I+–IV in G Major
Pattern: I+ – IV
Chords: Gaug – C
Chord Breakdown
| Numeral | Chord | Type | Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| I+ | Gaug (details) | augmented | Tonic |
| IV | C (details) | major | Subdominant |
Harmonic Analysis
This progression moves through Gaug (Tonic) → C (Subdominant).
The I+–IV progression uses the augmented tonic chord as a chromatic passing harmony to the subdominant. The raised fifth of the augmented chord (enharmonic to the flat sixth) resolves upward by half step to the root of the IV chord, creating smooth chromatic voice leading. This colorful motion adds sophistication to otherwise simple tonic-to-subdominant movement.
Song Examples
- Oh! You Pretty Things — David Bowie
- Crying — Roy Orbison
- Baby Hold On — Eddie Money