That would be a Barred A on the second fret, or move the A chord up two frets and play only the fingered strings.
B chord guitar charts from the following websites: Guitar About, Ultimate Guitar, Jam Play, Just In Guitar, Guitar Lessons World, Guitar Chord, Chord Book, Guitar Noise, Jazz Guitar Lessons, Chord Find, to name a few.
guitar
A chord, an abbreviation for" b minor seventh"
Do you mean a guitar string, or a chord of three or more notes? The second string (next to thinnest) on a guitar is usually tuned to a B note. A B chord is an A chord barred up two frets. A B7 chord can be played open, and can usually pass for a B chord in a song.
Start on "D" and hit every note along the way until you get to "A".
chord B TABS: 3,2,4,5,2,1,21,2,43,54,3,2,3,4, :-)
When a number is displayed after a chord, it means that you add that number of the scale of the chord you're playing to the chord as an addition, so actually, note number 8 on a guitar is the same as 1. And a major chord already has the note numbers 1,3,and 5 in the chord. In a nutshell, whoever told you that you needed to play a "b8" doesn't know a thing about music theory, because a regular b chord already has that scale # in it. But a B chord would go like this: -----2------ -----4------ -----4------ -----4------ -----2------ -----2------
Play the G chord on the guitar.
There are several guitar chord finders available on the internet. Simply go to Google and search for "guitar chord finder," and you will be presented with thousands of choices!
it's not a chord it means to strike the strings muted/or don't play those notes.
E/a/e/b/e
The letters and numbers appearing above guitar music indicate the chords to be played. The letters indicate the root of the chord (for example - G means a G major chord, but a G/B would be asking you to play a G major chord, but have B as the lowest note heard). The numbers indicate variants on a chord, such as a suspension to be resolved, or a chord with an added 7th tone (for example, G7 would be a G chord, but add in the seventh note above, an F for a bit more interest).