Here is the happy secret of pop music: most songs run on the same few chord progressions. Learn a handful and you can busk through hundreds of tunes — and start writing your own. A progression is just a few chords played in an order that sounds good, looped round and round. Below are the most useful ones, written out in the easy ukulele keys so you can play them today.
Each key has seven chords, one built on every step of its scale. We number them with Roman numerals — I is the home chord, IV the one four steps up, V five steps up, and so on. Upper case means a major chord; lower case (ii, iii, vi) means a minor one. Writing a progression in numerals is the trick that lets you play the very same song in any key — just read the chords off the row you want.
| Key | I | ii | iii | IV | V | vi |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C | C | Dm | Em | F | G | Am |
| G | G | Am | Bm | C | D | Em |
| F | F | Gm | Am | B♭ | C | Dm |
The key of C is the kindest on a ukulele — C, F, G and Am are among the first shapes everyone learns — so the examples below are all shown in C, with the numerals beside them so you can shift to G or F whenever you like.
The most famous loop in pop — comedians have stitched dozens of hit songs together over these exact four chords. Bright, uplifting, endlessly singable.
Good for: singalong pop and anthemic choruses. Learn this one first.
The backbone of folk, country and early rock & roll. Just three major chords, and yet thousands of campfire songs live entirely inside them. The simplest progression that still sounds complete.
Good for: your very first songs — the easiest chords, the biggest payoff.
The same four chords as the four-chord trick, but starting on the minor Am — which tilts the whole feel from sunny to wistful. A tiny reorder, a completely different mood.
Good for: heartfelt ballads and anything that wants a touch of melancholy.
The sound of 1950s slow dances and street-corner harmony — you can almost hear the “sh-boom, sh-boom.” Warm and nostalgic, and a lovely one to fingerpick.
Good for: doo-wop, soul ballads and dreamy, retro-sounding songs.
The single most common move in jazz and bossa nova: a gentle wind-up (Dm), a bit of tension (G), and a satisfying landing home (C). Try the seventh versions — Dm7, G7, Cmaj7 — for the proper smoky flavour.
Good for: jazz standards, bossa nova and smooth, resolving turnarounds.
Not a four-chord loop but a twelve-bar form — the grid above is the road map, read left to right, four bars per row. Same three chords as the three-chord trick (here C, F, G), arranged in the pattern every blues and a lot of rock & roll is built on. Swap in C7, F7 and G7 for the real bluesy bite.
Good for: blues, boogie and 12-bar rock & roll.
Every progression above is written in C, but the numerals make it portable. To move one into a friendlier key — or to match a singer — you have two easy paths:
Build them from scratch, too. The app’s chord tools include a “chords in a key” picker — choose a key and it lays out all seven chords with their numerals, so you can grab the I, IV, V and vi and assemble any progression on this page yourself.
Make sure you’re in tune first, keep the chord chart open beside you, and have fun spotting these four-chord loops hiding inside the songs you already know.