Online Chord Progression Library — Genre Filter & Instant Playback
Browse 20 essential chord progressions across eight genres — Pop, Rock, Jazz, Blues, R&B, Folk, Electronic and Classical. Filter by genre or search by chord name, Roman numeral or description. Furthermore, click Play on any progression to hear it arpeggiated immediately in your browser. The LazyTools library is the only free tool combining genre filtering and instant playback without ads or sign-up.
How to use the Online Chord Progression Library
Filter by genre
Select a genre from the dropdown — Pop, Rock, Jazz, Blues, R&B, Folk, Electronic or Classical. Furthermore, the list filters instantly to show only progressions in that genre. Leave it set to "All genres" to browse the full collection.
Search by chord, numeral or keyword
Type in the search box to filter by any part of the progression. Furthermore, searching "II-V" finds all progressions containing that jazz turnaround. Searching "Am" finds progressions containing A minor. Search is case-insensitive and works on Roman numerals, chord names and descriptions.
Read the progression details
Each result shows the genre badge, Roman numeral analysis, chord names with the key, and a short description. Furthermore, Roman numeral analysis (I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII) shows the harmonic function of each chord regardless of key — making progressions transposable to any key.
Click Play to hear the progression
Click the green Play button on any progression to hear it played immediately. Furthermore, each chord arpegiates slightly (notes played in quick succession rather than simultaneously) for clarity. The playback runs once through the full progression.
Transpose to your key
The library shows progressions in their example keys. Furthermore, Roman numeral analysis lets you transpose to any key — if the example is in C major and you want G major, replace each chord with the corresponding chord in G major using the Circle of Fifths tool.
Roman numeral analysis across genres
Roman numerals describe chord function regardless of key. Furthermore, the same Roman numeral pattern sounds identical in any key — only the actual pitch changes. This makes Roman numeral analysis the universal language for chord progressions.
| Roman numeral | Chord quality | Function | Example in C |
|---|---|---|---|
| I | Major | Tonic — home, resolution | C major |
| II or IIm | Minor | Supertonic — pre-dominant | D minor |
| IV | Major | Sub-dominant — movement away from home | F major |
| V | Major | Dominant — tension, wants to resolve to I | G major |
| VIm | Minor | Relative minor — emotional depth | A minor |
| bVII | Major (borrowed) | Borrowed from parallel minor — rock flavour | Bb major |
How to transpose a progression to any key
Transposing moves a progression from one key to another. Furthermore, the Roman numeral analysis stays the same — only the chord names change. Use the Circle of Fifths or the diatonic chord table for the target key to map each Roman numeral to the correct chord.
V = fifth chord of target key (e.g. D major in G)
VI (minor) = sixth chord of target key (e.g. E minor in G)
IV = fourth chord of target key (e.g. C major in G)
Worked example: transposing I–V–VI–IV from C to G
The I–V–VI–IV progression sounds the same in any key. Here is the same progression in four keys:
| Degree | Key of C | Key of G | Key of D | Key of Bb |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | C major | G major | D major | Bb major |
| V | G major | D major | A major | F major |
| VI | A minor | E minor | B minor | G minor |
| IV | F major | C major | G major | Eb major |
What are chord progressions?
A chord progression is a sequence of chords played in order. Furthermore, it forms the harmonic foundation of a song — defining the key, mood and direction of the music. Most popular songs use between three and eight chords in a repeating pattern. The specific pattern determines much of the emotional character of the music.
Chord progressions have been the primary structural element of Western music for centuries. Furthermore, composers in the Baroque period used standardised progressions like I–IV–V–I as cadences. Jazz musicians codified the II–V–I turnaround as the universal movement from tension to resolution. Moreover, pop songwriters have used the I–V–VI–IV pattern so prolifically that music theorists call it the "axis progression."
Why certain progressions work in certain genres
Genre-specific progressions reflect the harmonic vocabulary and emotional expectations of their listeners. Furthermore, blues progressions use dominant seventh chords because the minor third and flat seven create tension that reflects the blues emotional language. Jazz progressions use extended chords and complex substitutions because jazz listeners expect harmonic sophistication. Moreover, pop progressions prioritise resolution and accessibility — the I chord appears frequently, giving listeners a clear tonal home.
Why chord progressions matter for songwriters
Understanding chord progressions transforms a guitarist or pianist from a player into a composer. Furthermore, knowing which chords belong together in a key — and which movements create specific emotional effects — removes guesswork from composition. Moreover, the library here provides a starting inventory of proven progressions that can be used as-is or adapted.
Progressions are not copyrightable. Furthermore, the I–V–VI–IV progression belongs to no single artist — thousands of songs use it. Songwriters are free to use any progression as a structural starting point and make the song unique through melody, rhythm, lyrics and production. Moreover, learning classic progressions builds harmonic intuition that eventually enables original composition without reference to examples.
The II–V–I in jazz
The II–V–I turnaround is the foundational harmonic movement in jazz. Furthermore, it appears in virtually every jazz standard — standards are collections of these turnarounds in various keys and sequences. Jazz improvisation education begins by learning to navigate II–V–I in all 12 keys. Moreover, understanding this progression unlocks the ability to play over the vast majority of jazz repertoire.
Frequently asked questions
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