Rabbit Hole and Music Harmony

The “Functional Harmony” Rabbit Hole

Posted on March 12, 2025 by songtive

As a music teacher, I’ve spent years guiding students through the complexities of harmony, scales, and progressions. One of the most fascinating (and sometimes frustrating) topics that comes up is functional harmony. Learning about it is undeniably important for developing musical intuition. However, I’ve seen students—and even myself—fall into a trap where analyzing harmony becomes an obsession rather than a tool.

Why Functional Harmony Matters

At its core, functional harmony helps musicians understand why certain chord progressions work. It gives structure to Western music, providing a framework for tension, resolution, and movement within a piece. Understanding tonic, dominant, and subdominant relationships is key to mastering songwriting, composition, and improvisation.

But here’s the thing: not all music follows functional harmony rules.

The Boxed-In Thinking Trap

For a long time, I felt stuck when trying to analyze R&B and Neo-Soul harmony. I would sit at the piano, trying to label every chord I played.
“Okay, maybe this is an Fm11 acting as a ii chord? But then it moves to Bb7, which could be a dominant, but it doesn’t resolve to Eb major, so what now?”

It became a never-ending puzzle, where each harmonic decision felt like an equation that had to be solved. The more I obsessed over function, the harder it became to just hear the music and play what felt right.

Nonfunctional Harmony is Okay

One day, a mentor told me something that changed my perspective completely:
“If a chord sounds good, it is good.”

Not every chord progression needs to fit within the traditional functional framework. Modal harmony, borrowed chords, and even seemingly random voicings can work beautifully in music. Many of the greatest compositions of the 20th and 21st centuries incorporate nonfunctional harmony, using chords for their color rather than their resolution tendencies.

Breaking Free from the Rules

Once I stopped overanalyzing every harmonic move, my playing changed. Instead of asking, “What function does this chord serve?” I started asking, “How does this chord feel?”

  • Voice Leading Matters More Than Function: Smooth movement between chords creates cohesion, even when progressions don’t follow traditional functional harmony.
  • Experiment with Chord Colors: Add extensions, inversions, and altered tones to create unique harmonic textures.
  • Use the Ear Over Theory: If it sounds good, it’s worth exploring—whether or not it fits into a theoretical box.

Tools for Exploring Harmony

When I teach students how to break out of functional harmony constraints, I often use tools that help visualize and experiment with chords in different ways. One such tool is Piano Companion, which allows musicians to explore scales, chord progressions, and voicings interactively. By seeing and hearing different harmonic options, students can break away from rigid analysis and embrace more fluid musical decisions.

Final Thoughts

Understanding functional harmony is an important step in any musician’s journey, but it’s just one tool in a much larger toolbox. At the end of the day, music is about expression. If a chord sounds good and conveys the emotion you’re aiming for, it doesn’t always need a strict theoretical justification.

So next time you find yourself stuck trying to label every chord, take a step back. Play what feels right, trust your ear, and let theory be a guide—not a cage.