Using The Circle Of Fifths To Generate Guitar Chord Progressions
Posted: Sunday, November 16, 2008
by Ricky Sharples
http://playaguitarforfree.com/
This article is aimed at giving you some material to work with to come to your own understanding of chord progressions and to give you a working knowledge of the circle of fifths. You can stick with the proven formula of I-IV-V to arrive at chord progressions like: G C D G or C F G C or D G A D or A D E A or E A B E. But you can use the circle of fifths to get your own chord progressions and to understand how popular chord progressions have been invented.
So, you now have the basic idea of what you are looking at if you have the circle of fifths in front of you. If you write it out as a straight line, it goes: F C G D A E B Gb Ab Eb Bb. If you are like alot of guitar players, you may or may not know that Gb (G flat) is the same as F# (F sharp), Db is the same as C#, and so on.
Take a look at G in the circle. Do you know the chords in the key of G? They are C - the subdominant situated before the note G and D - the dominant, after G.
The circle of fifths became a chord generator simply because it filled the job so admirably. Around the nineteen twenties composers of popular music found that if you start with any tonic chord and jump forward along the circle of fifths as many steps as you like, then follow the circle backwards, you end up with a nice chord sequence. So, if you take C as the tonic fir the key you are working in and jump forward to, for example, A, then work your way back to C, you get C A D G C.
There are two things to note at this stage. First, when you are working your way backwards to the tonic, you are actually doing it in fourths, not fifths, and second, the notes of any of the chords you end up using may not be in the key you are using, but you will find that they still work well as accompaniment to tunes in that key.
Okay, so working between C and A you can have a chord progression that looks like:
C A7 D7 G7 C or instead of using sevenths to work back to C you can have minor chords: C Am Dm Gm C.
Let us try another example, this time going ahead by a rather large five steps: C B7 E7 A7 D7 G7 C.
You can take as may steps ahead as you like, just do some experimenting to see what chord sequences you come up with. After a little practice with this method of chord generation, you will be able to work out the chord progression of songs you hear, just by listening to them.
This Article has been viewed 1,023 times. (Not updated in real-time.)
Top-level comments on this article: (1 total)I've known about the circle of fifths for a while, but didn't know how to use them for chord progressions in songs. Thanks for making the concept simple.
We want your comments! If you can read this, you don't have javascript enabled, so you can't use this comment system. Please enable javascript.