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Chord Progressions in D♭ Major

The key of D♭ Major is built on the D♭ Major scale: D♭, E♭, F, G♭, A♭, B♭, C. Its diatonic chords give you everything you need to harmonize a melody — three majors (I, IV, V), three minors (ii, iii, vi), and one diminished (vii°). Most pop, rock, and folk songs in this key never venture outside this set.

The diatonic chords of D♭ Major

The seven chords built from the D♭ Major scale.

D♭E♭mFmG♭A♭B♭mCdim
IiiiiiIVVvivii°

Common progressions in D♭ Major

Pop axis in D♭ Major

I – V – vi – IV

D♭A♭B♭mG♭

The most common four-chord progression in popular music.

50s progression in D♭ Major

I – vi – IV – V

D♭B♭mG♭A♭

Doo-wop and early rock and roll. Stand By Me, Earth Angel.

ii–V–I in D♭ Major

ii – V – I

E♭mA♭D♭

The jazz cadence — works equally well in pop choruses.

Three-chord rock in D♭ Major

I – IV – V

D♭G♭A♭

Blues, country, rock and roll — all built on this triad.

Relative key

D♭ Major shares the same notes as its relative minor, B♭ minor. You can borrow chords freely between the two.

Generate progressions in D♭ Major

ChordGen builds custom progressions in any key. Just describe the mood — the AI handles the music theory.

Generate D♭ Major progressions

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