I've been wearing out this new Fleetwood Mac "
Rumours - Live" set the past few days, and what with my finely-honed sense of listening from not being able to play for so long, I have taken notice of some things that I hadn't really zeroed-in on before.
One of the tracks is "I'm So Afraid", the close-out song from the eponymous
1975 "White Fleetwood Mac Album" dirctly before Rumours. The original take is in G min. But every time it's played live, it's been a step down in F min. Either way, on the studio record or live, John is very clearly playing notes below the low E... so he had to have de-tuned his bass... and for a tune like "So Afraid" in F minor, that low string had to be a C to get him the relative fifth. (makes me strongly suspect he had a bass setup for this... I know for
sure he has in recent years. Not only for this tune, but others. How did he manage this in 1977 though? Just tune on the fly?
So anyway, I started wondering; when did de-tuning a bass guitar, at least the low string, become a thing? I would have thought it was a while yet, before mechanical tuners for this came about.
Here is the original take-
And here's the live one-
Anybody remember the first time you heard a sub-E ?