Lesson 3 of 5
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A Shape Familiarity

The A shape is an extremely effective barre chord shape and one that, once learned, can be incredibly useful.

This shape has given me a fair share of problems and this exercise is one that helped me build confidence in the feel, tone, and overall sound of the A shaped barre chord.

Go slow here and pay very special attention to what pressure is necessary for the chord. Make sure to take breaks when needed and also mental notes on how your hand feels when making a good sounding chord.

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Responses

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  1. Tough but
    Fun
    I feel like am graduating from very poor to competently poor
    Very excited
    In a year can def see where this is going

  2. Well I am having a very hard time with these barre cords. I was curious about what the E and A shapes were all about because I have never heard of them, Worked with the E shape which would were my hand out quick. And the A shape was even worse. So I said, wait a minute. I need to slow down and go back to square one ., So that what I’m doing. Going back to the limbering exercise until I know I’m ready to continue

  3. This chord shape has troubled me for years. The last joint in my ring finger does NOT hyperextend – so it is almost impossible for me to clearly fret the B string and mute the E. They either both ring clear or are muted. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. I have tried to not strum the high E but that requires pick accuracy as well. I have taken to treating the B shaped chords more as power chords – playing the middle strings as best I can

  4. Barre chords seem to take a long time and struggle but I want to let those who are struggling that you will eventually get it! Just keep at it, analyze which part is giving you trouble, focus practice on it, but just as important let it go and not get too frustrated. It will come.

  5. I worked on this with my in-person teacher last year, and finally got it after 2 weeks of playing it badly. What I still have to work on is when I transition to the Barre B from another usually a Barre Chord (e.g F or G). thanks

  6. Killer Bees! This one is gonna take a while to get. After I get these two patterns down…then I have to work on getting the transition to them up to speed…oy!

  7. This is actually kind of easy for me, I use the ring finger not the pinky, as some of you say is easier for you to use the pinky. But my ring finger is stronger, and I can brace it with the middle if needed.

  8. Ring finger on freting hand not flexible enough to span the d,g, and b strings. Am using all
    four fingers to make the A shape barre chord.

    1. Me too, can use the ring or index finger after moving up a few frets when the distance between frets is smaller, and it isn’t possible to continue using 4 fingers.

    1. From what I’m seeing Raymond, the only thing your index finger really needs to do for an A shape is fret the D string. It doesn’t really seem to do anything else for this shape chord.
      If you’re just wanting to work on rolling your finger, what helps me to get started is to tip the neck up higher for more of a classical position. That allows me to roll my wrist/finger a little more. You can also try moving your thumb lower on the back of the neck to apply pressure down towards the B & E strings.
      Hope these ideas help. They helped me.

  9. Still having problems with the palm and finger tips of some fingers dulling other strings. I have notice a good improvement if I lift my guitar neck up at a 45 degree angel I can get me fingers over the strings better and my palm is not as much trouble

  10. Tony is it okay to use middle ring and pinky on the bottom part of the chord. For some reason I find it much easier and cleaner.

    1. I also use three fingers (middle, ring and pinky) instead of just my ring finger so I can avoid the ring finger cramping up and risking a trigger finger. If I can get all the notes clearly, I’m happy.

  11. Holy moly! I’m decades away from getting my ring finger to cover the DGB without muting the high E. I find the 7th fret B chord much easier.

  12. Yippee! The A shape B chord is the first Barre chord that I am able to get clear sound with each string! Excited!
    #smallwin
    This is encouragement for me to continue patiently working on the other Barre chords.
    Thanks, Tony!

  13. This is the first time I was able to get clear tone on all the strings and feel like I have good confidence in using this chord. Having gone through a number of barre chord tutorials, I now feel like I can make the chord with clear sound. Next step is being able to make the chord changes quickly enough to play in a song. #smallwin

  14. That is definitely a killer on the ring finger on the fretting hand
    Really have to watch the hand positioning

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Responses

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  1. Tough but
    Fun
    I feel like am graduating from very poor to competently poor
    Very excited
    In a year can def see where this is going

  2. Well I am having a very hard time with these barre cords. I was curious about what the E and A shapes were all about because I have never heard of them, Worked with the E shape which would were my hand out quick. And the A shape was even worse. So I said, wait a minute. I need to slow down and go back to square one ., So that what I’m doing. Going back to the limbering exercise until I know I’m ready to continue

  3. This chord shape has troubled me for years. The last joint in my ring finger does NOT hyperextend – so it is almost impossible for me to clearly fret the B string and mute the E. They either both ring clear or are muted. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. I have tried to not strum the high E but that requires pick accuracy as well. I have taken to treating the B shaped chords more as power chords – playing the middle strings as best I can

  4. Barre chords seem to take a long time and struggle but I want to let those who are struggling that you will eventually get it! Just keep at it, analyze which part is giving you trouble, focus practice on it, but just as important let it go and not get too frustrated. It will come.

  5. I worked on this with my in-person teacher last year, and finally got it after 2 weeks of playing it badly. What I still have to work on is when I transition to the Barre B from another usually a Barre Chord (e.g F or G). thanks

  6. Killer Bees! This one is gonna take a while to get. After I get these two patterns down…then I have to work on getting the transition to them up to speed…oy!

  7. This is actually kind of easy for me, I use the ring finger not the pinky, as some of you say is easier for you to use the pinky. But my ring finger is stronger, and I can brace it with the middle if needed.

  8. Ring finger on freting hand not flexible enough to span the d,g, and b strings. Am using all
    four fingers to make the A shape barre chord.

    1. Me too, can use the ring or index finger after moving up a few frets when the distance between frets is smaller, and it isn’t possible to continue using 4 fingers.

    1. From what I’m seeing Raymond, the only thing your index finger really needs to do for an A shape is fret the D string. It doesn’t really seem to do anything else for this shape chord.
      If you’re just wanting to work on rolling your finger, what helps me to get started is to tip the neck up higher for more of a classical position. That allows me to roll my wrist/finger a little more. You can also try moving your thumb lower on the back of the neck to apply pressure down towards the B & E strings.
      Hope these ideas help. They helped me.

  9. Still having problems with the palm and finger tips of some fingers dulling other strings. I have notice a good improvement if I lift my guitar neck up at a 45 degree angel I can get me fingers over the strings better and my palm is not as much trouble

  10. Tony is it okay to use middle ring and pinky on the bottom part of the chord. For some reason I find it much easier and cleaner.

    1. I also use three fingers (middle, ring and pinky) instead of just my ring finger so I can avoid the ring finger cramping up and risking a trigger finger. If I can get all the notes clearly, I’m happy.

  11. Holy moly! I’m decades away from getting my ring finger to cover the DGB without muting the high E. I find the 7th fret B chord much easier.

  12. Yippee! The A shape B chord is the first Barre chord that I am able to get clear sound with each string! Excited!
    #smallwin
    This is encouragement for me to continue patiently working on the other Barre chords.
    Thanks, Tony!

  13. This is the first time I was able to get clear tone on all the strings and feel like I have good confidence in using this chord. Having gone through a number of barre chord tutorials, I now feel like I can make the chord with clear sound. Next step is being able to make the chord changes quickly enough to play in a song. #smallwin

  14. That is definitely a killer on the ring finger on the fretting hand
    Really have to watch the hand positioning

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