Chord chart for How to play A♯ minor 7th add 11 chord on guitar — Shape 666869 | Guitar Wiz
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Variation 5 of 8

How to play A♯ minor 7th add 11 chord on guitar

Shape 666869

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Shape characteristics

Barre chord Mid-neck Root position
Voicing type

Barre chord

Your first finger flattens across multiple strings at the same fret. Movable up and down the neck to any key without changing the shape.

Neck position

Mid-neck · fret 6-9

Balanced tone, with neither the ringing openness of first position nor the bright snap of the upper register. Common choice for rhythm work when you want a fuller, more compact sound.

Voicing density

Full six-string voicing

All six strings ring, giving you the biggest, most resonant version of this chord, ideal for strumming and solo acoustic contexts.

Bass & top note

Bass: A♯ · Top: C♯

The root is in the bass, so the chord sounds grounded and stable. This is the natural starting voicing for most progressions.

How to play this shape

  1. 1 Place the 1st finger on the 6th fret of the 2nd string, 4th string, 5th string, and 6th string in barre position
  2. 2 Place the 3rd finger on the 8th fret of the 3rd string
  3. 3 Place the 4th finger on the 9th fret of the 1st string

Frequently Asked Questions

What does "666869" mean?

The sequence 666869 is a highly compact guitar chord notation. It represents the fret played on each of the 6 strings, reading left-to-right from the thickest (lowest pitch) string to the thinnest (highest pitch) string: E, A, D, G, B, e.

  • x means the string is muted or skipped entirely.
  • 0 means the string is played "open" (without pressing over a fret).
  • 1-9 represent standard fret numbers 1 to 9.
  • a, b, c... represent frets 10, 11, 12, and higher (where a=10, b=11, c=12).

Can I play this A♯ minor 7th add 11 shape anywhere else?

Yes! This specific layout is just one way to voice a A♯ minor 7th add 11 chord. You can find all other variations in our chord shape library for A♯ minor 7th add 11. Most guitarists choose different shapes based on whether they want a "brighter" or "deeper" sound, or which chord they are transitioning from.

Other shapes

Showing 8 of 11 playable shapes