Te capo does not change the location of the chords, it only places the open strings at where you place the capo, in your position, the open strings are at the 7th fret. The capo is only ever useful if you have difficulty playing full chords and you only need to change a few during a performance or if you require the open strings at a more convenient position for doing leads for songs played in a certain chord, where the open strings are used often.
It means a capo on the 7th Fret of a guitar neck.
By putting the capo on the second fret and playing a C chord, will create the chord D sound. By playing Am you will get Bm, and by playing Dm you will get Em.
If you use the G fingering with the capo on the third fret, you are playing a Bb chord, which is three half-tones higher than G. If you wish to play in the key of G with the capo on the third fret, use the typical fingering for E, which is three half-tones lower than G.
The capo needs to go in 3rd fret to get the key of C.
A capo is a device which is clamped onto the fretboard and is used to hold all strings on a chosen fret, just as if you had your finger barred across on that fret. With that in mind, presumably "capo 2" would mean that you are being instructed to install the capo onto the 2nd fret. or in short....... you have to clip a capo on the second fret
Put the capo on the second fret and use the "C" chord configuration - this is equivalent to a "D" with no capo.
It means a capo on the 7th Fret of a guitar neck.
D chord
By putting the capo on the second fret and playing a C chord, will create the chord D sound. By playing Am you will get Bm, and by playing Dm you will get Em.
If you have a capo you can put it on the first fret and play a G chord, or you can play a bar chord on the 4th fret (4-6-6-5-4-4)
If you use the G fingering with the capo on the third fret, you are playing a Bb chord, which is three half-tones higher than G. If you wish to play in the key of G with the capo on the third fret, use the typical fingering for E, which is three half-tones lower than G.
An A. That would move the guitar 2 half steps or one whole step and yes making that an A
The capo needs to go in 3rd fret to get the key of C.
There are multiple ways to play every chord on guitar. Additionally, using a capo changes which fret you play the chord in as well. If you are not using a capo, and just want one way to play the Bm chord, here is a link to a diagram: http://guitar.about.com/library/weekly/aa112100d.htm Notice you bar the second fret by putting you're index finger on the five thinnest strings. You put your second finger on the second string in the third fret. The second string is the second thinnest string. Then you use your third and fourth fingers in the forth fret to push down the third and fourth strings.
A capo is a device which is clamped onto the fretboard and is used to hold all strings on a chosen fret, just as if you had your finger barred across on that fret. With that in mind, presumably "capo 2" would mean that you are being instructed to install the capo onto the 2nd fret. or in short....... you have to clip a capo on the second fret
you can either put the capo on the 10th fret, or tune the guitar to drop d
When Taylor plays "Love Story" on her acoustic guitar, she puts the capo on the 2nd fret