Pick a progression and press play. Change the key to hear it anywhere — every chord is built from the same theory as the chord pages, so the notes always agree.
I›C
80 BPM
Sounds a little stiff and jumpy? There’s a reason —
The most fundamental major progression — the I, IV and V chords. The backbone of countless folk, country, blues and rock songs.
The C Major is built by stacking intervals from the root note. The formula R-M3-P5 describes the scale degrees used. The intervals P1-M3-P5 show the distance between each note in the chord.
C Major — Frequently Asked Questions
What is the C Major chord on piano?
The C Major chord contains the notes C – E – G. On piano, play these notes together to sound the chord.
What notes make up the C Major chord?
C Major contains three notes: C (root), E (major third), and G (perfect fifth). All three are white keys, which is why C Major is typically the first chord pianists learn.
What fingering do I use for C Major?
Right hand: finger 1 on C, finger 3 on E, finger 5 on G. Left hand: finger 5 on C, finger 3 on E, finger 1 on G. The all-white-key layout means no awkward reaches over black keys.
What are the inversions of C Major?
First inversion (C/E): E–G–C, with E in the bass. Second inversion (C/G): G–C–E, with G in the bass. Both use the same three notes — only the bass note changes. Inversions help create smoother voice leading between chords.
What songs use the C Major chord?
C Major is one of the most common chords in Western music. It appears as the home chord in Let It Be (Beatles), Piano Man (Billy Joel), and Imagine (John Lennon), and as a passing chord in thousands of pop, folk, and classical pieces.
What chords pair well with C Major?
The most natural pairings in the key of C are F Major (IV), G Major (V), and A minor (vi). The progression C–F–G–C is a complete I–IV–V–I cadence and appears in countless songs. Am–F–C–G is another extremely common pop sequence.
Why is C Major special on the piano?
C Major uses only white keys — no sharps or flats. This makes it the theoretical starting point for Western music notation and the key from which all other keys and modes are derived. On the keyboard, C is always identifiable as the white key immediately to the left of a group of two black keys.
Practice Tips
Place your thumb on C first, then let fingers 3 and 5 fall naturally on E and G — avoid placing all fingers at once before finding C.
Play C Major slowly, holding each chord for two full beats, then gradually speed up a metronome from 60 BPM.
Practice C → Am → F → G → C (the "pop four") as a loop — this single progression unlocks hundreds of songs.
Learn all three positions up the keyboard: root (C–E–G), first inversion (E–G–C), second inversion (G–C–E).
Add your left hand after mastering the right: LH 5–3–1 mirrors RH exactly and both feel equally natural on white keys.
Keep going with the Major chord — these pages cover the underlying theory, the connected reference material, and the practice tools that work with this chord.