“Hello. My name is Shannon, and I use a capo.”
*GROUP RESPONDS: “Hello Shannon!“
I admit it – I’ve thought that before about “Capo Users”. I’ve gotten hand-cramps for the sake of my glorious anti-capo-dom. I’ve forced complex songs into simpler keys, far outside my sweet-spot vocally, to massage my ego and not use a capo. I’ve played chord-shapes that don’t ideally befit the riff/hook for the sake of being that guy who’s “better than the capo users.” Yes, on rare occasions I used a capo, but only on open tuned guitars – the fact that I once had 4 guitars on stage, 3 of which were in alternate tunings, gave me enough “cool points” to counteract the evil capo – sorta like buying “Carbon Credits”.
Back in ‘03, however, I saw Shane & Shane live. Those guys have MASTERED the guitar, and they’re capo maniacs: capos upon capos – cut capos inserted at odd angles into other cut capos. I think at one point he had to be using a capo on his vocal chords, too – Mr. Bernard’s range is pretty …well… “pretty”
– in the “female” sense of the word. Is it normal for a guy to sing soprano? In all seriousness, I love Shane & Shane, and that show was where I realize that a capo is a tool. Just like any tool, it has it’s purpose, and can also be misused.
So here’s my theory of Capo: please don’t use it as a crutch to hide the fact that you only know 3 chords – that’s sad. Granted, if you DO only know 3 chords, and you’re asked to lead worship somewhere, I’d rather you used a capo and play well than not use one and be a distraction. However, let your goal be to learn the real chords, and use them when it sounds good. However, some songs only sound ‘right’ with certain chord shapes on the guitar, and a capo is how you get those shapes. One song from a few years back is Charlie Hall’s “Marvelous Light” – a great example: the song is most singable, and in my opinion, grooves best in ‘B’, however if you play a ‘B’ chord shape (any of them) on an acoustic guitar to drive the song you really loose the bright, ‘jangly-ness’ of the song. Playing a B, E, G#m, F#, & etc. on an acoustic has ‘thump’ on the low-end (which is why I don’t capo “Sweetly Broken”, though it’s the same chord progression – the ‘bottom end’ of the chord progression helps keep the song ‘weighty’), but capo to the 4th fret, and play a G-shape, C9, Em7, & etc – it creates a brightness, and a continuity in the changes (particularly on the high end) that carries the song well.
Therefore, I repent – or rather, I repented some time ago. Use a capo, but not as a crutch – use it as a tool. Use it to open up your guitar to tones that help you blend into an overall band setting, give brightness or weight to a progression, depending on the song’s ‘mood’, or even – as Shane & Shane do with cut capos – to significantly alter your guitar’s tuning in a flash (not just up a step, but from Standard, to open G, or drop D). Used this way a capo can really open up the breadth of what your guitar is capable of.
“Hello. My name is Shannon, and I use a capo.”