You can take any open chord that is played with 3 fingers (or less) and turn it into a barre chord. In the accompanying video , we show you how to easily turn the open E chord into a fully-movable barre chord shape, which is necessary to practice along with these audio excerpts.

Barre chords (not bar chords!) are movable shapes that are usually used to play chords that aren’t available in the open position. (Ever heard of an open B chord? How about F#?). When you put 1 finger across multiple strings, you are barring the strings.

Exercise 1

Once you are comfortable making the shape, you need to practice moving it quickly. The best way to do this is to make the E chord using your 2nd, 3rd and 4th fingers. This is how it would be if you were playing a barre chord except we’re not barring anything with our 1st finger (which is the part everyone complains about!).

Once you’ve made the shape, drag it up the fretboard until your 2nd finger is on the 4th fret, and your 3rd and 4th fingers line up with the 5th fret. Now if you place your first finger along the 3rd fret (barring it) you will have a G major chord using the E major barre chord shape (what a mouthful!).

Now let’s practice changing back and forth between this and the open E chord.