Once you can play, writing your own music is closer than you think — most songs are built from a small kit of parts you already know. This is the beginner's blueprint for turning chords into a song.
Pick a key, then choose chords that belong to it (see chords in a key). Almost any order works, but these reliably sound good.
| Progression | In C | Mood |
|---|---|---|
| I–V–vi–IV | C–G–Am–F | uplifting, universal pop |
| vi–IV–I–V | Am–F–C–G | emotional, anthemic |
| I–vi–IV–V | C–Am–F–G | nostalgic, classic |
| ii–V–I | Dm–G–C | smooth, jazzy resolution |
| i–VI–III–VII | Am–F–C–G | minor-key, driving |
Loop your chosen progression until it feels natural. That loop is the foundation you'll build the whole song on.
Loop your progression and just hum. Your instinct will find notes that fit — because a good melody mostly uses notes from the same scale as the chords, landing on chord tones at key moments.
Melody notes that fall on the chord tones (root/3rd/5th) sound resolved; passing notes between them add motion. Start simple: a melody with few notes and lots of repetition is often the most memorable.
Songs arrange a few sections into a satisfying journey. You don't need all of these — many great songs use just verse and chorus.
| Section | Role |
|---|---|
| Intro | Sets the mood; often the chorus chords played quietly. |
| Verse | Tells the story; same music each time, different lyrics. Usually lower energy. |
| Pre-chorus | Optional lift that builds tension into the chorus. |
| Chorus | The emotional peak and main hook; same words and music each time. Make it bigger than the verse. |
| Bridge | A contrast section (new chords or feel) that appears once, to refresh the ear before the final chorus. |
| Outro | Winds the song down. |
A classic layout: Intro · Verse · Chorus · Verse · Chorus · Bridge · Chorus · Outro. Give the verse and chorus different energy — often by changing the strumming intensity or adding higher melody notes in the chorus.
Write about one specific moment or emotion rather than everything at once. Concrete images beat vague statements.
Sing lyrics against the melody; adjust words so the stressed syllables land on strong beats. It should feel natural to sing.
Get a complete rough version first — a finished bad song teaches more than a perfect unfinished one. Then improve a piece at a time.