Common Chord Progressions using Basic Chords

If you write songs or want to write songs, our 6 eBooks go a long way in helping you to do just that. With 300 mainly four-bar chord progressions written in C major and A minor there are literally thousands of combinations to be had. There's also a very easy to use Transposition Chart included so you can transpose any of the progressions into any key.

Basically, a musical note played on its own is just a single note. When we add another note to that single note and play them at the same time, it becomes a chord. And any succession of chords (i.e. one chord played after another) becomes a chord progression. In turn these chord progressions create the structure for a verse or a chorus etc. You may have also heard chord progressions referred to as chord charts or chord sequences too.

Okay, back to the chord progressions eBooks. Each chord progression contains on average four bars and several chords. You can mix and match all 300 chord progressions so the possibilities are endless! The chords used range from very basic chords such as C major right through to more exotic chords such as C major 9/11. But don't worry about chord complexity as each chord is named, has an audio example, is fully notated and has a guitar box above it.

These eBooks are a great way for you not only to learn new chords and their respective names but also to learn how to put the chords together to create common chord progressions using basic chords and some not so common chord progressions using basic and advanced chords. The layout is very simple and every chord progression can be combined with any other to form a decent original backing song structure which...

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