Guitar Tuning RC 3: Kate Lewis & Adrianos Trikas Pandis
Researcher(s):
Publication Type: Abstract
Date Published: 19th Jun 2026
Language: English
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
DOI: https://doi.org/10.57874/xsjf-1887
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Creative Use of Guitar Tuning Research Challenge
This is a research problem set using the 21st Century Music Practice Research Centre’s method: ‘Two Participant Online Practice Research Challenge: Collaborative Practice Exploration Through Video Exchange’. The research challenge format involves multiple practice researchers responding to the same problem or challenge to use a process of practical experimentation to explore that problem from a range of perspectives and musical styles and/or traditions. In this instance, the only stipulation was to “Think of an idea or approach for experimenting with tuning (either a strategy that you already use or something that you come up with for this challenge) – it could be for song writing, part-writing / arranging or something less specific like exploring different timbres”. The ten research practitioners who engaged in this challenge were put into five pairs and there are, therefore, five publications in each of the Rationale / Hypothesis, Results / Sources and Analysis categories. The Creative Use of Guitar Tuning Research Challenge sits as a sub-problem within two streams of research problems set by the 21st Century Music Practice Research Centre. The first is The Influence of Technology on Musical Instruments & Their Use which itself sits within the larger Technology & Musical Creativity research project. The second is Extended Techniques & Performance which sits within the Creative Strategies for Musical Practice research project.
Researcher(s):
Publication Type: Research Problem
Date Published: 23rd Mar 2026
Language: English
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
DOI: https://doi.org/10.57874/zs3f-ag50
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Rationale / Hypothesis
In the format for the C21MP Research Challenge the Rationale / Hypothesis section consists of the proposals by the practice research participants that outlines their initial ideas and approach.
Kate Lewis’ initial proposal
This experiment will explore the creative consequences of ‘Ostrich’ tuning, a guitar tuning in which all strings are tuned to the same pitch. The experiment emerges from my recent analytical research on the creative practices of St. Vincent, whose engagement with this tuning prompted questions best explored through practice. Despite extensive experience as a guitarist and researcher, this tuning has never formed part of my embodied playing practice and will therefore be used to unsettle established assumptions embedded in my practice, while also generating new forms of embodied knowledge.
The experiment will investigate what happens when pitch differentiation and conventional harmonic logic are removed from the instrument. The initial stage will focus on attempts to realise familiar guitar functions while documenting points of failure alongside emergent alternatives. From this, the experiment will also explore organising principles such as timbre articulation, rhythmic density, and gesture. The experiment will also align with my prior work on the ‘rhythm–lead continuum’, using ‘Ostrich’ tuning to test how role-based hierarchies collapse when pitch-based differentiation is unavailable.
The initial 10-minute video output will document my experimentation, culminating in a coherent textural or compositional idea that demonstrates how extreme tuning constraints can reframe guitar creativity.
Adrianos Pandis’ initial proposal
Accidental discoveries in open guitar tunings
In December 2025, I was preparing for my band’s annual Christmas concert in Athens. Having moved most of my instruments to London, I had to borrow a friend’s electric guitar to use at the performance. The owner warned that the guitar was tuned to standard C ( C-F-A#-D#-G-C) , and that I would need to change the 14 gauge strings if I wished to retune to standard tuning.
I began changing the strings from the lowest E moving gradually higher, while raising the new strings to the desired standard tuning. Half-way through the rather meditative process, I held a barred A Major chord and strummed, forgetting that the three higher strings were still tuned two steps lower. The chord startled me with a jazzy, borderline dissonant resonance and unique timbre combining 11 gauge and 14 gauge strings.
In this research challenge I would like to experiment with my accidental discovery, the E-A-D-D#-G-C tuning. Currently writing my second album as part of my PhD practice-research, consciously trying to explore and expand my understanding of my sound, I propose to examine how this unconventional tuning affects my song-craft.
Researcher(s):
Publication Type: Rationale / Hypothesis
Date Published: 23rd Mar 2026
Language: English
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
DOI: https://doi.org/10.57874/7xrz-ve48
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Method
This protocol establishes a structured method for collaborative practice research between two music practitioners through asynchronous video exchange. Participants independently develop proposals and create 10-minute videos exploring a practice concept, technique, or approach. Videos are exchanged, prompting each participant to create a second 10-minute response exploring how their partner’s work stimulates new directions in their own practice. The process concludes with a 20-minute filmed discussion analysing interpretative choices and outcomes. The protocol produces a 60-minute structure, serving as peer-reviewed, DOI-allocated practice research output via JISC Octopus. This method makes tacit practice knowledge explicit and generates transferable insights into practice innovation.
For further details see: https://doi.org/10.57874/s80m-1g18
Researcher(s):
Publication Type: Method
Date Published: 19th Jun 2026
Language: English
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
DOI: https://doi.org/10.57874/s80m-1g18
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Results / Sources
Researcher(s):
Publication Type: Results / Sources
Date Published: 19th Jun 2026
Language: English
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
DOI: https://doi.org/10.57874/xsjf-1887
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Analysis
Researcher(s):
Publication Type: Analysis
Date Published: 19th Jun 2026
Language: English
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
DOI: https://doi.org/10.57874/xsjf-1887
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Interpretation - Coming Soon
Researcher(s):
Publication Type: Interpretation
Date Published:
Language: English
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
DOI:
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Applications / Implications - Coming Soon
Researcher(s):
Publication Type: Applications / Implications
Date Published:
Language: English
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
DOI:
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