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What Is a Barre Chord?

What Is a Barre Chord?

A barre chord is a chord in which your index finger lies flat across several strings at one fret, while the other fingers form a chord shape above it. The index finger works as a movable capo: it replaces the nut, so a shape that needed open strings can slide anywhere on the neck.

One shape, twelve chords

The classic F chord is an E shape barred at the 1st fret. Slide the same grip to the 3rd fret and it's G; to the 5th, A. Because the shape's root rides the low E string, knowing the notes on that string instantly names all twelve chords the shape can make. The A-shape barre works the same way from the A string. That's the trade: one painful technique buys the entire chromatic set of major and minor chords.

Barre chords are CAGED in disguise

Every barre shape is one of the five open shapes (C, A, G, E, D) with the barre standing in for the nut — the E-shape and A-shape barres are simply the two most finger-friendly of the five. Seeing that connection is the on-ramp to the whole CAGED system; the full argument is in Barre Chords Are Just CAGED Shapes.

If barre chords still buzz, small triads on three strings deliver most of the same harmony with none of the clamp — many players find triads the better path to playing across the neck.