Remember from last time:
I. Eb major
ii. Fm
iii. Gm
IV. Ab major
V. Bb major
vi. Cm
vii(b5). Ddim
Many, many, many, many chord progressions in popular music contain some permutation of the I-IV-V progression, and since we're talking about the key of Eb:
I-IV-V can be replaced by the Eb, Ab, and Bb major chords.
You can change the order of the chords for some familiar-sounding progressions:
As I-IV-V-IV-V: Eb, Ab, Bb, Ab, and Bb chords.
As I-V-IV-IV: Eb, Bb, Ab, and Ab chords.
As IV-I-V: The Ab Lydian-sounding Ab, Eb, and Bb progression. (Also referred to as I-V-II.)
As V-IV-I: The Bb Mixolydian-sounding Bb, Ab, and Eb progression. (Also referred to as I-bVII-IV.)
All this looks a lot like high school algebra, but it sounds better than it looks (pun intended).
No comments:
Post a Comment
We'd love to hear from you! If you spot a typo or musical inconsistency (it sometimes happens), please let us know (please be nice, too). Thanks!
Comments on each post close after seven days.