I think Phil Keaggy used to put in his liner notes how he tuned for some songs, like where he would take a capo and cut out part of it to keep some strings un-capoed. But it does seem like they are becoming more commonplace.
Local folk songwriter was playing at a small gig last night. I was close to the stage and noticed the use of a partial capo. Never seen one before.
Cool, and kind of funny at first to see someone fretting*behind* as well as in front of capo!
Wikipedia tells me their use is rather new.
Less golf, more saxophone
I think Phil Keaggy used to put in his liner notes how he tuned for some songs, like where he would take a capo and cut out part of it to keep some strings un-capoed. But it does seem like they are becoming more commonplace.
Guitars: Gibson LP Studio, MIA Fender Precision, Carvin C350Originally Posted by Spudman
Amps: Genz Benz Shuttle 6.0 + Avatar B212 / Genzler 12-3, Acoustic B20
Pedals: Pod HD500X, Diamond Compressor, Tech 21 VT Bass, Sonic Research Turbo Tuner
David Wilcox does some very useful stuff with those, and when I saw him, he even used 2 capos at once. I haven't a clue how somebody can deal with so many variables.
Kyser makes several partial capos to give you specific tunings without needing to retune your guitar and keep standard fingering patterns for chords. The guy doing the demo at the guitar show was quite knowledgeable about their use.
-- Joe --
Guitars:
Gibson: '08 Longhorn DC HS
Martin: '09 OM-1
Ovation: '07 Elite-T 1868T; '95 Celebrity Deluxe CC257; '95 Balladeer 1751 12-string
Fender: '91 Stratocaster Plus; '69 Mustang Competition; '08 Squier Telecaster CV50
Other: '77 Bradley Les Paul Custom; '03 Michael Kelly Patriot Q
Bass: '08 Dean EABC
Effects:
MXR Dyna Comp; Dunlop Crybaby; DOD TR3R; Ibanez MT10; Rockman Soloist
Amps:
Genz Benz Shenandoah Jr.; Peavey Studio Pro 110; Tascam MP-GT1