Back to Music Theory Fundamentals

Borrowed Chord

A borrowed chord is a chord from a parallel mode, providing unique color and emotional depth to a progression by momentarily shifting the home base. In C major, an example of a borrowed chord could be substituting a C minor chord in place of the typical I chord, temporarily giving the song a minor feel. The use of borrowed chords results in what is called modal mixture, and since a borrowed chord is built from a different scale than the song’s primary mode, it contains notes outside the key of the song.

A chord is borrowed when it is not one of the basic chords built from the scale corresponding to the song’s key.

Below, you can see and listen to the basic chords in C major:

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The chords above are what you would find in songs written in the key of C major, but if the song wanted to borrow a chord from the minor mode, it could use the chords built from the C minor scale. These chords are shown below:

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One common use of a borrowed chord is the minor iv chord rather than a major IV. In Hooktheory’s notation, when a chord is borrowed, the mode it is borrowed from is indicated below the name in parentheses. In this case, (min) is written below the chord since it is borrowed from the minor mode.

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Other songs that use borrowed chords

Click on the following songs to see their chords and melody in the TheoryTab database.

Sultans of Swing
by Dire Straits
Katamari on the Rocks
by Katamari Damacy Soundtrack
Ken's Theme
by Capcom
Enjoy the Silence
by Depeche Mode
My Sweet Lord
by George Harrison
Where Are We Now
by David Bowie
Django Unchained Theme
by Luis Bacalov
Jar Of Hearts
by Christina Perri
I'll Make Love To You
by Boyz II Men
Still Alive
by Jonathan Coulton and Ellen McLain
Morning Music
by Konami
Crazy
by Gnarls Barkley
Bad Romance
by Lady Gaga
Basket Case
by Green Day
I Can't Get You Off My Mind
by Miss Li
What a Wonderful World
by Louis Armstrong
Your Song
by Elton John
Virtual Insanity
by Jamiroquai
Canned Heat
by Jamiroquai
American Pie
by Don McLean
Rimushotto Bungie Jump
by Frog Fractions Soundtrack
Desperado
by Eagles
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Theme
by Chuck Lorre
Dark Side
by Kelly Clarkson
Easy
by Commodores
Stairway to Heaven
by Led Zeppelin
I Will Follow You Into the Dark
by Death Cab for Cutie
The Way I Am
by Ingrid Michaelson
Mega Man 3 - Snake Man's Stage
by Yasuaki Fujita
Nothing Else Matters
by Metallica
Parachute
by Cheryl Cole
You Are Not Alone
by Michael Jackson
Take A Bow
by Madonna
Final Fantasy IV World Theme
by Nobuo Uematsu
In The End
by Linkin Park
I See You - Avatar
by Leona Lewis
Locke Theme
by Nobuo Uematsu
Dreaming With A Broken Heart
by John Mayer
Rolling In The Deep
by Adele
Don't Look Back In Anger
by Oasis
Blanka's Theme
by Capcom
It's My Life
by No Doubt
She's Always a Woman
by Billy Joel
Enter Sandman
by Metallica
Final Fantasy VI Boss Battle Theme
by Nobuo Uematsu
You Know I'm No Good
by Amy Winehouse
Beautiful Stranger
by Madonna
Tiny Dancer
by Elton John
Baby One More Time
by Britney Spears
Chun Li's Theme
by Capcom
My Way
by Frank Sinatra
Live Forever
by Oasis
The Rock Theme
by Hans Zimmer
Colin Zeal
by Blur
Walt Graces Submarine Test January 1967
by John Mayer
Showtime
by Homestuck Soundtrack
Say Yes
by Elliott Smith
Don't Speak
by No Doubt
This Love
by Maroon 5
Money For Nothing
by Dire Straits
Home Sweet Home
by Motley Crue
Ziggy Stardust
by David Bowie
Fantastic Voyage
by David Bowie
Snakes On A Plane
by Cobra Starship
Mitch Benn's Imagine
by Mitch Benn
Because Of You
by Kelly Clarkson
Before He Cheats
by Carrie Underwood
Downstream
by Braid Soundtrack
Seven Days in Sunny June
by Jamiroquai
When I Was Your Man
by Bruno Mars
Hello
by Lionel Richie
Final Fantasy Prologue
by Nobuo Uematsu
Atma Weapon Theme
by Nobuo Uematsu
Starlight
by Muse
Skyfall
by Adele
Uninvited
by Alanis Morissette
The Legend of Zelda Main Theme
by Nintendo
White Christmas
by Bing Crosby
Rock Your Body
by Justin Timberlake
Good-bye Baby
by Miss A

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