
Barre Chords
A Great Way to Improve Your Guitar Playing
Once you have learned the basic fingering of major and minor guitar chords, a great next step is to learn barre chords. They allow for fast changing of chords, and also allow you to play a chosen chord at a higher pitch. Over time, you will be able to completely master your fretboard and use it to create just the right chord and pitch you are looking for. Here is what you need to know.
Barre Chord Fingering
In barre chord fingering, the index finger is placed across all or most of a fret and the remaining fingers are placed on individual stings below that fret. You are, in effect, using your finger as a capo.
Because none of the strings are open in a barre chord, these chords are going to have a more muted sound. Therefore, it’s crucial to learn proper placement of the index finger. It won’t be comfortable at first; it might even hurt. Be very patient with yourself! This is one technique that will take time to master.
Types of Barre Chords
Note: Numeric or shape codes indicate the strings on a guitar from left to right.
The two most commonly barred notes are variations of the E chord and the A chord. The E barre chord is made of an E chord shape (022100) moved up and down the frets and being barred, changing the note. For example, the E chord barred one fret up becomes an F chord (133211). The next fret up is F♯, followed by G, A♭, A, B♭, B, C, C♯, D, E♭, and then back to E (1 octave up) at fret twelve.
A barre chords are similar, although the highest string is not played. It is the basic A chord shape (X02220) moved up and down the frets and being barred. As you go up the frets, the chords become B♭, B, C, C♯, D, E♭, E, F, F♯, G, A♭, and at the twelfth fret (that is, one octave up), it is A again.
As you can see, all major chords can be played with A or E barre chords.
C, D, and G barre chords can be used as well, although they are not nearly as common.
As you advance, you can learn even more chords (minors, 7ths etc.) using barre chord placement. The variations are numerous. But master these first; they will serve you well.
Advantages of the Barre Chord
Whatever your preferred genre of music is, learning barre chords is an effective way to expand your chord vocabulary. It allows you to change chords more quickly, which is helpful when playing fast songs or difficult passages requiring multiple chords in short periods of time. As you could probably guess, these chords are used most frequently in variations of rock music such as metal, punk, and blues rock, but they have a place for anyone who wants to take full advantage of their fretboard and play chords exactly as they would like to.
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