Hope this helps....
https://songwritingplanet.com/chord-progressions/
How to Create Awesome Chord Progressions for Songwriting
Guess How You Can Write Chord Progressions the will ALWAYS SOUND GREAT with your Melody, and make listeners feel TOTALLY CONNECTED to the song.
How? It’s Simple: DON’T GUESS!
Many songwriters simply guess which chords to use with their melodies; they try a variety of different ones until something sounds right.
There is nothing wrong with using your ear to find good sounds, but just guessing which chords might work with a melody is like trying to find a new car to for sale by driving up and down every street in the city looking for one, rather than simply going to the new car lots. You might eventually find a good one, but you would be really doing things THE HARD WAY.
For Songs, the big car-lot of chords that will ALWAYS SOUND GREAT with your melody will come from the Same Scale. When car shopping, if you want a Chevy you go to a Chevy dealer, if you want a Ford you go to a Ford car lot. It is no different in songwriting. If your melody comes from a D major scale, a G minor scale, or a Bb Blues scale, you need to know the chords in that key to write chord progressions.
This works the other way around also. If you begin with the chord progressions, your melody should come from the same scale that the chords come from.
HOW DO YOU FIND THESE MYSTERIOUS CHORDS?
Let’s quickly go over major keys, and stick to triads (3-note chords) for now to keep this simple. In any major key, which will contain 7 notes, the chords follow the scale tones in this order: I is major, ii is minor, iii is minor, IV is major, V is major, vi is minor, and vii is diminished.
So in the key of C here are the chords: C Dm Em F G Am Bdim.
And in the key of D we get these chords: D Em F#m G A Bm C#dim.
The order of major, minor, and diminished chords will always be the same, no matter what major key you are using.
Here is the BLUEPRINT: If you begin with a melody, determine what scale you are using, know what chords are in that key, and choose from them.
You can also do this the other way around: chords first, melody second. If you begin with the chords, determine what scale they belong to and create your melody from that scale.
This takes less than a minute to figure out, and Everything will match up LIKE MAGIC.
You can always choose a chord or two from outside of the key for Interesting Flavors, but most of the chords and melody notes need to come from the same scale, or song will taste like a Pizza with Tuna and Peanut Butter toppings.
https://songwritingplanet.com/chord-progressions/
How to Create Awesome Chord Progressions for Songwriting
Guess How You Can Write Chord Progressions the will ALWAYS SOUND GREAT with your Melody, and make listeners feel TOTALLY CONNECTED to the song.
How? It’s Simple: DON’T GUESS!
Many songwriters simply guess which chords to use with their melodies; they try a variety of different ones until something sounds right.
There is nothing wrong with using your ear to find good sounds, but just guessing which chords might work with a melody is like trying to find a new car to for sale by driving up and down every street in the city looking for one, rather than simply going to the new car lots. You might eventually find a good one, but you would be really doing things THE HARD WAY.
For Songs, the big car-lot of chords that will ALWAYS SOUND GREAT with your melody will come from the Same Scale. When car shopping, if you want a Chevy you go to a Chevy dealer, if you want a Ford you go to a Ford car lot. It is no different in songwriting. If your melody comes from a D major scale, a G minor scale, or a Bb Blues scale, you need to know the chords in that key to write chord progressions.
This works the other way around also. If you begin with the chord progressions, your melody should come from the same scale that the chords come from.
HOW DO YOU FIND THESE MYSTERIOUS CHORDS?
Let’s quickly go over major keys, and stick to triads (3-note chords) for now to keep this simple. In any major key, which will contain 7 notes, the chords follow the scale tones in this order: I is major, ii is minor, iii is minor, IV is major, V is major, vi is minor, and vii is diminished.
So in the key of C here are the chords: C Dm Em F G Am Bdim.
And in the key of D we get these chords: D Em F#m G A Bm C#dim.
The order of major, minor, and diminished chords will always be the same, no matter what major key you are using.
Here is the BLUEPRINT: If you begin with a melody, determine what scale you are using, know what chords are in that key, and choose from them.
You can also do this the other way around: chords first, melody second. If you begin with the chords, determine what scale they belong to and create your melody from that scale.
This takes less than a minute to figure out, and Everything will match up LIKE MAGIC.
You can always choose a chord or two from outside of the key for Interesting Flavors, but most of the chords and melody notes need to come from the same scale, or song will taste like a Pizza with Tuna and Peanut Butter toppings.
It is what it is until it isn't