Random Generators

Gerador de Progressão de Acordes

Gere progressões de acordes aleatórias para música

Configurações Musicais
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Progressão Gerada
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Tips & Use Cases
Master chord progressions for your musical journey

Perfect for

  • • Songwriting and composition
  • • Breaking creative blocks
  • • Learning music theory concepts
  • • Practicing chord transitions
  • • Discovering new musical styles
  • • Teaching harmony and progression
  • • Film and game music composition
  • • Jazz improvisation practice

Pro Tips

  • • Try different keys with the same progression
  • • Experiment with various chord voicings
  • • Add extensions (7ths, 9ths) to basic chords
  • • Use inversions to create smooth bass lines
  • • Mix major and minor scales for modal sounds
  • • Study how genres differ in chord choices
  • • Practice progressions at different tempos
  • • Build melodies over generated progressions
Frequently Asked Questions

What do the Roman numerals mean?

Roman numerals represent chord functions within a key. "I" is the tonic (home chord), "V" is the dominant, "vi" is the relative minor, etc. Capital numerals indicate major chords, lowercase indicate minor chords.

How do I use these progressions in my music?

Copy the generated chord progression and play it on your instrument. Experiment with different rhythms, strumming patterns, or voicings. Use it as a foundation to build melodies, basslines, or drum patterns around.

What's the difference between scales?

Major scales sound bright and happy, minor scales sound darker or sadder. Dorian has a jazzy, slightly minor feel, while Mixolydian has a bluesy, rock sound. Each scale creates different chord relationships and moods.

Can I modify the generated progressions?

Absolutely! These are starting points for your creativity. Try changing one chord, adding passing chords, using different inversions, or extending chords with 7ths, 9ths, or other additions to make them uniquely yours.

Why do some genres use specific progressions?

Each genre has evolved certain chord progressions that create its characteristic sound. Pop uses catchy, resolved progressions, jazz uses complex harmony with tensions, blues relies on 7th chords, and electronic music often uses modal progressions.

How can I learn more about music theory?

Start by understanding intervals, scales, and chord construction. Practice identifying chord progressions in songs you love. Study how different genres approach harmony, and experiment with the progressions generated here to hear how theory applies in practice.

Common Progressions by Genre

Pop

I - V - vi - IV
vi - IV - I - V

Rock

I - VII - IV - I
i - VII - VI - VII

Jazz

IIM7 - V7 - IM7
IM7 - VIM7 - IIM7 - V7

Blues

I7 - I7 - I7 - I7
IV7 - IV7 - I7 - I7

Folk

I - V - vi - IV
vi - I - V - IV

Electronic

i - VII - VI - VII
i - v - VI - VII