Barre Chords

Approaching Chord Theory Visually

See What You’re Playing

As opposed to open chords, barre chords can enable us to see the chord numbering system at work on the fretboard. The information in this section covers the following:

  1. What is a barre chord?
  2. Advantage of playing barre chords
  3. E shape barre chords
  4. A shape barre chords
  5. Barre Chord Numbering – Putting it All Together: I, ii, iii, IV, V, vi. This section demonstrates how we can visualize and play the chord families easily. Additionally, it shows how we can simply transpose to different keys using barre chords.
  6. C shape barre chords

What is a Barre Chord?

A Temporary Capo

A barre chord is simply a guitar chord where one finger (usually the index finger), frets more than one string at the same time. Many times the index finger frets all strings in one fret and acts as a “temporary capo”.  

F chord

 

This is how we would chart an F barre chord. Notice the curved line demonstrating that this is a barre chord.

 

F Barre Photo

 

This is what an actual F barre chord looks like on the guitar.  Notice the fairly straight line from point of index finger to the knuckle.  Also, the wrist is below the neck of the guitar, not behind it.

Click for PDF

For a printable copy of barre chord charts, click the button below.

Advantage of Barre Chords

Don’t Give Up

Barre chords are not exactly easy to play. But they are definitely worth the effort — unless you have a guitar with horrible action (the distance between the strings and the frets). 

Perhaps the best advice for starting with barre chords would be to use a classical or an electric guitar.

There are several advantages to playing barre chords:

  1. Play every major and minor chord – Barre chords will minimally allow you to play every major or minor chord with ease.
  2. Transposes easily – Understanding barre chord theory will allow you to transpose into other keys without much problem.
  3. Power Chord Positions – Barre chords provide a stepping stone for learning Power Chords.  I call power chords “abbreviated barre chords”.  Power Chords use only the lowest two or three notes of the barre chord, and sound better than any other chords when played with any distortion effect.  (Power chords use the chord formula 1-5.  There is no third note, and therefore can be substituted for either a major or a minor chord.  A power chord is noted with -5 as a suffix.  The G power chord is written “G5”.)

How can I get my barre chords to sound better?

Because barre chords played in the first fret are closest to the nut, the amount of angle between the string and the fretboard is increased.  This causes them to be more difficult to play, more difficult to obtain clear sounds.

  1. Build the muscles in your hands – Don’t stop playing if your barre chord doesn’t sound super clear.  It takes time for the muscles in your hands to strengthen, so keep playing even if there is a little buzzing or muting.
  2. Correct finger form – Making sure your barre finger is straight (not curved) is a help, especially when your thumb is directly behind it allowing more pressure to be applied at the barre finger.
  3. Drop your wrist – One other important point for barre chords is your wrist.  Your wrist should not be behind the neck of your guitar, but below it.  This helps with straightening your barre finger and increasing the pressure between the thumb and barre finger.

 

Perhaps the best advice for starting with barre chords would be to use a classical or an electric guitar.

Click for PDF

For a printable copy of barre chord charts, click the button below.

E Shape Barre Chords

Change Fingering First

Because barre chords are like creating a temporary capo with our index finger, this means we are playing a known chord with the rest of our fingers. The most common shape barre chord is the E Shape. Normally the E chord is played with fingers 1, 2, and 3 like this:

Free Up Barre Finger

But we need to “free up” our index finger to use as a temporary capo, so we will use fingers 2, 3, and 4 like this:

 

 

Slide Up the Fret

Next we will slide our new E chord shape up one fret, then place our index finger across all strings in the FIRST fret. This will give us the major chord that is one half step higher than the E chord, the F chord. Below is how we play the F chord as an “E shape barre chord”.

F Barre Photo

Follow the Chromatic Scale

We can take this same shape and ascend by one fret at a time, or half step increments. The pictures show how the E shape barre chord in the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th frets create the F#, G, G# and A major chords respectively. Click on the navigation controls to see the different photos.

F# Barre

E shape

(2nd fret)

G Barre

E shape

(3rd fret)

G# Barre

E shape

(4th fret)

A Barre

E shape

(5th fret)

Modifying the E Shape

Any way we modify an E chord, we can modify the E shape, and alter the barre chord accordingly. By leaving off the finger on the third string, we change the E major to an Em. We can apply this to the E shape barre chords. Sometimes we will call this the “Em shape”. Look at the images:

Fm Barre

Em shape

(1st fret)

Gm Barre

Em shape

(3rd fret)

Am Barre

Em shape

(5th fret)

A Shape Barre Chords

The A Open Chord Shape

The second most common barre chord shape is the “A Shape”. This is the way I normally play an A major chord:

  

 

A Major Chord

 

Free Up the Barre Finger

There are various ways to play this chord. It really doesn’t matter how you play it now, because we are going to free up our 1 finger to act as our temporary capo, then fret the strings 2, 3, and 4 in the second fret like this:

Slide Up One Fret

Sliding the shape up one fret, and adding the barre finger leaves us with the A shape barre in the first fret, or the Bb chord:

 

 

Slide Up by Half Steps

Now we will slide the A shape barre up one fret at a time in half step increments, to play the B chord, C chord, C# chord and the D chord.

B Barre

A shape

(2nd fret)

C Barre

A shape

(3rd fret)

C# Barre

A shape

(4th fret)

D Barre

A shape

(5th fret)

Modifying the A Shape

Like the E shape, any way we modify an A chord, we can modify the A shape barre chord, and alter each barre chord accordingly. Thus we can use an Am shape, and then move it up the fretboard to create minor chords. We can call this the “Am shape”. Look at the images:

Am Chord

(open chord)

Am Shape

(after freeing up barre finger)

Bbm Barre

Am shape

(1st fret)

Dm Barre

Am shape

(5th fret)

Em Barre

Am shape

(7th fret)

Putting it all Together

Visualizing How Chords Relate to Each Other

Numbering the Chords in a Key with Barres

 

“Barre chords enable the guitarist to visualize and transpose with ease.”

For people applying chord theory and chord numbering on the piano/keyboard, it is easy to visualize how the chords work together. For the guitarist, it is not that simple. Many musicians have moved to the Nashville Number System for chording songs, and instead of writing the progression G, C, D, C, they might write 1, 4, 5, 4 with the thought that they may transpose from one key to any key. This is one of the benefit of understanding chord theory: making transposing easier.

Barre chords enable the guitarist to visualize and transpose with ease. If we are in the key of F, we can play all our major and minor chords with these barre chords (remember I, IV and V are major; ii, iii, and vi are minor):

Some important things to observe here include:

  • The I, ii, and iii chords are all whole steps apart. We use the E shape barre chord for them, changing to the Em shape on chords ii and iii because they are to be minor.
  • The IV, V, and vi chords are all whole steps apart. We use the A shape barre chord for them, changing to the Am shape on the vi chord because it is minor.
  • The chords line up in the same frets: I and IV are in the same frets, as are ii and V, and iii and vi.
If I were to play the chord progression 1, 4, 5, 4 in the key of F, then I would be playing this progression: F, Bb, C, Bb.
If I want to change this progression to the key of G, all my chords would move up a whole step (or two frets). The chords would be each a whole step higher: G, C, D, C.
If I want to play this in the key of A, I again would move this entire progression up a whole step, or two frets. And I would be playing the chords: A, D, E, D.

Starting with an A Shape Barre Chord

When the Root is An A Shape

What if our starting chord, our I chord, was an A shape barre chord? Let’s say we wanted to play chords I, ii, iii, IV, V, and vi, in the key of C. Our I, ii and iii chords would be A or Am shapes, and our IV, V, and vi chords would be E or Em shapes offset by two frets as in the picture below:

This pattern could be copied up or down the fret board to change keys. In other words, if we would want to change to the key of D, each of our chords I through vi would be moved up two frets or a whole step.

Let’s say we wanted to do a popular progression in the key of C: 1 , 4, 6, 5 (I, IV, vi, V). We would be playing chords C, F, Am, G. It would look like this:

To modulate this progression, we could take it up or down the fretboard. To change to the key of D, everything would slide up two frets, and we would be playing chords D, G, Bm, A. To change to the key of B, we would instead go down one fret and be playing chords B, E (no barre finger here), G#m, and F#.

Thus we can raise or lower any key rather easily, when we play with barre chords. Additionally, the more one plays barre chords, they begin to visualize and hear chord progressions, which make them more easy to transpose into other keys.

C Shape Barre Chords

A Quick Look

“Technically, you can create barre chord shapes from any open chord.”

At the present time, I will not go into much detail here about the C shape barre chord. It is probably the 3rd most common barre chord shape. It takes the C chord below, rotates the fingers to free up the index finger, slides the whole shape up and applies the barre, as seen in the diagrams below:

C Barre Pattern

  

Some people only “barre” the first three strings, since the 6th string is supposed to be muted. My preference is to barre all six strings and mute the 6th string. Barred in the first fret like this gives us the C# chord. Barred in the 3rd fret gives us the Eb chord, etc.

Technically, you can create barre chords from any open shape chord, they just get more difficult from here.

4 Comments

  1. im learning to play on my own and i found this site very informative thank you

    Reply
    • Thank you, Rich!

      Reply
  2. Love this…..Been playing by ear for 20 years…Ive so much to learn about theory…Thank You……

    Reply
    • I’m glad it’s a help!

      Reply

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