Chord Sequencer
Chord Sequence
Chord Sequencer
Design complex chord sequences with visual step editing, rhythm patterns, and preset progressions. Perfect for songwriting, composition, and music production with real-time playback.
Why creators choose our AI Song Generator
Value propositions
Visual Step Sequencer Grid
Program chord progressions with an intuitive grid interface. Enable or disable steps, assign different chord types to each position, and see your sequence come to life visually. Choose between 8, 16, or 32 steps for different progression lengths.
Comprehensive Chord Library
Access a full range of chord types including major, minor, dominant 7th, major 7th, minor 7th, suspended 2nd and 4th, diminished, and augmented chords. Build sophisticated progressions with professional harmonic depth.
Rhythm Pattern Control
Choose from multiple rhythm patterns to change how chords are played. Options include whole notes, half notes, quarter notes, eighth notes, staccato hits, and arpeggio mode for sequential note playback. Each pattern transforms your progression's feel.
Preset Progressions
Jump-start your creativity with classic chord progressions. Instantly load popular patterns like I-V-vi-IV (Pop), I-IV-V (Rock), ii-V-I (Jazz), I-vi-IV-V (50s progression), i-VI-III-VII (Andalusian cadence), and the Canon progression. Modify presets to create your own variations.
Real-Time Loop Playback
Hear your sequence immediately with real-time playback. Adjust the BPM from 60 to 200 to match your target tempo. The sequencer loops continuously, making it perfect for composition and practice sessions.
Save and Export
Save your sequences as JSON files to continue working later. Export options preserve all settings including chord selections, key, octave, BPM, and rhythm pattern. Build a library of your favorite progressions.
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Prompt library for AI Song Generator
Explore ready-to-run ideas grouped by mood, genre, and theme
Pop progressions
3 promptsI-V-vi-IV (Pop)
The most popular progression in modern pop music. Perfect for uplifting, emotional songs. Example: C - G - Am - FI-vi-IV-V (50s progression)
Classic doo-wop and early rock progression. Great for retro-style songs and ballads. Example: C - Am - F - Gvi-IV-I-V (Emotional)
Minor start creates emotional depth. Common in alternative and indie music. Example: Am - F - C - GRock progressions
3 promptsI-IV-V (Rock)
The foundation of rock and blues. Simple, powerful, and effective. Example: C - F - GI-bVII-IV (Modal)
Mixolydian mode progression. Gives a folk-rock or classic rock feel. Example: C - Bb - FI-III-IV (Power progression)
Ascending progression with strong forward motion. Works great for anthemic rock. Example: C - E - FJazz progressions
3 promptsii-V-I (Jazz standard)
The most important progression in jazz. Foundation of countless standards. Example: Dm7 - G7 - Cmaj7I-VI-ii-V (Rhythm changes)
Based on 'I Got Rhythm', extremely common in jazz. Example: Cmaj7 - A7 - Dm7 - G7iii-vi-ii-V-I (Extended)
Extended jazz progression with smooth voice leading. Example: Em7 - Am7 - Dm7 - G7 - Cmaj7Classical & Modal
3 promptsCanon progression
Based on Pachelbel's Canon. Eight-chord classical sequence. Example: C - G - Am - Em - F - C - F - Gi-VI-III-VII (Andalusian)
Descending minor progression with Spanish/flamenco character. Example: Am - F - C - Gi-VII-VI-V (Minor)
Descending minor progression, dramatic and emotional. Example: Am - G - F - EElectronic & Modern
3 promptsTwo-chord vamp
Minimalist EDM/house pattern. Alternate between two chords. Example: Dm - AmFour-to-the-floor pattern
Use quarter note or eighth note rhythm with simple progression for dance music. Example: Fm - Cm - Gm - EbArpeggiated sequence
Use arpeggio mode for trance, progressive house, or ambient textures. Example: Am - F - C - GWorkflow overview
Follow these steps to move from idea to final mix
- 1Set Your Key and Octave: Choose your root key (C, D, E, etc.) and octave range to establish the harmonic foundation for your sequence.
- 2Select Number of Steps: Pick 8 steps for short loops, 16 steps for standard progressions, or 32 steps for extended sequences.
- 3Set Your Tempo: Adjust the BPM slider anywhere from 60 BPM (slow ballad) to 200 BPM (uptempo dance) to match your song's tempo.
- 4Enable Steps in the Grid: Click step buttons to enable positions where you want chords to play. Disabled steps remain silent.
- 5Assign Chord Types: For each enabled step, select a chord type from the dropdown menu - major, minor, 7th variations, suspended, diminished, or augmented.
- 6Choose a Rhythm Pattern: Select how chords are played - whole notes for sustained pads, eighth notes for rhythmic comping, or arpeggio mode for melodic sequences.
- 7Use Preset Progressions: Click preset buttons to instantly load classic progressions like I-V-vi-IV, ii-V-I, or I-IV-V, then customize them to your needs.
- 8Play and Loop: Hit the play button to hear your sequence loop continuously. Make real-time adjustments while listening.
- 9Save Your Work: Click Save to download your sequence as a JSON file, preserving all settings including chords, key, BPM, and rhythm pattern for future sessions.
Chord Player
Play individual chords with instant audio feedback. Perfect companion for testing chord voicings before adding them to your sequence.
AI Chord Generator
Generate chord progressions from text prompts using AI. Export as MIDI and recreate patterns in the chord sequencer.
Arpeggiator
Turn chords into arpeggiated patterns. Use with the chord sequencer's arpeggio mode for melodic sequences.
Scale Trainer
Learn scales and modes to understand which chords work together. Build sequencer progressions using scale-based chord theory.
Key Finder
Analyze audio to find the key, then use the chord sequencer to create progressions in the same key.
Chord Progression Generator
Generate random and theory-based chord progressions, then recreate them step-by-step in the sequencer.
What you can create with AI Song Generator
Inspiration for different creator workflows
Songwriters & Composers
Design chord progressions visually before committing them to your DAW. Test different harmonic ideas quickly with preset progressions, then customize step by step to create unique sequences that serve as the foundation for your melodies and lyrics.
Music Producers
Generate chord patterns for electronic music, hip-hop, and pop productions. Use the step sequencer to create rhythmic chord stabs, sustained pad progressions, or arpeggiated sequences. Export settings and recreate patterns in your production software.
Music Students & Teachers
Learn and teach chord progressions, harmonic theory, and common progression patterns interactively. Experiment with different chord types, hear how dominant 7ths resolve, understand sus chords, and explore modal progressions with immediate audio feedback.
Instrumentalists & Practice
Practice playing over chord changes with adjustable tempo. Set the sequencer to loop a jazz ii-V-I progression while you improvise, or create practice backing tracks for guitar, piano, saxophone, or any melodic instrument.
Live Performers
Use the chord sequencer as a live performance tool. Program progressions for different song sections, adjust BPM to match your band's tempo, and trigger chord sequences in real-time during electronic live sets or solo performances.
Arrangers & Music Directors
Create reference chord patterns for band arrangements, choir voicings, and ensemble recordings. Share saved JSON files with band members so everyone can hear the exact progression and rhythm pattern you envision.
Frequently asked questions
Answers for licensing, quality, and workflow
What is a chord sequencer and how does it work?+
How do I create a chord progression from scratch?+
What are the preset progressions and when should I use them?+
Can I change how the chords are played?+
How do I save and share my chord sequences?+
Can I export my progressions to my DAW or as MIDI?+
What's the difference between 8, 16, and 32 steps?+
How do I use the chord sequencer for songwriting?+
What chord types are available and when should I use them?+
Is the chord sequencer suitable for beginners?+
Can I use this for jazz chord progressions?+
How can I create more interesting progressions?+
About the Chord Sequencer
Deep-dive context for AI-generated music
The chord sequencer is a browser-based step sequencer designed specifically for programming and experimenting with chord progressions. Unlike traditional piano rolls or notation software, the chord sequencer uses a grid-based approach where each step represents a position in your sequence. This makes it incredibly intuitive to visualize and edit harmonic progressions, especially for producers and songwriters familiar with drum machine and synthesizer sequencer workflows.
At its core, the tool combines harmonic composition with the step-by-step programming interface popularized by electronic music production. You can choose from 8, 16, or 32 steps to accommodate different progression lengths - from tight two-bar loops perfect for house music and hip-hop, to extended eight-bar sequences ideal for jazz standards and progressive rock compositions. The visual grid makes it easy to see the structure of your progression at a glance.
The chord library includes all essential chord types: major and minor for fundamental harmony, dominant 7th, major 7th, and minor 7th for jazz and sophisticated pop, suspended 2nd and 4th chords for creating tension and anticipation, plus diminished and augmented chords for chromatic movement and dramatic effect. This comprehensive palette allows you to create progressions ranging from simple three-chord rock songs to complex jazz reharmonizations.
One of the most powerful features is the rhythm pattern control. While most chord tools simply play chords as sustained notes, the chord sequencer lets you choose exactly how chords are performed. Whole notes create ambient, pad-like textures. Quarter and eighth note patterns produce rhythmic, comping-style chord hits perfect for funk, reggae, and pop. Staccato mode delivers short, percussive chord stabs ideal for EDM and house music. Arpeggio mode transforms chords into flowing melodic sequences by playing notes sequentially, creating the foundation for trance, ambient, and progressive electronic styles.
The preset progression library serves multiple purposes. For beginners, presets are educational tools that demonstrate the most important chord progressions in Western music theory - the I-V-vi-IV that powers countless pop hits, the I-IV-V that forms the backbone of rock and blues, and the ii-V-I that every jazz musician must master. For experienced musicians, presets function as time-saving templates that can be loaded and customized quickly, speeding up the workflow when you need a solid harmonic foundation to build upon.
Real-time loop playback is essential for compositional workflow. The sequencer continuously loops your progression at the tempo you set (anywhere from 60 to 200 BPM), allowing you to hear your chord changes in context repeatedly. This is invaluable when writing melodies, testing harmonic ideas, or practicing improvisation over changes. You can make adjustments while the sequence plays, hearing the effect of chord substitutions and modifications immediately without interrupting your creative flow.
The save and load functionality turns the chord sequencer into a progression library. Each saved JSON file is a complete snapshot of your sequence settings - which steps are enabled, which chord type is assigned to each step, the key and octave, BPM, rhythm pattern, and step count. This means you can build a collection of progressions for different projects, share sequences with collaborators and band members, or return to previous ideas months later with all settings intact.
For music educators and students, the chord sequencer is an interactive learning tool. Students can load preset progressions to hear classic patterns, then modify individual chords to understand how substitutions and variations work. The immediate audio feedback reinforces theoretical concepts - students hear the difference between a major IV and a minor iv chord, experience how dominant 7ths create tension that resolves to I, and discover how suspended chords delay harmonic resolution. The visual grid representation helps students understand progression structure and phrase length.
Songwriters benefit from the chord sequencer's experimental approach to composition. Instead of sitting at a piano or guitar trying chord combinations manually, you can rapidly test different progressions by enabling steps and selecting chord types. The loop playback lets you live with a progression, singing or humming melodies over it to test whether the harmony supports your lyrical ideas. The ability to quickly swap individual chords means you can explore variations efficiently - try a minor vi instead of major VI, substitute a diminished passing chord, or experiment with modal interchange.
Music producers working in DAW environments can use the chord sequencer as a sketching and reference tool. Program your progression in the sequencer, experimenting with different harmonic approaches and rhythm patterns. Once you find a sequence you like, save it and recreate the pattern in your DAW using your preferred virtual instruments and voicings. The sequencer serves as a fast, distraction-free environment for pure harmonic composition before you dive into the complexities of production, sound design, and arrangement.
The step sequencer paradigm is particularly powerful for electronic music producers who think in grids and patterns. If you're comfortable programming drum beats and synthesizer sequences in step mode, the chord sequencer applies that same workflow to harmony. This makes it natural to create chord progressions that lock rhythmically with your drum patterns - use eighth note chord rhythm to match your hi-hat pattern, or staccato mode to create chord stabs that hit with your kick and snare.
For practice and rehearsal, the chord sequencer becomes a customizable backing track generator. Guitar players can program a jazz ii-V-I progression at 120 BPM and practice improvising over the changes. Piano students can load a preset progression and practice comping patterns at different tempos. Horn players can set up a sequence in their instrument's best key and work on melodic ideas over the harmony. The adjustable BPM means you can start slow while learning and gradually increase tempo as you improve.
Understanding step counts is key to using the sequencer effectively. Eight steps create tight, looping progressions perfect for electronic music hooks, hip-hop beats, and minimalist composition. Each step represents half a bar in 4/4 time, so eight steps equal four bars, enough for a complete phrase. Sixteen steps (eight bars) accommodate most song sections - verses, choruses, and bridges typically use four to eight bar progressions. Thirty-two steps (sixteen bars) allow for extended jazz forms, classical-style periods, and progressive rock sections with complex harmonic development.
The chord sequencer represents a modern approach to chord progression composition that bridges traditional music theory with contemporary production workflows. It's free, runs entirely in your browser with no installation required, and works on desktop and mobile devices. Whether you're a beginner learning basic progressions, a songwriter sketching harmonic ideas, a producer programming chord patterns, or a teacher demonstrating music theory concepts, the chord sequencer provides an intuitive, visual, and immediate way to work with harmony.
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