Guitar Tuning RC 5: Sirisan Sobhanasiri & Stuart Ironside
Researcher(s):
Publication Type: Abstract
Date Published:
Language: English
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
DOI: https://doi.org/10.57874/ma35-ea53
Click here to submit and read peer review
No peer review comments on this section yet.
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
Click here to submit and read peer review
No peer review comments on this section yet.
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.
Sirisan Sobhanasiri’s initial proposal
Musical Collaborations: Capturing the Spirit of Isan Music with Classical Guitar
This project develops a new composer-performer collaborative framework to create new classical guitar works expressing the Isan musical instrumental styles. Isan, the northeastern region of Thailand, is predominantly inhabited by people within the Thai-Lao heritage whose culture blends Buddhism, animism, and Hinduism. Isan music, within the Thai-Laos culture, is known for its light-hearted, energetic, and uplifting character, distinguishing it from the folk music of other regions in Thailand. Adapting Isan music to classical guitar is challenging due to its reliance on sustained drone intervals and natural resonance, which are inefficient to replicate on standard tuned guitar. This project addresses these limitations by rethinking tuning as a primary site of cultural translation. This tuning is derived from a unique method developed by Kammao Perdtanon, a phīn (Thai mandolin) master from Roi Et, Thailand, who combines multiple phīn tunings to allow the phīn to perform various styles of Isan music without the need to retune. Adapting this concept for classical guitar enables idiomatic access to the key drone intervals of the 2nd, 4th and 5th, facilitating authentic performance of Isan styles. The presentation will include demonstrations of the new guitar tuning, adapted techniques, and excerpts from newly composed collaborative works.
Stuart Ironside’s initial proposal
My general performance style also incorporates elements of meditative, improvised grooves and repeated melodic fragments. This style is especially influenced by my experience with music of the West African Mande griots, who have a repertoire built up from repeated grooves that are then improvised and elaborated on as well as Indonesian gamelan.
Building on the work of Derek gripper (who devised the method of playing this music based on the tuning of DADF#Be) I have taken these principles and use them in making my own arrangements of West African music as well as arranging traditional songs from the UK and Estonia. This has inspired me in my own compositions to explore tunings such as these and others in improvisations and compositions.
A central part of my technique is embracing tunings that allow me to play fretted notes and open strings at the same time, giving the guitar both a resonant and percussive sound with many harmonics. I would be interested in exploring this technique on camera with a totally new tuning that has not been suggested to me, either in improvisation or of an arrangement of a traditional song I have not.
Past tunings used include:
DADF#Be
DAC#F#Be
EAD#G#Be
EBDGBE.
Researcher(s):
Publication Type: Rationale / Hypothesis
Date Published: 23rd Mar 2026
Language: English
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
DOI: https://doi.org/10.57874/6k74-4q39
Click here to submit and read peer review
No peer review comments on this section yet.
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
Click here to submit and read peer review
No peer review comments on this section yet.
Results / Sources
Researcher(s):
Publication Type: Results / Sources
Date Published:
Language: English
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
DOI: https://doi.org/10.57874/ma35-ea53
Click here to submit and read peer review
No peer review comments on this section yet.
Analysis
Researcher(s):
Publication Type: Analysis
Date Published:
Language: English
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
DOI: https://doi.org/10.57874/ma35-ea53
Click here to submit and read peer review
No peer review comments on this section yet.
Interpretation - Coming Soon
Researcher(s):
Publication Type: Interpretation
Date Published:
Language: English
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
DOI:
Click here to submit and read peer review
No peer review comments on this section yet.
Applications / Implications - Coming Soon
Researcher(s):
Publication Type: Applications / Implications
Date Published:
Language: English
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
DOI:
Click here to submit and read peer review
No peer review comments on this section yet.
Technology and Musical Creativity / The Influence of Technology on Musical Instruments and Their Use / Creative Use of Guitar Tuning Research Challenge / Guitar Tuning 5: Sirisan Sobhanasiri & Stuart Ironside
Position in the Centre's Structure
Technology & Musical Creativity
Creative Use of Guitar Tuning Research Challenge
Guitar Tuning 5: Sirisan Sobhanasiri & Stuart Ironside
Main Researchers
Summary
Coming Soon
Research Problem
Rationale / Hypothesis
Method
Results / Sources
Analysis
Interpretation
Applications / Implications
Peer Review
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.
Sirisan Sobhanasiri’s initial proposal
Musical Collaborations: Capturing the Spirit of Isan Music with Classical Guitar
This project develops a new composer-performer collaborative framework to create new classical guitar works expressing the Isan musical instrumental styles. Isan, the northeastern region of Thailand, is predominantly inhabited by people within the Thai-Lao heritage whose culture blends Buddhism, animism, and Hinduism. Isan music, within the Thai-Laos culture, is known for its light-hearted, energetic, and uplifting character, distinguishing it from the folk music of other regions in Thailand. Adapting Isan music to classical guitar is challenging due to its reliance on sustained drone intervals and natural resonance, which are inefficient to replicate on standard tuned guitar. This project addresses these limitations by rethinking tuning as a primary site of cultural translation. This tuning is derived from a unique method developed by Kammao Perdtanon, a phīn (Thai mandolin) master from Roi Et, Thailand, who combines multiple phīn tunings to allow the phīn to perform various styles of Isan music without the need to retune. Adapting this concept for classical guitar enables idiomatic access to the key drone intervals of the 2nd, 4th and 5th, facilitating authentic performance of Isan styles. The presentation will include demonstrations of the new guitar tuning, adapted techniques, and excerpts from newly composed collaborative works.
Works performed by Sobhanasiri in this video:
Mahakit Mahaniranon – Dance of the rain offering 1st Mov. (2025)
Waris Sukontapatipark – May Sudsanan 1st Mov. (2024)
Chawin Temsittichok – Fai Laam Toong (2025)
Stuart Ironside’s initial proposal
My general performance style also incorporates elements of meditative, improvised grooves and repeated melodic fragments. This style is especially influenced by my experience with music of the West African Mande griots, who have a repertoire built up from repeated grooves that are then improvised and elaborated on as well as Indonesian gamelan.
Building on the work of Derek gripper (who devised the method of playing this music based on the tuning of DADF#Be) I have taken these principles and use them in making my own arrangements of West African music as well as arranging traditional songs from the UK and Estonia. This has inspired me in my own compositions to explore tunings such as these and others in improvisations and compositions.
A central part of my technique is embracing tunings that allow me to play fretted notes and open strings at the same time, giving the guitar both a resonant and percussive sound with many harmonics. I would be interested in exploring this technique on camera with a totally new tuning that has not been suggested to me, either in improvisation or of an arrangement of a traditional song I have not.
Past tunings used include:
DADF#Be
DAC#F#Be
EAD#G#Be
EBDGBE.
Information
Publication Type: Rationale / Hypothesis
Date Published: 23/02/2026
Language: English
Licence: CC BY 4.0
DOI:
Peer Review:
Results / Sources & Analysis
Information
Publication Type: Results / Sources & Analysis
Date Published: 23/02/2026
Language: English
Licence: CC BY 4.0
DOI:
Peer Review: