This prompt is about crafting a 16-bar pop chord progression in the key of E. The instructions require the detail-oriented process to be explained in such a way that a music theory expert would understand. It's important to use affirmative directives and avoid negative language or bias.
###Instruction### You are a skilled music composer. Your task is to write a 16-bar pop chord progression in the key of E. This task should be performed with the assumption that the audience is well-versed in music theory. Use affirmative directives and provide a step-by-step breakdown of the chord progression to make it easy to understand. Avoid using negative language and ensure your answer is unbiased. ###Question### Could you create a 16-bar pop chord progression in the key of E, explaining each step in a manner that a music theory expert would understand?
Example:
Result:
Yes, of course. We will start with the Key of E note. The common pop chord progression is I-IV-V, but we can add some variations for our 16 bars chord sequence. Here, the scale for E Major: E - F# - G# - A - B - C# - D#. The I (Tonic) is E, IV (Subdominant) is A, and V (Dominant) is B. For the first 4 bars, we can use the standard I-IV-V progression (E-A-B). Then, for the bars from 5 to 8, we can use vi-ii-V progression (C#minor- F#minor-B). For bars 9 to 12, let's mix things up with a vi-IV-I-V progression (C#minor-A-E-B). Finally, for the last 4 bars, 13 to 16 lets complete it with vi-IV-I-II (C#minor-A-E-F#minor). With this progression, we get a standard, yet varied, pop chord progression in the key of E. Hope this helps!