Similarly one may ask, who popularized drop D tuning?
John Dowland was a Renaissance composer (1500-1600's-ish) From my repertoire, those are the earliest compositions I know of that call for drop-D. (D-A-D-G-B-E) Mind you, he was also composing for lute, so the pieces were arranged later.
Likewise, why is drop D so popular? On acoustic guitar, drop D is popular because you have a bigger range of pitches while using open-string chords. It doesn't quite give you the ethereal, ghostly sound you get with DADGAD but it's close.
Also know, what tuning does Slipknot use?
| Artist | Song | Tuning |
|---|---|---|
| Slipknot | Snuff | C#F#BEG#C# |
| Slipknot | Snuff | C#F#BEG#C# |
| Slipknot | Sulfur | BF#BEG#C# |
| Slipknot | Vermillion Part 2 | BEADF#B |
What tuning does black tongue use?
Drop A1. It's a whole octave below drop A. Andrew Baena said in his "What if Black Tongue tuned down?" video that the tuning he used was AEAEADGBEG# on his 10-string, so it's probably an octave above that. It's two semitones lower than their previous releases - C1.