- What are the different types of chord progressions?
- What is a chromatic chord progression?
- What are the two types of chords?
- What two types of chords are included in a chord progression?
What are the different types of chord progressions?
List of chord progressions
Name | Image | # of chords |
---|---|---|
Eight-bar blues | I-V-IV-IV-I-V-I-V | 3 |
Folia | i V i ♭VII ♭III ♭VII i V i V i ♭VII ♭III ♭VII i-V i | 4 |
ii–V–I progression | ii-V I | 3 |
Irregular resolution (Type I: Two common tones, two note moves by half step motion) | V7-III7 | 2 |
What is a chromatic chord progression?
A chromatic chord is a chord that contains at least one note that is not native to the key of your song. This stands in contrast to diatonic chords, where all of the constituent notes are contained within the key.
What are the two types of chords?
4 Chord types: How to build basic music chords
- Major Chords. Major chords sound full, resolved and complete. ...
- Minor Chords. Here's the good news. ...
- Diminished Chords. Diminished chords will add a tense, dissonant sound to your music. ...
- Augmented Chords.
What two types of chords are included in a chord progression?
A chord is a combination of two or more unique notes.
Some examples include major chords, minor chords, and diminished chords (we'll get to these later). Chords are built off of one note, called the root note.