How to play the guitar, how to play 5th chords - 5th Chord Placement
5th Chord Placement
If you want to learn the positioning of all
the 5th
chords then learn the notes on the thick E, A and D strings.
As discussed in "5th
Chord Shapes", root 6 and 5 are the two most common
5th
chords. So to make it a little easier for now, you can
just learn the notes on the E and A strings. If you learnt
the "Bar
chords" section you should all ready know these notes.
Root 6 Position
Playing this root 6 position 5th chord from
the 1st fret
would would make it an F5 chord. I f you were to play it from
the 7th fret
it would then become a B5 chord.
The diagram below is showing you where you could
play three different B5 chords on the fretboard.
The first two (root 6 and root 5) will sound the same, but
the third (root 4) will sound higher (1 octave higher). The
same rule applies with 5th
chords as does with bar
chords, if you have two chords
that sound the same but are placed in two different positions
on the fretboard
then play the closest chord from where you are.