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Next Lesson: E Shape Barre Chord
You cannot play every Major chord in the guitar’s open position. You can only play 5 major chords in the open position (C,A,G,E,D).
What if you wanted to play an F or B chord? How about an F# or Gb chord for that matter?
You can’t do it without using what we call barre chords.
There are 12 possible major chords and without barre chords you can only play 5 of them.
A barre chord is where we take a basic chord pattern and “carry” it up the guitar’s neck to create all possible chords.
For example, let’s take the E chord pattern:
To move the chord pattern up the neck, we create a barre with our 1st finger. This barre, in a way, replaces the nut of your guitar. The notes that were played open to produce the E chord will now be fingered with the barre that you create with your 1st finger.
If we were to move the entire pattern up one fret it would look like this:
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It’s the same pattern, but now that we have moved the pattern up one fret, it’s no longer an E chord. Now it’s an F chord.The reason we know that it’s an F chord is because of the root note. The root note of the chord will be the lowest note. In the E chord, the root note was the low E string played open. |
This is one of the reasons why it is helpful to actually know the names of the notes on the fretboard. We can play all 12 possible major chords with this one chord pattern by moving it up the neck.
Below on the right is an A chord, because the root falls on the A note:
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See how simple that is?
Next Lesson: E Shape Barre Chord




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You really make it seem so easy along with your presentation however I find this matter to be really one thing that I believe I’d by no means understand. It seems too complex and very broad for me. I am taking a look forward for your subsequent put up, I will try to get the grasp of it!
Writing this stuff out really helps!…The fretboard is like an alphabet and that simple sentence of using this one shape you can play all 12 possible chords is like an epiphany!. Nice