Real Song. Real Progression.
💿 "7 Summers" by Morgan Wallen
Break it down:
Key: C Major
Chord Progressions:
Verse: Ima9 → IVma9
(Cma9 → Fma9)
Chorus: ii7 → V7 → Ima9 → vi7 and ii7 → V7
(Dm7 → G7 → Cma9 → Am7) and (Dm7 → G7)
Why it works: Morgan Wallen's 7 Summers demonstrates emotional contrast through chord progression design.
The verse creates a nostalgic, floating feel with just two chords (Ima9 → IVma9), perfect for storytelling.
The chorus introduces forward motion with a classic ii–V–I–vi progression.
This creates a cycle that repeats three times, with the vi chord leading back to ii each time, then ends with ii–V to perfectly set up the verse's return to I.
The vi chord (Am7) extends the emotional journey by leading back to the ii chord (Dm7), creating continuous forward motion rather than final resolution.
Then the chorus ends with a ii–V that perfectly sets up the verse's return to the I chord.
⭐️Check out this week's Vault Pick for focused audio examples of the "7 Summers" progressions
I also included insights on the cadences used, how to build those 9th extensions from basic triads, and practical ideas to better understand these harmony concepts.
Perfect for taking your understanding of contemporary chord progressions to the next level!
🧠 Term of the Week: Cadence
A cadence is how you end a musical sentence.
Just like punctuation tells you when a thought is complete, cadences tell your ear when a musical phrase is wrapping up.
There are a few common types:
- Perfect cadence (V → I): The strongest resolution, like a period. Creates that "we're home" feeling.
- Plagal cadence (IV → I): The "Amen" cadence. Smooth and soulful.
- Half cadence (I → V): Creates an 'unfinished' feeling that demands continuation, like ending a sentence with a comma instead of a period.
- Deceptive cadence (V → vi): A musical plot twist, moves to vi instead of I. Creates surprise while sharing notes with the expected tonic.
In real songs, cadences control the emotional pacing, when to build tension, when to release it, and when to surprise your listener.