Tunings you like to use on your dulcimer
General mountain dulcimer or music discussions
Here's a bit of a dulcimer history myth buster!
Although we have a folklore that pre-revival dulcimers were generally played in the key of C, I've yet to find any early recordings or pre-revival design features on the instrument that holds this to be true.
Jean Ritchie's 'The Dulcimer Book' is written in C but in all her early recordings (prior to the book) she in tuned a tone and a half or so higher to suit her voice. And an Ambugy (Jean's early dulcimer used for her first recordings) does struggle to produce any volume in C with 2nd and 4th banjo strings (or any other strings for that matter!). The recordings and articles I've found from Virginia, WV, NC, Ohio are not in the key of C. The keys of D, G, A (often mixolidian) or a little higher being prevelant - with the majority of old dulcimers being built and played around the key of G.
The Hindaman School may have had an influence on the development of our belief that early dulcimers were in the key of C. Edna Ritchie apparently used that key (possibly due to her vocal range or because she played other instruments too) and the explanation given to beginners that ".....the dulcimer frets are set to a 7 note scale like the white keys on a piano..." could also have influenced teaching books to use the C scale to make explanations easy. You can tune a dulcimer down to CGG, and some will sound and play OK but that 28" Kentucky scale (less in other areas) on the smaller bodies of older dulcimers means they struggle to perform well at that pitch.
There's a great video on youtube of Ralph Lee Smith playing his original Prichard dulcimer. In it he is tuned up to E (E,B,B). I emailed him nad asked why he did that and he said that the dulcimer didn't find its voice until it was tuned up a little. And I have to say my experience of playing older dulcimers mirrors that finding.
One of the 'problems' with DAd is that the high 'd' on a 28" scale is not ideal so we need quite a thin string gauge to comfortably work that VSL at that pitch. It is difficult to raise a 28" scale dulcimer much further in 1-5-8 - say up to EBe or FCf without breaking strings. Whereas from DAA is is simpler to push the tuning higher towards something that may better suit the physics of the instrument - and use strings at a more appropriate gauge for the physics of the instrument too.
Contemporary DAd dulcimer players struggle with lack of volume - the dulcimer has become a quite instrument. Early playing styles, set-ups and tunings often meant that this was far from the case - in many regions the dulcimer, like its European predecessors, was loud enough for dancing. It has not always been a solo, sit on the porch at dusk instrument for singing to the moon. Jean Ritchie was a unique player and a remarkable innovator on dulcimer. The tunes she played and sang were old but her playing style was her own. She was hugely influential in the growth of the dulcimer and conclusions about the instrument's history drawn from listening Jean play have fallen into folklore. And yet no one plays like Jean today!
So feel free to innovate on your own as that's as much a part of the history of the instrument as anything. I can't think of two pre-revival players I've heard who actually played alike. DAd and contemporary playing has to some extent homogenised the instrument more than at any time in its history - So feel free to break away from the mould and see what music you can discover inside our little boxes of delight!
updated by @robin-clark: 08/25/15 04:09:07AM