Note 4: Composers aren't restricted to any particular structure, they can use any chord they like, anywhere they like so this chart won't work for every piece of music but it should be effective for most songs. Note 3: The 7 chord is based on a flat 7th rather than the actual 7th note of the scale. Note 2: If the composer uses natural sequence chords (all notes remaining within the scale of the key) the 1, 4, and 5 chords will be major, while the 2, 3, and 6 chords will be minor. This chart is also set up for major keys so it may have discrepancies in minor keys which you can correct by finding the root note of your minor chord under the 6 column and getting numbers of your chords from that row then find the new minor key in the 6 column and use numbers from that row to convert back to chords. Note 1: I've deliberately elected to go with more commonly used keys avoiding obscure, awkward keys like A#, C#, D# and Gb.
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