 Hi, got another lesson for you here for the NCSSM classical guitar and piano course. This one is on bar chords, it's a further explanation of what we're doing with bars. So if you did the introduction to bar chords lesson, you know that this is the shape of an E major chord, and then we based the bar chord on that shape as we moved it up the fretboard. It's important to note that the lowest sound on that particular chord is an E, and that's what gives it the name E major. So if we make our bar chord in such a way that we've taken that shape and simply moved it up one fret, our lowest pitch now is this note, it's an F, and this becomes an F major bar chord. If we go up another fret, it becomes an F sharp major, another fret based on the third fret is the G major bar, and we can keep going from there. G sharp or A flat, A sharp or B flat, B and C. And we actually could go farther than that if you're an electric guitar player used to go and weigh up the fingerboard. So that's the beginning of understanding the names of the chords. So if you know you need to play a G major chord, you can go right to that E shape bar chord based on the third fret on the guitar, and you know you've got a G major chord. Now let's go a step farther. In You Would Not Know, the next song that you're working on, and probably many of you are working on it already, you are asked to go to the fifth fret and play a bar chord, but you lift up this finger and it gives you this sound. And that is a minor bar chord, so instead of it being the major E major shape, it's based on the minor shape, the E minor shape, and this is A minor. And we could work our way backwards. This would be a flat minor. This would be G minor. This would be F sharp minor. And this is F minor. So now you know a major bar chord and a minor bar chord and the names of those bar chords. So give that a try and just try to think about the names of the bar chords you're playing as you move your hand up the fingerboard. Good luck and when you feel like you've mastered that a little bit, show me what you know. I'll give you a song credit for knowing some of those names of bar chords.