In music, the viâÂÂiiâÂÂVâÂÂI progression is a chord progression (also called the circle progression for the circle of fifths, along which it travels). A viâÂÂiiâÂÂVâÂÂI progression in C major (with inverted chords) is shown below.
It is "undoubtedly the most common and the strongest of all harmonic progressions" and consists of "adjacent roots in ascending fourth or descending fifth relationship", with movement by ascending perfect fourth being equivalent to movement by descending perfect fifth due to inversion. For instance, in C major, the chords are AmâÂÂDmâÂÂGâÂÂC, which have roots that descend by perfect fifth (or ascend by fourth). In a major progression, the second leap in the sequence is typically reduced to a diminished fourth so as not to become too removed from the starting key (as shown below).
Examples of viâÂÂiiâÂÂVâÂÂI are shown below.
Pop songs that include the viâÂÂiiâÂÂVâÂÂI progression include Weezer's "Island in the Sun" and Talk Talk's "It's My Life".
IâÂÂviâÂÂiiâÂÂV is one of the most common chord progressions in jazz. The progression is often used as a turnaround, occurring as the last two bars of a chorus or section. The IâÂÂviâÂÂiiâÂÂV chord progression occurs as a two-bar pattern in the A section of the rhythm changes, the progression based on George Gershwin's "I Got Rhythm". It can be varied as well: according to Mark Levine, "[t]oday's players usually play a dominant 7th chord rather than a minor 7th chord as the VI chord in a I-VI-II-V."
In the jazz minor scale, the diatonic progression below is possible.
The circle progression is commonly a succession through all seven diatonic chords of a diatonic scale by fifths, including one progression by diminished fifth, (in C: between F and B) and one diminished chord (in C major, B), returning to the tonic at the end. A full circle of fifths progression in C major is shown below.
Shorter progressions may be derived from this by selecting certain specific chords from the progression through all seven diatonic chords. The iiâÂÂVâÂÂI turnaround lies at the end of the circle progression, as does the viâÂÂiiâÂÂVâÂÂI progression of root movement by descending fifths, which establishes tonality and also strengthens the key through the contrast of minor and major.
In a minor key, the progression is iâÂÂivâÂÂVIIâÂÂIIIâÂÂVIâÂÂiiðâÂÂVâÂÂi.