of drop G tuning.