Eb Standard Guitar

Eb Ab Db Gb Bb Eb 334 songs · 60 artists

All strings tuned half a step down from standard. Popular in hard rock and heavy metal.

Eb Standard drops every string by one semitone. The result is a slightly darker, heavier sound with looser string tension that makes bends easier and vibrato wider. Slash, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Guns N' Roses and most of Hendrix's catalog all live in this tuning.

Every chord shape and scale pattern you know from E Standard works identically here. The only difference is that everything sounds a half step lower.

A
AC/DC 9
Alcest 1
Alice in Chains 10
Amorphis 1
At The Gates 1
Audioslave 1
Avenged Sevenfold 5
B
Black Sabbath 2
blink-182 2
Burzum 1
C
Coldplay 3
Creed 1
D
Deftones 2
Dick Dale 1
Dimmu Borgir 2
Dio 1
E
Ed Sheeran 1
Emperor 4
Eric Clapton 2
Evanescence 1
Extreme 1
F
Fall Out Boy 1
G
Green Day 10
Guns N' Roses 36
H
Heart 1
Helloween 2
J
Jeff Buckley 1
Jimi Hendrix 16
L
Linkin Park 1
M
Mayhem 1
Megadeth 13
Metallica 31
Motley Crue 12
N
Nirvana 23
O
Oasis 2
Ozzy Osbourne 8
P
Pearl Jam 5
Prince 2
Q
Queens of the Stone Age 1
Quiet Riot 2
R
Rage Against The Machine 1
Randy Rhoads 1
Ratt 1
Red Hot Chili Peppers 13
S
Scorpions 1
Skid Row 5
Slash 3
Slayer 4
Smashing Pumpkins 2
Stevie Ray Vaughan 20
Stone Temple Pilots 5
System Of A Down 3
T
The Beatles 1
The Eagles 2
The Police 1
The Rolling Stones 2
The Smashing Pumpkins 2
V
Van Halen 41
Velvet Revolver 2
W
Whitesnake 4

When to Use Eb Standard

If the original recording sounds "almost" like E Standard but slightly lower, it is probably in Eb. Many classic rock and blues players tuned down a half step because the reduced tension made bending and vibrato more expressive, especially with heavier gauge strings.

The looser feel also suits singers who prefer a slightly lower key. If you play along to Appetite for Destruction or Texas Flood, you need Eb Standard. Everything else about your playing stays the same.