This is the " Secrets of Exciting Chords & Chord Progressions!" newsletter that you (or someone using your E-mail address) signed up for when you visited our site. If you no longer want to receive these free weekly E-mail piano lessons, toggle down to the bottom of this E-mail and you'll see where you can take yourself off the list. We take your privacy (and ours) very seriously, so we don't want anyone receiving our stuff who doesn't want it! ('cause thousands really do!).

divider.gif (1021 bytes)

" Secrets of Exciting Chords & Chord Progressions!"

 

Piano keyboard with music notesDuane has played a few songs in his lifetime...

 

- Week 21 -

 

Chord Progressions Part Two:

The Circle of Minor Keys

 

 

      Last week we looked at the "circle of 4ths" or the "circle of 5ths", they are the same thing as the "circle of keys". It just depends on whether you're moving clockwise or counter-clockwise around the circle.  All the major keys that you can play in -- 12 of 'em -- are listed in this circle:


Major Keys:  
C     F    Bb    Eb    Ab    Db    Gb    B    E    A   D   G


   
 But there are also 12 minor keys in which songs can be written, so there must also be a circle of minor keys. It's not as well known as the circle of major keys, but it works the same way. Here it is:

 

Circle of keys - minor

    

     It works the same way as the major circle of keys, with one exception:

     When figuring the 3 most likely chords in any key, you still look left and look right, but because of the fact that most songs written in the western hemisphere use the harmonic minor scale instead of the natural minor scale (which is much too involved to get into here -- if you want to know about that in detail you'll need to get a course on scales), the chord to the left is usually a MAJOR chord instead of a minor chord.

     So in the key of Am, the 3 most likely chords would be Am, Dm, and E major -- not E minor! There are some exceptions to that, but not many.

    So what we come out with is this -- the most likely chords in each minor key:

Most likely chords in all 12 minor keys

    So -- to repeat what I said last week:

    Do you see what an enormous advantage this gives you? You have a highly educated guess what chords are going to occur in the song you are playing based on the key that the song is written in. Not only that, you now know that chords like to either move up a 4th or a 5th (or down a 4th or 5th -- same thing).

     And so as we begin learning chord progressions, this is the first step -- memorize the circle above until you can say it forward and backward and upside down and in your sleep! If I were you, I would print it out and stick it up on your piano or bathroom mirror or wherever you would see it often -- it's that important.

     That's all for this time.

     Next time we'll see how you can quickly tell what key a song is in, therefore telling you in advance what chords are the most likely! Is that important?

    It is huge -- monumental -- galactic! Don't miss it!

Music notes divider

 

     This FREE newsletter is sponsored by PlayPiano.com -- the folks who made piano playing exciting, fun, and understandable!

Music notes divider

      If you need to bone up on scales so you can better understand the Circle of Keys, please check out our

"Scales -- Major, Minor, & Modes"

If you're serious about understanding what you're doing in piano playing, don't miss it

!Piano

 

     This is the "Piano Chords & Progressions" e-course that you (or someone using your name) signed up for. If you didn't sign up, then go to the bottom of this page and unsubscribe, because we only want people who LOVE this stuff to get it! Make sure this newsletter reaches you by calling your ISP and putting us on your "Mail I want to receive" list and put our address in your address box. Some SPAM filters actually stop this newsletter from being delivered, even though the person signed up for it and wants it! And if your SPAM filter "eats" it, there is nothing I can do about it. I can't resend it because that is all handled automatically by a 3rd party auto-responder. So make sure you get it by calling your ISP (Certain popular ISP's are particularly notorious about this, so if you have an e-mail account with one of them, please let them know you want this newsletter!)

 

 Disclaimer     Privacy Policy     Children Privacy Policy     Terms of Use

Copyright 2005 by Shinn Trading Inc.

Sponsored by Chord Piano