When I was learning guitar, I did a lot of studying and memorizing chord progressions. I did even more thinking about chords when I was learning to play jazz. When I shifted over to mainly producing electronic music, all my focus went to thinking about groove and timbre and I stopped thinking about chords completely. But now that I’m teaching music theory, I’m back to thinking about chords, and as I prep examples for class, I am in particular thinking about chords in rock songs in a serious way for the first time since my 20s.
You can’t generalize about chord progressions in Anglo-American pop across the board, because there’s too much stylistic diversity between metal, country, hip-hop, R&B, dance music and so on. However, rock has stabilized into a canon, and it’s possible to get your arms around the entire thing.

So given all that, here’s my explanation of rock harmony in one sentence: put major chords on the notes in the natural minor scale, and put minor chords on the notes in the major scale. That doesn’t explain every chord you’ll find in a rock song, but it does explain a lot of them.
Continue reading “A unified theory of rock harmony in one sentence”

