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Harmony

Harmony is the study of chords — how they function, how they relate to each other, and how they’re used to add richness and emotion to music. When you add chords to a melody, you’re creating harmony: extra layers of sound that give a song depth and movement.

In popular music, harmony is built around a few core ideas: how chords establish a tonal center (the key), how they work in progressions, and how they create tension and release. A strong understanding of harmony helps you write music that feels grounded, emotionally resonant, and familiar — even when it’s new.

One of the most helpful things harmony explains is why certain chord combinations sound natural — and why some chords are used much more often than others. For example, in songs written in C major, some chords appear far more frequently than others. The chart below shows a breakdown of the most common chords in this key:

Chord frequency in C major

We can see that in C major, the chords C, F, G, and Am are the most common. These chords — I, IV, V, and vi — are the basic chords built from the C major scale.

But harmony doesn’t just explain which chords are likely to appear — it also helps predict where they’re likely to go. For example, in Hooktheory’s TheoryTab database, the data shows that for songs in C Major, after Em chords, the next chord is almost always F or Am.

Chords following Em in C major

Students familiar with harmony will recognize this as a natural progression. In the key of C major, Em is the iii chord — and one of its common tendencies is to move to the IV (F) or the vi (Am) chord.

You can explore patterns in harmony by visiting the Hooktheory Trends page, where you can see which chords are commonly used together and how likely one chord is to follow another — all backed by real examples from the TheoryTab database.

Contents

Music Fundamentals

The 7 notes that are the building blocks of a song
The spacing between notes

Functional Harmony

The study of how chords work
Establishing the set of notes and chords used in a song
A powerful framework for understanding how songs work
Numbering notes within a key
Numbering chords within a key

Basic Chord Concepts

Chords naturally found in the key
Different chord sounds and their function
Different ways of playing or arranging the same chord
Ending a musical idea

Melody

A song's rhythmic framework
Understanding melody tension over chords

Advanced Chords

Using a different bass note to change a chord's sound
Adding one more note to the basic chords
Chords that temporarily shift the harmonic center
A chord with built in tension and release
A chord with an added tone that enriches its sound
Using chords from parallel modes for contrast and emotion
Jazz harmonic technique replacing dominant chords with chords a tritone away
Altered (raised or lowered) notes create tension and complexity in chords

Advanced Concepts in Harmony

Two ways to change a song's key
Borrowing chords from another key
New scales and home base chords for a different mood
Using notes within and outside a song's key
Progressions that connect the bass