StringsOfJoy wrote:I think the note you're referring to is simply an open E on the sixth string. Neal isn't using Drop-D tuning live when he plays this song and I don't hear a D in there, if I'm listening to the same note.
To most listeners, I think "heavier, meaner, ballsier" may sound a little different than something they'd describe as "darker," which dropped tuning can achieve very well. "Higher Place" used a brightly-voiced guitar with Drop-D tuning to exploit the contrast and provide wide audible texture, but "City of Hope" doesn't require a Drop-D guitar: in fact, that badass note you're talking about would probably lose something in dropped tuning because you wouldn't be able to play it on an open string and get the full length of the string vibrating.
I think you're simply hearing good tone achieved with good technique through very good equipment.
Lol... missed Rick posting this as a separate thread after he asked it in the long Eclipse reviews thread. I wrote the SAME thing there that you did

. Here it is:
Rick: No. I don't believe the main rhythm guitar is in drop D. To my ears, it's just your standard chunky E5 power chord riff. I'll have to double check on my guitar tomorrow though. It's a little late to be jamming (even though Dan, my buds, and I once had a drunken, post-Frontiers concert jam session at 4 AM here one time... can't imagine that pleased my neighbors downstairs).
Compare the City of Hope rhythm sound to that of Higher Place's chorus, which IS in Drop D, and I think you'll hear Higher Place is lower.
Rick, you can hear drop D tuning on some of these famous cuts: Unchained (VH), Cinnamon Girl (Neil Young), ANY Tool song, anything by Creed (garbage), Everlong (Foo Fighters), Spoonman (Soundgarden), Even Flow (Pearl Jam), Lots of Motley Crue songs.... geez, can mostly think of grunge/metal stuff right now. I know there's more 80s drop D classics that I can't think of right now.