Guitar CaposMinueta Guitar Capo

Price: £4.99 - In
stock (ships 1-2 working days)

Perfect fit for all types of guitar.
Dunlop 87N Guitar Capo
Dunlop Electric Guitar Trigger Capo 87DN
£15.99 

Your sound shouldn't change when you put on the Dunlop 87DN electric guitar trigger capo. With Dunlop, you'll come
through loud, clear and in tune. All Dunlop Trigger® Capos are made of aircraft quality aluminum.
A capo (short for capotasto, Italian for "head of fretboard") is a device used for shortening the strings, and
hence raising the pitch, of a stringed instrument such as a guitar, mandolin or banjo. There are several different styles of capo available,
utilizing a range of mechanisms, but most use a rubber-covered bar to hold down the strings, fastened with a strip of elastic or nylon, a
cam-operated metal clamp, or another device.
The use of a capo is considered by some people to be a crutch for technically inferior players. While it can be
used for this purpose (for example, allowing a novice guitarist to play chords in the relatively difficult key of A flat by playing the much
simpler chord shapes for the key of G), it also facilitates making use of the instrument's natural qualities in certain keys and allows for the
use of techniques and sounds that would otherwise be unavailable.
With 12-string guitars a capo used to be necessary to play in tune with a six-string because manufacturers
would strongly recommend that the instrument not be tuned above a tone below standard guitar tuning to reduce stresses on the neck. Modern
12-strings can be tuned up to pitch with ultra light gauge strings, but many players still prefer to tune a tone lower and use a capo to play in
tune with six-string or bass guitars.
Because of the different techniques and chord voicings available in different keys, the same piece may sound
very different played in D or played in C with a capo at the second fret (at the same actual pitch). Additionally, the timbre of the strings
changes as the scale length is shortened, suggesting other short-scaled stringed instruments such as the mandolin. Therefore the use of a capo is
as much a matter of artistic expression as of technical expediency.
The use of a capo also obviates the need to learn a song in several different keys if accompanying singers who
sing at different pitches.
For guitar playing, some styles such as flamenco and British/American folk music make extensive use of the
capo, while it is used very rarely, if at all, in other styles such as classical and jazz playing.
Variations in the design of capos allow a range of advantages to players. A capo with two rollers, one over the
neck and one under, facilitates quick key changes in the middle of tunes or sets. This is a particular advantage in playing Irish music on the
guitar, as it enables the player to move quickly between keys without sacrificing drone strings. Clamp-style capos fitted from the side of the
neck (as distinct from those which encircle it) can be placed so as to leave one or two strings open. This gives some of the advantages of
variant tunings (such as a capoed dropped D), without requiring a change in fingering of chords above the capo.
One of the more radical developments in capo design in recent years is the partial capo made by the Third Hand
Capo Company. This model allows each string to be stopped individually, and can be used in conjunction with other capos, either of the same type
or of conventional design. In theory this puts a vast number of variant tunings at the player's disposal. In practice it is most often placed
either on the 2nd fret of the 3rd, 4th and 5th strings (producing the effect of DADGAD tuning raised two semitones), or on the 2nd fret of the
2nd, 3rd and 4th strings (open A major). Again, this requires no change of fingering above the capo. A little experimentation with the two
methods of producing variant tunings (partial capo or actual retuning) will show that each has its own advantages.
The five-string banjo, with its short fifth string, poses a particular problem for using the capo. For many
years now it has been possible to buy a specialised fifth-string capo, consisting of a narrow metal strip fixed to the side of the neck of the
instrument, with a sliding stopper for the string.
More Guitar Capos For SaleGuitar Capo Dunlop Pro Flat 11FD
(out of
stock)
Jim Dunlop Toggle Action Capos are designed for both curved and flat fingerboards, providing extremely positive clamping. These easy-to-use capos
will not scratch the guitar and have a low profile guaranteed not to hinder your fingering.
Dunlop Curved Capo 11CD Pro
(out of stock)
Jim Dunlop Toggle Action Capos are designed for both curved and flat fingerboards, providing extremely positive clamping. These easy-to-use capos
will not scratch the guitar and have a low profile guaranteed not to hinder your fingering.
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