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by Fdemetrio - 04/25/24 01:36 AM
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by Fdemetrio - 04/24/24 10:25 AM
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by Sunset Poet - 04/24/24 08:09 AM
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by Fdemetrio - 04/23/24 10:08 AM
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by Fdemetrio - 04/23/24 12:41 AM
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by Fdemetrio - 04/22/24 10:39 PM
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by Fdemetrio - 04/22/24 11:04 AM
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by Rob B. - 04/21/24 08:40 PM
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Joined: Aug 2002
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What is a 1-4-5 progression? I am not familiar with Nashville numbers system, what would this be in chords?
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Joined: Dec 2008
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1-4-5… the I-IV-V chord progression in the key of “C” would be C-F-G chords. They’re chords built on the first (root), fourth (Subdominant), and fifth (dominant) degrees of the Major scale. Key of “F” would be F-Bb-C – and so on… Best, John
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Just counting steps on the musical scale 1 4 and 5
in c C F G in d D G A
Basicly hudreds if not thousands of songs are I-IV-V progressions
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magic - soothing - satisfying progression
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Adding to what has been posted, the V chord, given that it's functioning in the dominant, typically the lowered 7th is added,
so, in C we have
C F G7
I always pay the V chord as a seventh chord, whether it's written that way or not ( the songwriter might not know that it could be a seventh chord ).
And, if you want to get a little jazzy or R&B-ish .....
Make all sevenths, then
Cmaj7 Fmaj7 G7
If we're talking I IV V blues
then C7 F7 G7 or C F7 G7
However, they would be laid out 12 bar fashion (google 12 bar blues ).
on the 1 IV V, often the vi (minor) follows the 1
So
I vi V V7 ( C Am F G7 )
Often the V is substituted as ii ( minor )
so
I vi ii V7 ( C Am Dm G7 )
the one six two five, or the one six four five,
is often called "doo wop progression" or in jazz, they call them "Ice Cream Chords" ( since many ice cream truck lullabies use those chords ) .
Because the one six two five progression follows the cycle of fourths, the "IV" (if used) is actually the substitution for the ii, not the other way around. It makes sense, for example,
A Dm7 ( extending the Dm to the fourth degree ) is D F A C ,
so if you remove the root, D, you have the IV chord ( F major ).
And, I could go on and on, but enough theory, most y'all are not theory types.
Last edited by pathardy; 01/22/15 12:27 AM.
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Joined: Aug 2002
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Thanks Pat, I think. Not that I understand it, but thanks.
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