IV–iv–I in D♭ Major
Pattern: IV – iv – I
Chords: G♭ – Gbm – D♭
Chord Breakdown
| Numeral | Chord | Type | Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| IV | G♭ (details) | major | Subdominant |
| iv | Gbm (details) | minor | Subdominant |
| I | D♭ (details) | major | Tonic |
Harmonic Analysis
This progression moves through G♭ (Subdominant) → Gbm (Subdominant) → D♭ (Tonic).
A plagal cadence enhanced by modal mixture, darkening the major IV to minor iv before resolving to the tonic. The chromatic lowering of the sixth scale degree creates a poignant, ♭ittersweet quality beloved by Romantic-era composers.
Song Examples
- Prelude in C Major, Op. 28 No. 1 — Frederic Chopin
- Liebestraum No. 3 — Franz Liszt