i–v–♭VI–♭VII in F♯ Minor
Pattern: i – v – ♭VI – ♭VII
Chords: F♯m – C♯m – D – E
Chord Breakdown
| Numeral | Chord | Type | Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| i | F♯m (details) | minor | Tonic |
| v | C♯m (details) | minor | Dominant |
| ♭VI | D (details) | major | Submediant |
| ♭VII | E (details) | major | Subtonic |
Harmonic Analysis
This progression moves through F♯m (Tonic) → C♯m (Dominant) → D (Submediant) → E (Subtonic).
The i–v–♭VI–♭VII progression steps upward through the natural minor scale, creating a steadily building momentum. The minor v (rather than a major V) keeps the sound firmly in Aeolian territory. This ascending pattern is common in epic rock and cinematic compositions.
Song Examples
- Comfortably Numb (verse) — Pink Floyd
- Space Oddity — David Bowie