On the Boston Hitch A Ride lesson it says to tune up to E#. I thought there was no such thing as E#. My tuner does not even have an E#. Do they really mean to tune up to F? What have I missed?
Is there an E#?
Originally Posted by: kpjohnOn the Boston Hitch A Ride lesson it says to tune up to E#. I thought there was no such thing as E#. My tuner does not even have an E#. Do they really mean to tune up to F? What have I missed?
E# is the same pitch as F. There are certain musical contexts in which it makes more sense to call it E#. For example if there is already an F in the key signature; when you play in F# minor harmonic minor, the major 7th is E#. When you tune up a half-step the notes are:
E goes up to E#
A goes up to A#
D goes up to D#
G goes up to G#
B goes up to B#
E goes up to E#
This makes it easy to see that every string is still the same relative pitch to each other, but all are a half-step up.
If you you instead called it F, then you'd get this.
E goes up to F
A goes up to A#
D goes up to D#
G goes up to G#
B goes up to C
E goes up to F
Now if you carefully consider these notes, you will realize the F to A# is a 4th, as in standard tuning. But at first glance you see an F to A relationship that is typically a 3rd. Similarly for the rest of the strings, it looks confusing at first. Compare that to the E# listing & it's more immediately obvious that everything is just up 1/2 step.
At least after you know that E# is a legitimate note name. :)
But for practical purposes you can just call it F & use your tuner to tune to the pitch F. Hope that helps!
E# and F are what are known as enharmonic equivalents. They are the same note in an audible situation but written on sheet music they look different.
Some other enharmonic equivalents are E and Fb, B and Cb, B# and C.
It is often used in sheet music to simplify the written notation.
Joe