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Guitar chord progressions

Aggressive Guitar Progressions for guitar players.

Explore aggressive guitar progressions with twelve playable four-chord loops, guitar voicing notes, harmonic tendencies, practice suggestions, songwriting angles, and direct StrumForge generator links.

  • four-chord loops
  • voicing choices
  • practice flow
  • songwriting use
StrumForge guitar chord progression generator with playable chord diagrams
Every progression below is a four-chord loop you can open directly in StrumForge.

How this sound works

Use these guitar-specific checkpoints before you decide whether a progression is useful.

Harmonic tendency

This sound usually works best when the chord order gives the part a clear emotional job: lift, pressure, release, drift, or forward motion.

Voicing suggestion

Try open shapes first when you want resonance, triads when the arrangement is dense, barre chords when you need key flexibility, and power chords when the rhythm part should stay lean.

Practice suggestion

Loop one example for several minutes. Keep the fretting hand relaxed, count the bar line out loud, and only raise the tempo after the weakest transition feels controlled.

Songwriting suggestion

Assign the loop a role before adding more chords. A strong verse, chorus, bridge, intro, or vamp usually comes from rhythm and register as much as harmony.

Playable aggressive guitar progressions

These are four-chord progressions. The generator link loads the loop into StrumForge, which counts as one of the 10 free generations per day.

  1. i-bVI-bIII-bVII: Am, F, C, G

    Reliable minor gravity with a broad chorus shape.Open in the generator

  2. i-bVII-bVI-bVII: Am, G, F, G

    Descending darkness with a repeating climb.Open in the generator

  3. vi-IV-i-V: Em, C, Am, B7

    Minor-key pressure with a dominant return.Open in the generator

  4. i-iv-bVI-V: Am, Dm, F, E

    Classical minor pull into a strong resolution.Open in the generator

  5. i-bIII-bVII-iv: Em, G, D, Am

    Moody rock movement with room for riffs.Open in the generator

  6. i-bVI-iv-V: Dm, Bb, Gm, A

    Darker color that still points home.Open in the generator

  7. i-v-bVI-bVII: Cm, Gm, Ab, Bb

    Cinematic minor motion with a lift at the end.Open in the generator

  8. i-bII-bVII-i: Em, F, D, Em

    Half-step tension for darker writing.Open in the generator

  9. i-bVI-bVII-i: E5, C5, D5, E5

    Power-chord version for aggressive rhythm.Open in the generator

  10. i-bIII-IV-i: Em, G, A, Em

    Minor loop with a brighter fourth-chord lift.Open in the generator

  11. i-bV-IV-bII: E5, Bb5, A5, F5

    Chromatic weight for heavy parts.Open in the generator

  12. i-iv-i-bVII: Am, Dm, Am, G

    Small movement that keeps the mood contained.Open in the generator

Turn the page into a practice session

Use the page as a starting point, then move into the app when you need sound, timing, diagrams, and scale context.

FAQ

Short answers for players using this page as a practice or writing reference.

What is the best way to practice aggressive guitar progressions?

Start with one four-chord loop, slow the tempo down, and keep the same voicing family until the rhythm and chord changes feel automatic.

Can I open these examples in StrumForge?

Yes. Each example links into the generator with a four-chord progression. Loading that linked loop uses one of the 10 free daily generations.

Should I change the key?

Yes. Once the loop works, change key or capo position so the idea becomes a fretboard exercise instead of a memorized shape.