ii°–V–i progression in A minor
The ii°–V–i chord progression in A minor is a smooth and sophisticated sequence that uses Bm7♭5 – E7 – Am7. It's one of the cornerstone harmonic patterns of Jazz — instantly familiar to listeners and effortless to play once you understand its structure.
This progression has a smooth and sophisticated character. It works beautifully for jazz songs, but you'll also hear it across countless adjacent styles. Try it with steady eighth-note strumming, broken arpeggios or a four-on-the-floor rhythm to instantly change the feel.
Hear this progression
Chords in this progression
These are the chords for the progression in A minor. Click any chord to open its dedicated page with diagrams and theory.
| Step | Roman numeral | Chord | Open |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ii° | Bm7♭5 | Open chord page |
| 2 | V | E7 | Open chord page |
| 3 | i | Am7 | Open chord page |
What this progression means
In A minor, the ii°–V–i progression places each chord on a specific scale degree. Roman numerals describe how the chords function regardless of the key you're in, while the actual chord symbols (Bm7♭5 – E7 – Am7) tell you exactly what to play on guitar, piano or any other instrument.
Each Roman numeral represents a chord built on a degree of the A minor scale. Uppercase numerals (I, IV, V) are major chords; lowercase (ii, iii, vi) are minor; ° marks a diminished chord; ♭ in front of a numeral lowers the root by a half step (e.g. ♭VII).
Practice tips
Loop the progression slowly with a metronome at around 80 BPM. Once each change is comfortable, try arpeggiating the chords, then experiment with inversions, common-tone voicings and adding 7ths or 9ths to taste.
Variations and substitutions
You can extend this progression with secondary dominants (e.g. V/vi → vi), borrowed chords from the parallel minor, or by repeating one chord for multiple bars before moving on. These variations keep the progression fresh while preserving its core sound.
Famous songs with this progression
You'll hear the ii°–V–i progression in songs like Blue Bossa — Kenny Dorham. Many of these are originally in different keys — transpose them to A minor to play along.
Progressions related to ii°–V–i in A minor
If you like the ii°–V–i progression in A minor, you'll probably enjoy these closely related progressions. Some share the same key, others use the same Roman numeral pattern in a new key.
Frequently asked questions
What chords are in the ii°–V–i progression in A minor?
What tempo and time signature work best for this progression?
Why is this progression so popular?
Can I use the same chords in a different key?
Keep exploring chord progressions
Use this progression in your own songs in A minor or transpose it to any key with our tools.