Vsus4–V–I in F♯ Major
Pattern: Vsus4 – V – I
Chords: C♯sus4 – C♯ – F♯
Chord Breakdown
| Numeral | Chord | Type | Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vsus4 | C♯sus4 (details) | sus4 | Dominant |
| V | C♯ (details) | major | Dominant |
| I | F♯ (details) | major | Tonic |
Harmonic Analysis
This progression moves through C♯sus4 (Dominant) → C♯ (Dominant) → F♯ (Tonic).
The Vsus4–V–I progression is one of the oldest and most satisfying resolution patterns in music. The suspended fourth on the dominant chord delays the leading tone, building anticipation before it falls to the major third and the chord resolves to the tonic. This 4–3 suspension has been a cornerstone of cadences since the Renaissance and remains ubiquitous in modern rock and pop.
Song Examples
- A Hard Day's Night — The Beatles
- The Seeker — The Who
- Ode to Joy — Beethoven