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Related Music Theory Alchemy

“Right Where It Belongs” by Nine Inch Nails is a song characterized by its melodic and harmonic structure. It has a unique yet familiar sound, blending pop and alternative rock elements with its rich chord progression and powerful melody.

“Something I Can Never Have” by Nine Inch Nails is a song with a dark and moody atmosphere. The chord progression in both the verse and chorus of the song features certain borrowed chords and chromatic tones that give the piece this distinctive quality. The song seems to be in the key of C Major, but certain chords from the parallel minor key (C Minor) are used to create a sense of tension and emotional turmoil.

“For No One” is a song from The Beatles’ album Revolver, released in 1966. The song has a melancholic theme, represented quite well through a sophisticated chord progression that features significant use of the minor scale and infrequent use of chord extensions, such as 7th and suspended chords. It’s written primarily in C Major, but the chorus alternates between D Minor and A7, an interesting modal shift (Using structural chords from different modes).

“Knights of Cydonia” by Muse features a harmonically straightforward chord progression within the rock style. This progression is primarily based in the key of E minor and centers around the Em, Bm, and A chords. Throughout the song, the driving rhythm, vocal melodies, and transitions between different sections contribute to its energetic and dramatic qualities.

The modality of the song “Yet Again” by Grizzly Bear is primarily in A minor, which makes it a piece in the minor modality. This song uses several traditional progression elements, but intermixes them with unexpected changes, especially the shift from E minor to F major, and the chromatic shift from G major to B flat major.

Nine Inch Nails – Right Where It Belongs – Chorus

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Chord Progression

[‘Gm’, ‘Bb’, ‘F’, ‘C’, ‘Gm’, ‘Bb’, ‘F’, ‘C’, ‘Gm’, ‘Bb’, ‘F’, ‘C’, ‘Gm’, ‘Bb’, ‘F’, ‘C’, ‘Gm’, ‘Bb’, ‘F’, ‘C’]

Chord Progression Analysis

Here’s a breakdown of the specific chord names and their corresponding Roman numerals:

G minor (vi) – Bb Major (I) – F Major (V) – C Major (V/ii)

“`code
Chord Function:
G minor – Tonic parallel
Bb Major – Tonic
F Major – Dominant
C Major – Dominant of the ii (Secondary dominant)
“`

Similar Chord Progressions

There are a number of artists and songs that use similar four-chord progressions:

1. “I Will Follow You Into the Dark” by Death Cab for Cutie also uses a vi-I-V-IV chord progression in the key of C major:

Am (vi) – C (I) – G (V) – F (IV)

2. “No Woman, No Cry” by Bob Marley uses a I-V-vi-IV progression in the key of C major:

C (I) – G (V) – Am (vi) – F (IV)

3. “Don’t Stop Believin’” by Journey also uses a I-V-vi-IV progression, but in the key of E major:

E (I) – B (V) – C#m (vi) – A (IV)

Each of these songs are in different genres from “Right Where It Belongs,” but all rely on similar four-chord progressions for their harmonic foundations.

Musical Analysis

The repeated four-chord progression creates a loop effect that is hypnotic in nature and is often characteristic of Nine Inch Nails’s music. This progression is also notable for the use of a secondary dominant (C Major, the V/ii), which briefly modulates the key center to ii (C minor) before the progression loops back to vi (Gm).

Overall Analysis

The chorus of “Right Where It Belongs” by Nine Inch Nails is built upon a repeating four-chord progression of Gm-Bb-F-C. This song is in the key of Bb major (with two flats in the key signature, Bb and Eb). All the chords used in this song are derived from the Bb major scale, which makes this a diatonic chord progression. There is no borrowed or chromatic harmony in this song.

Style Analysis

The style of this song is typical of the industrial rock genre, with a strong reliance on synthesized sounds and heavy drum beats for its instrumentation. The chord progression itself, while relatively simple, represents the darker and more melancholic musical aesthetic that Nine Inch Nails is known for, with its use of minor and major chords.

Chords in the Chorus section of Right Where It Belongs by Nine Inch Nails are:

[‘Gm’, ‘Bb’, ‘F’, ‘C’, ‘Gm’, ‘Bb’, ‘F’, ‘C’, ‘Gm’, ‘Bb’, ‘F’, ‘C’, ‘Gm’, ‘Bb’, ‘F’, ‘C’, ‘Gm’, ‘Bb’, ‘F’, ‘C’]