I–♭VI–♭VII–IV in F♯ Major

Pattern: I – ♭VI – ♭VII – IV   Chords: F♯ – D – E – B

Chord Breakdown

NumeralChordTypeFunction
I F♯ (details) major Tonic
♭VI D (details) major Submediant
♭VII E (details) major Subtonic
IV B (details) major Subdominant

Harmonic Analysis

This progression moves through F♯ (Tonic) → D (Submediant) → E (Subtonic) → B (Subdominant).

The I–♭VI–♭VII–IV progression borrows the ♭VI and ♭VII from the parallel minor before landing on the diatonic IV, blending dark and bright tonalities. The borrowed chords add grit and edge to what resolves as a major-key pattern. This mixture of modal borrowing and punk energy is common in pop-punk and alternative rock.

Song Examples

Chord Details

More Progressions in F♯ Major