D Minor
Dm
chordAt a Glance
- Formula:
- D minor
- Notes:
- D, F, A
Piano
Fretboard
What It Is
Root, minor third, perfect fifth - a darker-sounding counterpart to the major triad. Notes: D, F, A.
How It Functions
Typically the tonic chord in a minor key.
Appears In These Progressions
- Jazz Turnaround (ii-V-I)
- as ii in C Major
- Extended Jazz Turnaround
- as ii in C Major
- as vi in F Major
- as iii in A# Major
- Pop Progression (I-V-vi-IV)
- as vi in F Major
- Pop Progression, Alternate Rotation (vi-IV-I-V)
- as vi in F Major
- 50s Progression (I-vi-IV-V)
- as vi in F Major
- Pop Progression, Alternate Rotation (I-IV-vi-V)
- as vi in F Major
- Deceptive Cadence
- as vi in F Major
- Minor Primary Progression (i-iv-v)
- as i in D Minor
- as v in G Minor
- as iv in A Minor
- Harmonic Minor Cadential Progression (i-iv-V)
- as i in D Minor
- as iv in A Minor
- Natural Minor Loop (i-VI-III-VII)
- as i in D Minor
- Andalusian Cadence (i-VII-VI-V)
- as i in D Minor
- Authentic Cadence (Minor Key)
- as i in D Minor
- Plagal Cadence (Minor Key)
- as i in D Minor
- as iv in A Minor
- Half Cadence (Minor Key)
- as i in D Minor
- as iv in A Minor
Real Song Examples
Real song examples aren't available yet - check back soon.