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Download a copy, print it, send it by email, or mail it via USPS—whatever works best for your next step.

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The famous four chords used in many pop song progressions are the I, V, vi and IV chords of a major key. The roman numerals represent the numbers of the major scale we begin a chord from (1, 5, 6, 4) so in C major this would be C, G, Amin, F or in G major it would be G, D, Emin, C.
The most common cowboy chords include: E major (E) A major (A) D major (D) G major (G) C major (C) E minor (Em) A minor (Am) D minor (Dm)
Step 1: The 4 Most Commonly Used Chords Are... I = C: C,E, G (C is the 1st tone of C Major) V = G: G, B, D (G is the 5th tone of C Major) vi = A: a, c, e (A is the 6th tone of C Major, and remember this one is minor) IV = F: F, A, C (F is the 4th tone of C Major)
There are only four triads: Major, Minor, Augmented, and Diminished. These four triad types are the basis for nearly every chord you'll encounter.
The chords, in Ed's case, were Em (E minor), C, G and D. Ed was asked by the host to play songs by Passenger, Craig David (although subtitles implied Greg David - we're still trying to find out who he is), the Spice Girls and Beyonce.
The I–V–vi–IV progression is a common chord progression popular across several genres of music. It uses the I, V, vi, and IV chords of a musical scale. For example, in the key of C major, this progression would be C–G–Am–F.
And you want to keep the second and first strings open as well. So that's b sus4. Those are ourMoreAnd you want to keep the second and first strings open as well. So that's b sus4. Those are our three chords a sus2 e major and b sus. Four. So that's the main chord progression.
The classic I-IV-V chord progression, also called the '50s progression' or 'authentic cadence,' is a cornerstone of happy sounding chord progressions in countless musical genres.
The 5 chords we'll look at are the C major, A major, G major, E major, and D major. The reason we use all major chords is that the minor versions of any of these chords just require tiny adjustments. Each one of those minor chords is completely based on its major counterpart.
The golden rule of strumming is as follows: downstroke on the downbeats and upstroke on the upbeats. Simple enough, right?