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5도권

인터랙티브 5도권 — 조성, 음계, 코드 진행 탐색

CG1#D2#A3#E4#B5#Gb6bDb5bAb4bEb3bBb2bF1bAmEmBmF#mC#mG#mEbmBbmFmCmGmDm조를 선택하세요
장조 음계

5도권에서 조를 선택하여 음계, 코드, 진행을 확인하세요

다이아토닉 코드
자주 쓰는 코드 진행
I – IV – V – I
I – V – vi – IV
ii – V – I
I – vi – IV – V
vi – IV – I – V
I – IV – vi – V

사용 방법

1

도구 열기

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2

조작하고 탐색하기

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3

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설치 불필요

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모바일 지원

완전 반응형 — 스마트폰, 태블릿, 데스크톱에서 사용할 수 있습니다.

Understanding the Circle of Fifths

Key Takeaways

  • The Circle of Fifths arranges all 12 major and minor keys by the interval of a perfect fifth (7 semitones).
  • Adjacent keys on the circle share all but one note, making them ideal for smooth modulations.
  • Moving clockwise adds sharps; counterclockwise adds flats to the key signature.

The Circle of Fifths is one of the most important tools in Western music theory. It visually maps the relationships between all 12 major and minor keys, showing which keys are closely related, how many sharps or flats each contains, and which chords naturally belong together. This interactive diagram lets you explore these relationships by clicking on any key.

12 keys

All keys connected

Core Concepts

1

Perfect Fifth Interval

Moving clockwise, each key is a perfect fifth (7 semitones) above the previous. From C to G, G to D, D to A — this pattern continues through all 12 notes.

2

Key Signatures & Accidentals

C major has no sharps or flats. Each step clockwise adds one sharp (G has 1, D has 2, A has 3). Each step counterclockwise adds one flat (F has 1, Bb has 2, Eb has 3).

3

Relative Major & Minor

Every major key has a relative minor sharing the same key signature. C major and A minor both have no accidentals. The relative minor appears on the inner ring.

4

Common Chord Progressions

The I–IV–V progression uses three adjacent keys on the circle. For C major: C (I), F (IV), and G (V) sit side by side, explaining why this progression sounds natural.

Tips for Using the Circle

To find closely related keys, look at the two neighbors on either side — they differ by only one accidental.

Use the circle to transpose songs: shift every chord the same number of steps to change key.

Opposite keys (like C and F#) are tritone pairs and create maximum harmonic tension.

Memorize: sharps order is FCGDAEB, flats order is BEADGCF — they are each other's reverse.

This interactive Circle of Fifths runs entirely in your browser. No data is collected or transmitted. All music theory calculations are performed locally.

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