Acoustic Guitar Chords Barre

Acoustic Guitar Chords Barre

Once you know how to play the basic open chords like G, C, D, A, E, F, Am, Em, Dm, and other chord forms like sus, sus2, sus4, dom7, min7, add9, etc, it’s time to learn bar chords! Although you can play lots of songs with just open chords, your playing will be limited at times. Bar chords will add a ton of versatility to your guitar playing and several popular country and bluegrass songs are played with bar chords.

The bar chords are challenging but very beneficial because you can move one bar chord shape across the entire fretboard and play the same chord shape in 12 different keys. There are many other bar chord shapes, but these are the four shapes that you will probably use most often. Also a lot of the other bar chords are derived from these shapes.

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Let’s take a look at the first chord diagram, the “E major” shape bar chord. The blue line is where you will “bar” the fret using index finger. Place your index finger on the first fret across all the strings and rotate your index finger slightly onto its side to hold down all the strings.

Barre Chords Guitar Lesson 1

Next place your middle finger on third string, second fret. Place your ring finger on the fifth string, third fret. Place your pinky on the fourth string, third fret. Pick all the strings one by one to make sure each string rings out clearly. If you don’t get a good sound out of each string it might be due to some of your fingers touching nearby strings or you might need to apply some more pressure on the strings using the tip of your fingers.

The E major shape bar chord indicates a bar with an “E major shape” chord played with your middle, ring and pinky. When you play the E major shape bar chord with your pointer finger bar on the first fret, you’re actually playing an F major chord. The lowest note which you press with your index finger on the sixth string, first fret is the F note, which is also the root note of the chord. This root note defines the name of the chord.

Now if you move the entire E major shape bar chord up a half step (one fret), you’re playing an F sharp major (F#) chord because your lowest note (the root note) is now on the sixth string, second fret, which is an F# note.

How To Play Bar Chords

As you can see, you are able to move the E major shape bar chord to any location across the entire fretboard. As another example, if you play the E major shape bar chord with your index finger barring the third fret, you will sound a G major chord. If you move that shape up the fretboard one fret at a time, you will play the G#, A, A#, B, C, D, D#, E, and finally back to F major chord on the 13th fret.

You can move all other bar chord shapes in the same exact way. The second chord diagram, the Em chord shape, is actually an F minor (Fm) chord with the pointer finger barring across the first fret. The third chord diagram is an A# major chord or B flat (Bb). The fourth chord diagram is A# minor (A#m) or Bb minor (Bbm).

If you look at “A major shape” bar chord, you can see the lowest note (the root note) is now on the fifth string and not on the sixth string — the low E string is muted. Move the entire chord up a half step (one fret) and you will play the B major chord with the root note on the 2nd fret. Move the shape up another half step and you will play a C major. You get the idea.

The Ultimate Guide To Effortless, Beautiful Bar Chords

Practice bar chords on a regular basis and play songs with bar chords as much as you can. Pay attention to how you place your fingers and check if you can find any errors. Replace or move your fingers if necessary. Strive to make all the notes sound clean and clear.

IMPORTANT: Memorize all the notes on the 6th and 5th string, so you’re able to easily find all the bar chords across the fretboard.A good  bar chord chart is one of the beginning guitarists best tools for his or her toolbox. Having quick access to the information you need is a proven way to speed your progress.

On this page, I not only supply you with an easy to read chart but a downloadable PDF copy for your desktop for easy reference. Feel free to pass it on to your friends on Facebook or anywhere else you can.

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Understanding Guitar Chords

I don't know about you, but I have found bar chords to be one of the most frustrating and painful guitar techniques there is.

There are quite a few situations where a particular chord is almost impossible to finger in an open chord. Also, bar chords can be quite handy to grab while you are soloing or doing whatever you do further up the guitar neck away from the open chord positions.

As you might know already a bar chord is a type of chord where the index finger is used for another guitar nut.

Guitar Bar Chords Tutorial With Diagrams, Photos And Playing Tips

You could also think of it like a capo (a device that clamps onto the guitar neck to position the nut anywhere you want.)

You can have the slickest prettiest chord chart all laid out in front of you, a $4000 dollar guitar a $3000 custom built kick butt amp with the finest guitar effects and gadgets in the world today.

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But, if you don't have the hand strength and dexterity to do the job you might as well buy a kazoo and get your Hendrix licks down with that.

Why Are Barre Chords Hard To Play On A Classical Guitar?

But most of us don't start with hands that can crush rocks and fingers that can trip the light fantastic right away.

Well first of all I'm not a Doctor, But I will tell you this. Be sure to check with a Medical doctor if you have any pain in your hands. They could save your hands and your career as a guitarist.

OK, what is this big secret tip that will make using the great downloadable bar chord chart and bar chords, in general, a breeze?

Bar Chord Chart

If your anything like me when I was first learning to play bar chords I would clamp my hand around the guitar neck like I was trying to strangle a goose that was trying to kill me and my family.

Free

That's a great way of not only making it sound really bad, but also a great way to send your hands into spasms for two weeks.

Instead of clamping down with all your might on your hands trying to get that bar chord to sound right, use you thumb behind the neck as a clamping lever and pull back with your triceps muscle.

Teaching Barre Chords

Just pull your elbow on your fretting arm straight backwards and use the pressure that you produce from that to clamp the fretting hand around the neck.If you’ve been strumming and playing songs using chords like G, C, D, E, and A, with maybe a couple of minor or sevenths thrown in, you’ve been playing open chords—those that use one or more open strings. Barre chords have no open strings; you play them by placing your index finger across five or six strings at once (barring them) and putting down some combination of your remaining fingers on the frets above your index finger.

It can be a challenge at first to get barre chords to sound as clear and clean as their open counterparts. But the payoff is that, unlike open chords, you can use each barre-chord shape to play 12 different chords—just by moving the shape up or down the neck. Learning barre shapes thus gives you access to the kind of out-of-the-way chords you may have run into in songbooks, with names like Bm, Ab7, F#, etc. In this lesson you’ll learn a handful of essential chord shapes and use them to play the swing favorite “After You’ve Gone.”

Your first barre chord is G major, as shown in Example 1. Your first finger covers all six strings at the third fret; your second is on fret 4 of string 3; your fourth, fret 5 of string 4; and your third, fret 5 of string 5. To see where this chord comes from, play an open-position E chord and look at where your fingers are relative to the nut of the guitar. Now place a capo at the third fret and play the same E chord above the capo. Remove the capo and play the G barre chord. Look familiar? The G barre chord is just an E shape capoed up three frets, with your first finger serving as the capo.

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Evil Barre Chords On Acoustic Guitar: F#m, C#m — Rocinante Studios

The same logic leads to your next two barre chords. If you lift your second finger from the G barre chord, you get a Gm barre. If you play an open-position Em chord with the capo at the third fret,

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