By now you have the full 10 Chord Toolkit, you can hear form, and you’re starting to identify chords by ear. This chapter zooms in on one of the most ubiquitous patterns in modern music — and then shows you what happens when songs start coloring outside the lines.
Heart and Soul
You already know this one.

C → Am → F → G. That’s I → vi → IV → V. Heart and Soul. It’s the first thing anyone plays on a piano. It’s the song from Big. It’s the progression that every kid at a party gravitates to, even if they’ve never had a single lesson.
And it’s the backbone of an absurd number of pop, rock, and indie songs. Same four chords — just in different orders.
The Four-Chord Progression
Now start the loop on vi instead of I:
vi → IV → I → V on the Harmony Wheel
Am → F → C → G. Same chords, different starting point — and suddenly it feels different. Starting on the minor chord gives it a yearning quality. The loop never discretely settles into major or minor. It’s both at once.
What makes this progression so effective? A few things:
-
It never fully resolves. The
vichord at the top of the loop gives it a minor, slightly yearning quality. ThenIVprovides warmth.Igives a moment of rest.Vcreates expectation. And then…viagain. The loop keeps turning — an ouroboros, a snake eating its own tail. The progression is happier in motion than at rest. -
It works in any key, at any tempo, with any instrumentation. Slow it down and it’s a ballad. Speed it up and it’s a driving anthem. Strip it to acoustic guitar and it’s intimate. Layer it with synths and it’s an arena.
The four-chord loop is not a weakness of modern music. It’s a feature. It’s a family of progressions — four relatives sharing the same DNA — and a framework flexible enough to hold almost any melody, any lyric, any arrangement. The craft isn’t in the chords — it’s in everything built on top of them.
Ending on IV: The Floating Resolution
Notice what happens when you end a phrase on the IV chord instead of the I chord. Instead of resolving to the tonic (landing), you hover above it (floating). The music doesn’t feel unfinished — it feels open. There’s space. Possibility. The listener isn’t waiting for a resolution; they’re sitting in a sustained moment of warmth.
I → V → vi → IV on the Harmony Wheel
This version of the four-chord loop ends on IV. Compare it with the vi-first version and the Heart and Soul version. Same four chords, different starting point, different emotional landing. It’s like Spin the Bottle — wherever it lands, that’s where the loop begins. People will do somersaults not to end one of these songs on either the I or the vi, because landing on one of those breaks the floating, in-motion feeling that makes the loop work.
Borrowed Chords: Trading Between Major and Minor
Every major key has a parallel minor with the same tonic. C major and C minor both start on C, but they use different scales. C major has E, A, and B. C minor has E♭, A♭, and B♭. When you take a chord from the minor key and use it in the major key, that’s modal interchange — commonly called borrowing. We like to call these flat-side chords, because they come from the flat side of the key, where the thirds and sixths and sevenths are all lowered.
Remember the ♭VII from the toolkit? We heard it as a “four of four” — a cascading plagal cadence. Here’s another way to think about it: B♭ is borrowed from C minor. Both descriptions are true. One of the beautiful things about music theory is that more than one thing can be true — what we try to do is make the most compelling argument for what makes sense to our ear at the time.
I think my favorite thing about music is that frequently two things can be true even when they are seemingly contrary.
— Nathan Rosenberg, Beat KitchenThe most commonly borrowed chords:
| Borrowed Chord | Source | Sound |
|---|---|---|
iv (Fm in C) |
C minor | Bittersweet plagal cadence |
♭VII (B♭ in C) |
C minor | Wide, open, floating |
♭III (E♭ in C) |
C minor | Dramatic, unexpected brightness |
♭VI (A♭ in C) |
C minor | Dark, cinematic |
I → ♭VII → IV → iv on the Harmony Wheel
Borrowed chords add emotional weight without leaving the orbit of the tonic. They don’t modulate (change key) — they just color the existing key with shades from its minor side. Think of it as opening a window between two parallel rooms.
Here’s the key insight: your ear doesn’t flinch at ending on a chord of a different quality. You can hold the idea of two parallel qualities — major and minor — in your mind, as long as the tonic remains the same. Home is home, whether you paint it warm or cool.
Whether a chord (or interval) is major or minor. The quality of C major is major. The quality of C minor is minor. Same root, different character.
The Picardy Third
Here’s a specific and beautiful example of borrowing — in reverse.
A Picardy third is when a piece in a minor key ends on a major tonic chord. The song has been in A minor the whole time — dark, tense, unresolved — and then the final chord is A major. That raised third (C# instead of C) floods the ending with unexpected light.
It’s been used since the Renaissance. It shows up in Bach, in film scores, in pop songs when they want an ending that says “after all that struggle, here’s the sunrise.”
The Picardy third works because it borrows from the parallel major. A minor borrows A major’s third. One note changes. The entire emotional landscape shifts.
Hearing Borrowed Chords in the Wild
Now that you know what borrowing is, you’ll start hearing it everywhere. Your ear is no fool — it’s been noticing these moments all along. It just didn’t have the words yet. Listen for:
- Moments that feel “darker” than expected in a major-key song — borrowed chords from the minor side
- The
♭VII → Imotion — that wide, open, non-dominant resolution. It’s all over rock music - Minor
ivbefore a finalI— the bittersweet plagal cadence. Film composers love this - Surprise major chords in minor-key songs — possible Picardy third
Open the Harmony Wheel and experiment. Start with a basic major-key progression, then swap one chord for its borrowed equivalent. Hear the difference. That’s modal interchange.
Search This Guide
This Course
- 1. Sound, Scales, and the Language
- 2. Your First Chords: Major, Minor, and the Dominant
- 3. The 10 Chord Toolkit: Part 1
- 4. The 10 Chord Toolkit: Part 2
- 5. Song Form and Arrangement
- 6. Ear Training: Finding Tonic, Hearing Cadences
- 7. The Four-Chord Progression and Borrowed Chords
- 8. Voice Leading and the Caterpillar
- 9. Diminished Chords, Extensions, and Other Chameleons
- 10. Rhythm: Counting, Meter, and Feel
- 11. Modes (Without the Mystique)
- 12. Blues, and the Stuff We Didn't Cover
- 13. Arrangement — Making a Track Work
- 14. Sources and Further Reading
Related Videos
Like what you're reading?
Everything in this guide is yours to keep. But reading about it isn't the same as hearing it, doing it, and having someone who's been at this for 30 years tell you why it matters in your music. This is one chapter of a live course — small group, cameras optional, taught by someone who gives a shit.
View the Theory: Musician Basics Course →© 2026 Beat Kitchen School — beatkitchen.io. Licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0. Free to share and adapt for non-commercial purposes with attribution.