Shape characteristics
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.
Upper register · fret 11-14
Brighter, more focused tone with less low-end. Works well when layering over a bassist or second guitar, and integrates naturally with lead-line phrasing higher on the neck.
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: D♯ · Top: F♯
The 7th (or equivalent upper tone) is in the bass, producing a suspended, leading quality that naturally wants to resolve downward.
Compared to Shape bbdbeb , this voicing uses a partial barre.
How to play this shape
- 1 Place the 1st finger on the 11th fret of the 3rd string, 4th string, 5th string, and 6th string in barre position
- 2 Place the 4th finger on the 14th fret of the 1st string and 2nd string in barre position
Frequently Asked Questions
What does "bbbbee" mean?
The sequence bbbbee 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 F♯6sus2/D♯ shape anywhere else?
Yes! This specific layout is just one way to voice a F♯6sus2/D♯ chord. You can find all other variations in our chord shape library for F♯6sus2/D♯. 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 27 playable shapes
