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How To Use a Chord Progression Generator Without Writing Generic Songs

Learn how to use a chord progression generator for songwriting without ending up with generic harmony. Build stronger progressions with function, bass motion, borrowed chords, and voice leading.

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A chord progression generator is only as good as the choices you make after it gives you an idea.

That is the part people often miss. The generator is not the song. It is a fast way to get harmonic material on the page so you can start hearing possibilities sooner.

Used well, it speeds up writing. Used lazily, it produces interchangeable progressions that sound fine for ten seconds and then disappear from memory.

Why Progression Generators Can Be Useful

Most songwriters are not blocked because they have zero theory knowledge. They are blocked because they need momentum.

A good chord progression generator solves that problem by giving you:

The Genre-Based Progression Generator is useful because it ties those elements together instead of handing you a random list of roman numerals.

Why Generated Progressions Sometimes Sound Generic

There are four common reasons:

That means the problem is not the generator itself. The problem is that the raw output has not been developed yet.

Check The Harmonic Function First

A progression feels stronger when you understand what each chord is doing.

Use the Diatonic Chord Explorer to see whether the progression is mostly tonic, predominant, or dominant in behavior. If the harmony sits in one function too long, the section can feel static even if the chords themselves are technically fine.

This is also where you can spot when a substitute chord works better than the original generated option.

Shape The Bass, Not Just The Chords

Many writers focus on the chord symbols and forget that bass motion changes how a progression feels.

The same harmony can feel grounded, climbing, unstable, or flowing depending on the bass line underneath it. The Bass Motion Designer helps here because it lets you compare different low-end contours without rebuilding the progression from scratch.

If a generated progression feels generic, changing the bass path can be one of the fastest ways to fix it.

Borrow Chords When The Section Needs More Color

In-key writing is useful, but it is not the whole story.

When a progression sounds too safe, borrowed harmony often provides the missing contrast. The Borrowed Chord Generator gives you parallel-mode options that can add tension, lift, darkness, or brightness without making the harmony feel random.

That is especially useful for choruses, bridges, and pre-choruses that need a stronger emotional turn.

Think In Versions, Not Final Answers

One of the best ways to use a chord progression generator is to make several versions quickly.

For example:

  1. Generate a basic version that feels close.
  2. Rewrite the bass movement.
  3. Replace one diatonic chord with a borrowed chord.
  4. Add a stronger dominant before the cadence.
  5. Compare which version supports the melody best.

This approach treats the generator as a creative partner instead of a final authority.

Pair The Progression With Ear Training

It also helps to hear progressions more clearly, not only build them symbolically.

If you use a generator often, Chord Ear Training and Progression Similarity Finder can help you hear why some chord moves feel more familiar, more stable, or more striking than others. The better your ear gets, the less likely you are to accept bland harmony just because it is available.

Final Thought

A chord progression generator is best used as a sketch tool.

Let it give you speed. Then earn individuality through function, bass design, borrowed harmony, and listening. That is how you keep the convenience while still writing progressions that sound like they belong to you.

Tools To Use While You Read

These interactive pages turn the ideas in this guide into ear-training, harmony, and songwriting practice.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is using a chord progression generator cheating?

No. A progression generator is just a starting tool. The songwriting work still comes from how you shape melody, rhythm, phrasing, arrangement, and harmonic variation.

Why do generated chord progressions sound generic?

They usually sound generic when the chords are not adapted to a melody, bass shape, tension plan, or tonal contrast.

How can I make a chord progression generator more useful?

Use it to get raw material, then refine the result with diatonic function, borrowed chords, bass motion, and better voice leading.

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