Chord And Melody Metrics

Chord Complexity

How do we judge a chord to be more or less complex? A good way to understand complexity in chords is to start with the seven most basic chords in any key, the so-called “primary chords.” These are the seven chords that are featured in the Hookpad chord palette and taken together, represent the majority of chords found in popular music.

Colored blocks showing chords in C Major

Each chord above contains 3 notes and is built from degrees of a scale skipping every other note. For example, a C chord has the notes C, E, and G, the 1st, 3rd, and 5th notes of the C Major scale.

Notes in C major making C major chord

There are fundamentally two metrics that we consider when judging the complexity of a chord relative to the basic ones above. The first is whether the chords contains additional notes beyond the 3 that form the primary chords described above. Adding notes to a chord increases its complexity because it increases the number and nature of intervals or note interactions that our ear must process. A Cmaj7 chord, for example, is similar to a plain C chord, except it has an additional note: B. In addition to the intervals C — E, E — G, C — G, we now have twice as many when we add C — B, E — B, G — B. The nature of the intervals is changed as well; C — B is called a 7th (as there are 7 notes counting from C to B along the scale), and this interval didn’t exist previously. 7ths are more dissonant than the 3rds and 5ths of the plain C chord, and so our ears perceive this as more complex. Other examples of chords with extra notes are Sus2/Sus4 chords, and add9, 9th chords. Songs that have these chords in them will be judged to have more chord complexity than one that does not.

The second factor we look at is whether a chord contains notes that lie outside of the scale of the song's key. Our ears naturally expect to hear notes in the scale so chords with non-scale tones tend to sound more exotic and complex. Chords that do this are often called borrowed chords because they are using tones they’ve “borrowed” from a different scale. For example, in the key of C major, the 4th chord is normally an F major chord. If instead, we consider the key of C Minor, the 4th chord is an F minor chord. Using an F minor chord in a chord progression that is in the key of C major will sound more complex because our ears simply aren’t expecting it (the same is true for using an F Major chord in a song that is in the key of C Minor). Other examples of chords that contain non-sacle tones are secondary chords, and chords with certain non diatonic alterations (#5, b9, etc.).

Browse songs with above average Chord Complexity

Click on the following songs in to see their chords and melody in the TheoryTab database.

What's Going On
by Marvin Gaye
Wasted Time
by Skid Row
Genie
by Girls' Generation
Bottle It Up
by Sara Bareilles
Rocky Raccoon
by The Beatles
Baby One More Time
by Britney Spears
Tiny Dancer
by Elton John
Michelle
by The Beatles
Rock Your Body
by Justin Timberlake
You Never Give Me Your Money
by The Beatles
Atma Weapon Theme
by Nobuo Uematsu
Don't Speak
by No Doubt
Final Fantasy Prologue
by Nobuo Uematsu
In The Fields
by Doug Hammer
My Way
by Frank Sinatra
Titanium feat Sia
by David Guetta
Desperado
by Eagles
Live Forever
by Oasis
Uninvited
by Alanis Morissette
Hello
by Lionel Richie
The Legend Of Zelda Fairy Theme
by Nintendo
Where Are We Now
by David Bowie
Ticket to Ride
by The Beatles
Ken's Theme
by Capcom
If I Ever Feel Better
by Phoenix
Mega Man 3 - Snake Man's Stage
by Yasuaki Fujita
Stairway to Heaven
by Led Zeppelin
Freedom of '76
by Ween
Beautiful Stranger
by Madonna
Penny Lane
by The Beatles
Day Tripper
by The Beatles
Boogie On Reggae Woman
by Stevie Wonder
Take A Bow
by Madonna
Easy
by Mat Zo and Porter Robinson
Stars Come Out
by Zedd
Lovefool
by The Cardigans
You Are Not Alone
by Michael Jackson
Smoke on the Water
by Deep Purple
We Are the Champions
by Queen
This Love
by Maroon 5
Chrono Trigger - Main Theme
by Yasunori Mitsuda
Kick the Rock
by Hunnid-P
Before He Cheats
by Carrie Underwood
Unfaithful
by Rihanna
Lovely Rita
by The Beatles
Don't Talk - Put Your Head On My Shoulder
by The Beach Boys
A Day In The Life
by The Beatles
The Legend of Zelda Main Theme
by Nintendo
Jump 'N' Move
by The Brand New Heavies
Unbreak My Heart
by Toni Braxton
A Saucerful of Secrets
by Pink Floyd
Seven Days in Sunny June
by Jamiroquai
I Saw The Sign
by Barden Bellas - Pitch Perfect
Blanka's Theme
by Capcom
Feels Like We Only Go Backwards
by Tame Impala
One Man and His Droid
by Rob Hubbard
Mas Que Nada
by Sergio Mendes and Brazil '66
Gangnam Style
by Psy
Numb
by Linkin Park
Ms Jackson
by Outkast
Be My Baby
by The Ronettes
Canned Heat
by Jamiroquai
Downstream
by Braid Soundtrack
Final Fantasy IV World Theme
by Nobuo Uematsu
I Just Can't Stop Loving You
by Michael Jackson
Sultans of Swing
by Dire Straits
She's Always a Woman
by Billy Joel
Something
by The Beatles
Hello Goodbye
by The Beatles
I Believe I Can Fly
by R Kelly
Wonderboy
by Tenacious D
Never Gonna Give You Up
by Rick Astley
ET
by Katy Perry
Think For Yourself
by The Beatles
Zulf's Theme
by Bastion Soundtrack
Virtual Insanity
by Jamiroquai
Gravity
by Sara Bareilles
Wonderwall
by Oasis
Free Fallin'
by Tom Petty
Skyfall
by Adele
Into The Great Wide Open
by Tom Petty
Black Star
by Radiohead
Hard To Say I'm Sorry
by Chicago
Zelda's Lullaby
by The Legend of Zelda
Killing Me Softly
by Roberta Flack
While My Guitar Gently Weeps
by The Beatles

Melodic complexity

A melody, at its heart, is a sequence of notes sung or played with specific timings. In “Western” music — a label that describes the bulk of popular music — melodies are based on 7-note scales called “diatonic” scales, like the Major or Minor scales. Whether these scales are simply cultural artifacts stemming from centuries of music doing it this way or rather they are derived from something more fundamental (falling naturally from the laws of nature) is a topic of continued debate.

In either case, it’s almost certain that most of the melodies that you know by heart are based on the 7 notes in one of these scales. For this reason, melodies that use notes outside of the scale create an added complexity. Often these “non-diatonic” notes create dissonance that isn’t available within the normal diatonic notes and require more care in creating a melody that is coherent. In Hooktheory's color notation, non-diatonic notes are labeled with hashed colors.

colored blocks showing a melody in Hooktheory notation

Melodies can also have rhythmic complexity. Notes that are timed with the beats of a song are often perceived as more natural, whereas notes that occur off of a main beat (an “off-beat”) sound more rhythmically complex. Melodies that rely on a large number of off-beat rhythms are called syncopated, and can often give a song a more complex, groovy feel.

colored blocks showing a syncopated rhythm in Hooktheory notation

Browse songs with above average Melodic Complexity

Click on the following songs in to see their chords and melody in the TheoryTab database.

Nigel's 'Top of the Heap' 1959 Gibson Les Paul
by Nigel Tufnel
Domino
by Jessie J
You Know I'm No Good
by Amy Winehouse
One Of My Turns
by Pink Floyd
Genie
by Girls' Generation
Who Knew
by Pink
Leave It Alone
by NOFX
Sakuranbo
by Ai Otsuka
Nyan Cat - nyanyanya
by PRGuitarMan -Yamaha Vocaloid
Eclipse
by Pink Floyd
Videotape
by Radiohead
Yakety Sax
by James Rich and Boots Randolph
Apache - Jump On It
by Sugarhill Gang
She Will Be Loved
by Maroon 5
Hello
by Lionel Richie
Your Song
by Elton John
Creep
by Radiohead
Final Fantasy Prologue
by Nobuo Uematsu
Final Fantasy VI Boss Battle Theme
by Nobuo Uematsu
Scary Monsters And Nice Sprites
by Skrillex
Bohemian Rhapsody
by Queen
Where I End and You Begin
by Radiohead
November Rain
by Guns N' Roses
Money For Nothing
by Dire Straits
That'll Be The Day
by Buddy Holly
The Chain
by Fleetwood Mac
Titanium feat Sia
by David Guetta
Gravity
by Sara Bareilles
Always
by Erasure
Last Friday Night TGIF
by Katy Perry
The Rock Theme
by Hans Zimmer
Time
by Pink Floyd
Unfaithful
by Rihanna
The Legend of Zelda Main Theme
by Nintendo
Language
by Porter Robinson
She's Always a Woman
by Billy Joel
Love Song
by Sara Bareilles
Zulf's Theme
by Bastion Soundtrack
Boyfriend
by Justin Bieber
Still Alive
by Jonathan Coulton and Ellen McLain
Showtime
by Homestuck Soundtrack
No Surprises
by Radiohead
All Along The Watchtower
by Jimi Hendrix
Monty On The Run
by Rob Hubbard
Downstream
by Braid Soundtrack
Hey Nineteen
by Steely Dan
Tiny Dancer
by Elton John
Easy
by Mat Zo and Porter Robinson
Django Unchained Theme
by Luis Bacalov
Strobe
by deadmau5
Locke Theme
by Nobuo Uematsu
Pushing Onwards
by SoulEye
I See You - Avatar
by Leona Lewis
Ken's Theme
by Capcom
Karkat's Theme
by Homestuck Soundtrack
Emerald Sword
by Rhapsody of Fire
Don't Speak
by No Doubt
Kick the Rock
by Hunnid-P
Final Fantasy IV Battle Theme
by Nobuo Uematsu
One Man and His Droid
by Rob Hubbard
Cryin'
by Aerosmith
Ziggy Stardust
by David Bowie
The Great Gig In The Sky
by Pink Floyd
Mardy Bum
by Arctic Monkeys
Morphogenetic Sorrow - I Am Zero
by Shinji Hosoe
It's My Life
by No Doubt
Blanka's Theme
by Capcom
Final Fantasy IV World Theme
by Nobuo Uematsu
Brain Damage
by Pink Floyd
Morning Music
by Konami
Fantastic Voyage
by David Bowie
Atma Weapon Theme
by Nobuo Uematsu
Basket Case
by Green Day
Give Me Everything
by Pitbull
Boogie On Reggae Woman
by Stevie Wonder
The Cave
by Mumford and Sons
Flower Power - From C64 Frankie Goes To Hollywood
by Fred Gray
Annie's Song
by John Denver
Passion for Exploring
by SoulEye
Be Like That
by 3 Doors Down
Teenage Dream
by Katy Perry
My Grown Up Christmas Wish
by Kelly Clarkson
So What
by Pink
The Legend Of Zelda Fairy Theme
by Nintendo
Karma Police
by Radiohead
Ever Ever After
by Carrie Underwood

Chord-melody tension

When a melody is played over a chord progression, their interaction is one of the most important aspects of a song. When a note in the melody is contained in the chord, (for example, the melody note C over a C Major chord, which contains C, E, and G), it creates a sense of stability. If this note is not contained in the chord (for example, the note D over a C Major chord), it creates a sense of instability and tension. In many examples in using Hooktheory notation, you can show which notes are contained in every chord by clicking the "Guides" button. Shown below is a simple chord progression with stable notes highlighted in the note region.

colored blocks showing a chord progression and stable melody notes

Tension, in moderation, is a good thing in music. Melodies that stick to only stable notes over their chord progressions (think “Twinkle Twinkle”), may sound safe, but they are also not very ambitious. On the other hand, melodies that use only unstable notes will sound dissonant and cacophonous. The middle ground involves crafting melodies that intentionally build and release tension at all the right moments.

Browse songs with above average Chord-Melody Tension

Click on the following songs in to see their chords and melody in the TheoryTab database.

Waking Up In Vegas
by Katy Perry
Airplanes
by B o B ft Hayley Williams
Take Care
by Drake
Say
by OneRepublic
Hold It Against Me
by Britney Spears
Firework
by Katy Perry
I Gotta Feeling
by Black Eyed Peas
So In Love
by Cole Porter - Ella Fitzgerald
A Long December
by Counting Crows
Whistle
by Flo Rida
Enjoy the Silence
by Depeche Mode
Atma Weapon Theme
by Nobuo Uematsu
Super Hexagon Theme 1
by Chipzel
Summertime
by Kenny Chesney
Cryin'
by Aerosmith
Cooler Than Me
by Mike Posner
Boyfriend
by Justin Bieber
Doctor
by Homestuck Soundtrack
Smile Smile Smile
by My Little Pony
Don't Look Back in Anger
by Oasis
Dreaming With A Broken Heart
by John Mayer
The Scientist
by Coldplay
Because Of You
by Kelly Clarkson
Uninvited
by Alanis Morissette
Malaguena
by Blast
She Will Be Loved
by Maroon 5
Already Gone
by Kelly Clarkson
Turn Around
by Conor Maynard
Animal
by Neon Trees
Somebody That I Used To Know
by Gotye
Who says you can't go home
by Bon Jovi
When I Was Your Man
by Bruno Mars
Last Friday Night TGIF
by Katy Perry
Haven't Met You Yet
by Michael Buble
Before He Cheats
by Carrie Underwood
Duele El Amor ft Ana Torroja
by Aleks Syntek
Smells Like Teen Spirit
by Nirvana
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Theme
by Chuck Lorre
That'll Be The Day
by Buddy Holly
I Will Follow You Into the Dark
by Death Cab for Cutie
Everybody Talks
by Neon Trees
Fantastic Voyage
by David Bowie
Who Knew
by Pink
Like A Prayer
by Madonna
The Chain
by Fleetwood Mac
Ghost Of Days Gone By
by Alter Bridge
Payphone
by Maroon 5
Say Yes
by Elliott Smith
Lisztomania
by Phoenix
ET
by Katy Perry
Lust For Life
by Girls
Ass Back Home
by Gym Class Heroes
Rolling In The Deep
by Adele
Canned Heat
by Jamiroquai
Final Fantasy VI Boss Battle Theme
by Nobuo Uematsu
Guile's Theme
by Capcom
Hey Ya
by Outkast
Wonderwall
by Oasis
Realize
by Colbie Caillat
Come On Get Higher
by Matt Nathanson
California Gurls
by Katy Perry
Iris
by Goo Goo Dolls
Let's Go
by Calvin Harris
Baby
by Justin Bieber
Kick the Rock
by Hunnid-P
Like A Rolling Stone
by Bob Dylan
In The End
by Linkin Park
The One That Got Away
by Katy Perry
Wild Ones
by Flo Rida
Mardy Bum
by Arctic Monkeys
Super Bass
by Nicki Minaj
Temple Of Dreams
by Messiah
Live Forever
by Oasis
Basket Case
by Green Day
Turn Me On
by Nicki Minaj
Forget You
by Cee Lo Green
Karkat's Theme
by Homestuck Soundtrack
Girlfriend
by Avril Lavigne
Walt Graces Submarine Test January 1967
by John Mayer
Someone Like You
by Adele
Zulf's Theme
by Bastion Soundtrack
Hello
by Lionel Richie
Breezeblocks
by Alt-J
Home
by Daughtry
Say My Name
by Destiny's Child
Katamari on the Rocks
by Katamari Damacy Soundtrack
Epic Sax Guy
by Epic Sax Guy
Don't Stop Believing
by Journey

Chord progression novelty

You’ve probably heard a song somewhere and thought to yourself, “this song sounds just like this other song I know!” With a limited number of chords in the universe, it’s inevitable that the same chord progression is going to be featured in multiple songs. Chord progressions are only one part of a song, and there’s absolutely no reason not to reuse effective ones.

At Hooktheory we keep detailed statistics on the most commonly used chord progressions and chord changes, and we are always impressed to see songs using familiar chords in creative and exciting new ways.

Browse songs with above average Chord Progression Novelty

Click on the following songs in to see their chords and melody in the TheoryTab database.

Boogie On Reggae Woman
by Stevie Wonder
Titanium feat Sia
by David Guetta
Strobe
by deadmau5
If I Ever Feel Better
by Phoenix
November Rain
by Guns N' Roses
Seven Days in Sunny June
by Jamiroquai
Like A Prayer
by Madonna
Bohemian Rhapsody
by Queen
Mary's Song
by Taylor Swift
Virtual Insanity
by Jamiroquai
Super Hexagon Theme 1
by Chipzel
Baby One More Time
by Britney Spears
Ziggy Stardust
by David Bowie
Skyscraper
by Demi Lovato
Home Sweet Home
by Motley Crue
Temple Of Dreams
by Messiah
Wide Awake
by Katy Perry
It's My Life
by No Doubt
Karma Police
by Radiohead
Bad Romance
by Lady Gaga
Feels Like We Only Go Backwards
by Tame Impala
Bottle It Up
by Sara Bareilles
Be Like That
by 3 Doors Down
Dark Side
by Kelly Clarkson
Crazy
by Gnarls Barkley
No Surprises
by Radiohead
If I Could Fly
by Joe Satriani
Zulf's Theme
by Bastion Soundtrack
Blanka's Theme
by Capcom
We Are the Champions
by Queen
Canned Heat
by Jamiroquai
A Hard Day's Night
by The Beatles
Karkat's Theme
by Homestuck Soundtrack
Rock Your Body
by Justin Timberlake
Black Star
by Radiohead
Have You Ever Seen the Rain
by Creedence Clearwater Revival
Iris
by Goo Goo Dolls
The Legend of Zelda Main Theme
by Nintendo
You Are Not Alone
by Michael Jackson
Wonderwall
by Oasis
Walkaways
by Counting Crows
Locke Theme
by Nobuo Uematsu
Photograph
by Nickelback
Take A Bow
by Madonna
Give Your Heart A Break
by Demi Lovato
Where Are We Now
by David Bowie
My Way
by Frank Sinatra
Stairway to Heaven
by Led Zeppelin
Creep
by Radiohead
Genie
by Girls' Generation
Where I End and You Begin
by Radiohead
Never Gonna Give You Up
by Rick Astley
One Man and His Droid
by Rob Hubbard
Big Bang Theory Theme Song
by Bare Naked Ladies
Fake Plastic Trees
by Radiohead
Uninvited
by Alanis Morissette
Final Fantasy Prologue
by Nobuo Uematsu
Brain Damage
by Pink Floyd
Don't Talk - Put Your Head On My Shoulder
by The Beach Boys
Fireflies
by Owl City
Thank You
by Led Zeppelin
Easy
by Mat Zo and Porter Robinson
Domino
by Jessie J
The Legend Of Zelda Fairy Theme
by Nintendo
Firework
by Katy Perry
The Scientist
by Coldplay
The Show Goes On
by Lupe Fiasco
Mas Que Nada
by Sergio Mendes and Brazil '66
I Believe I Can Fly
by R Kelly
Atma Weapon Theme
by Nobuo Uematsu
Love The Way You Lie ft Rihanna
by Eminem
Ken's Theme
by Capcom
ET
by Katy Perry
Sittin' On The Dock of the Bay
by Otis Redding
Videotape
by Radiohead
My Heart Will Go On
by Celine Dion
Killing Me Softly
by Roberta Flack
Soviet National Anthem
by Alexander Alexandrov
Beautiful Stranger
by Madonna
A Day In The Life
by The Beatles
Wasted Time
by Skid Row
Hurts Like Heaven
by Coldplay
Downstream
by Braid Soundtrack
Enjoy the Silence
by Depeche Mode
I Get Around
by Beach Boys
She's Always a Woman
by Billy Joel
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Theme
by Chuck Lorre
Clocks
by Coldplay
She Will Be Loved
by Maroon 5

Chord Bass Melody

Every chord has a bass note, which is the lowest note in the chord. When the bass notes defined by a chord progression ascend or descend in a stepwise manner (like C → D → E), it creates an additional layer of continuity in the progression that helps it flow. But creating a chord progression that is effective in its own right, compatible with the melody, strikes a good balance of chord-melody tension, AND has an ascending or descending bassline can be a tall order. Crafting chord progressions that do this is an art, and at Hooktheory we enjoy marveling at the brilliance of some songwriters who manage to put all of these pieces together simultaneously.

In Hooktheory notation, chords are colored by the color of their bass notes, so chord progressions that have stepwise ascending or descending bass melodies will follow a rainbow pattern.

colored blocks showing a chord progression with an ascending bass line

Browse songs with above average Chord-Bass Melody

Click on the following songs in to see their chords and melody in the TheoryTab database.

Ziggy Stardust
by David Bowie
Take A Bow
by Madonna
The Road And The Radio
by Kenny Chesney
Still Alive
by Jonathan Coulton and Ellen McLain
Jupiter
by Ayaka Hirahara
Levon
by Elton John
Iris
by Goo Goo Dolls
Love The Way You Lie ft Rihanna
by Eminem
Rimushotto Bungie Jump
by Frog Fractions Soundtrack
Ever Ever After
by Carrie Underwood
Realize
by Colbie Caillat
Where Are We Now
by David Bowie
My Way
by Frank Sinatra
Desperado
by Eagles
Somebody That I Used To Know
by Gotye
My Heart Will Go On
by Celine Dion
Defying Gravity
by Lea Michele from Glee
Out From Under
by Britney Spears
Tiny Dancer
by Elton John
Hard To Say I'm Sorry
by Chicago
Rolling In The Deep
by Adele
The Show Goes On
by Lupe Fiasco
Haven't Met You Yet
by Michael Buble
Breathe
by Faith Hill
Say Yes
by Elliott Smith
Memories
by David Guetta
Canned Heat
by Jamiroquai
Nothing Else Matters
by Metallica
Come On Over
by Christina Aguilera
Because Of You
by Kelly Clarkson
All Along The Watchtower
by Jimi Hendrix
Mardy Bum
by Arctic Monkeys
Like A Prayer
by Madonna
She's Always a Woman
by Billy Joel
Good-bye Baby
by Miss A
Thank You
by Led Zeppelin
Your Song
by Elton John
We Are Young
by Fun
Can You Feel The Love Tonight
by Disney
Before He Cheats
by Carrie Underwood
Come On Get Higher
by Matt Nathanson
Teenage Dream
by Katy Perry
Can't Help Falling In Love
by Elvis Presley
Tik Tok
by Kesha
Lights
by Ellie Goulding
Baby One More Time
by Britney Spears
I See You - Avatar
by Leona Lewis
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Theme
by Chuck Lorre
November Rain
by Guns N' Roses
Stairway to Heaven
by Led Zeppelin
You Shook Me All Night Long
by ACDC
Say My Name
by Destiny's Child
Lean on Me
by Bill Withers
Living On A Prayer
by Bon Jovi
ET
by Katy Perry
All American Girl
by Carrie Underwood
Sultans of Swing
by Dire Straits
100 Years
by Five For Fighting
All My Life
by K-Ci and Jojo
Someone Like You
by Adele
Push
by Matchbox 20
Let's Go
by Calvin Harris
Walt Graces Submarine Test January 1967
by John Mayer
Zulf's Theme
by Bastion Soundtrack
Dust In The Wind
by Kansas
I Can't Help Falling In Love
by Elvis Presley
When You're Gone
by Avril Lavigne
Piano Man
by Billy Joel
Annie's Song
by John Denver
California Gurls
by Katy Perry
Want You Gone
by Jonathan Coulton and Ellen McLain
Soviet National Anthem
by Alexander Alexandrov
Ass Back Home
by Gym Class Heroes
I Don't Want To Miss A Thing
by Aerosmith
Whataya Want from Me
by Adam Lambert
You're Beautiful
by James Blunt
Bring Me To Life
by Evanescence
If We Hold On Together
by Diana Ross
What a Wonderful World
by Louis Armstrong
Breakaway
by Kelly Clarkson