Compare revision #1 with #2 for "Baritone guitar"

-The baritone guitar is a longer-scale six-string instrument that is usually tuned B to B (B E A D F# B) or A to A (A D G C E A) and sits between the ranges of the standard guitar and the [[bass guitar|four-string bass]]. There many types of baritones, including [[elecric guitar|electric]], [[acoustic guitar|acoustic]], and 7 and 8-strings, and the instrument has maintained a distinct position on the outer edge of the guitar community for decades. It is found in many styles of playing from country to heavy metal.
+The **baritone guitar** is a longer-scale six-string instrument that is usually tuned [[B tuning|B to B (B E A D F# B)]] or [[A tuning|A to A (A D G C E A)]] and sits between the ranges of the standard guitar and the [[bass guitar|four-string bass]]. There many types of baritones, including [[elecric guitar|electric]], [[acoustic guitar|acoustic]], and 7 and 8-strings, and the instrument has maintained a distinct position on the outer edge of the guitar community for decades. It is found in many styles of playing from country to heavy metal.
## Use
The first baritones were used to play classical music but it was Danelectro that made the original electric baritone guitars near the end of the 1950s. The electric baritone quickly found a home with the surf/instrumental bands of the period, in film soundtracks, and in country music, where it was muted, called "tic tac bass" and employed to double the part of the actual bass player. In the modern era, baritones have become common in metal and some types of jazz and improvised music.