Fa Alegrías Extended

iii – IV – V – IV – I – V7 – I progression in Fa major

Do Re MiC D E
Harmony
OriginalPass Chords
iiiLam
IVSi♭
VDo
IVSi♭
IFa
V7Do
IFa

Triad Diagrams — Fa Alegrías Extended (Guitar)

Display
FingerNoteDegree

Fa Alegrías Extendediii – IV – V – IV – I – V7 – I

Extended Alegrias variation starting from the iii chord (G#m in E major). Creates a richer harmonic journey through IV and V before resolving. Documented by Granados as one of the characteristic harmonic structures for concert guitar alegrias.

Playing in Fa major

F major is the gateway to barre chords. While F itself requires a full barre at fret 1, the remaining diatonic chords (C, Dm, Am, G, Bb) mix open and barre shapes. The open high E acts as Fmaj7's seventh, adding unexpected richness. F is a intermediate-level key on guitar because the open high E string is the major seventh of F, creating a lush Fmaj7 resonance even in basic shapes, but the F barre chord itself is the first big hurdle for beginners. This key mixes open and barre shapes, making it a good intermediate challenge that builds fretboard fluency.

Voice Leading

The bass line moves through A to Bb (ascending half step), Bb to C (ascending whole step), C to Bb (descending whole step), Bb to F (descending perfect fourth), F to C (descending perfect fourth), C to F (ascending perfect fourth). A half-step bass movement creates a strong leading-tone pull that demands resolution. The mix of stepwise and leap motion balances smoothness with harmonic drive. When the progression loops, the bass returns from F to A by major third.

Capo Transposition

To play in F using familiar open chords: capo 1 with open E shapes; capo 3 with open D shapes; capo 5 with open C shapes. Choose the capo position that gives you the voicings you prefer — lower capo positions produce a fuller sound, while higher positions create a brighter, mandolin-like timbre.

Scales for Soloing

F major pentatonic works because every note is either a chord tone or a safe passing tone — there are no avoid notes. For soloing, this means you can play freely without clashing. Over dominant seventh chords, F Mixolydian adds the flat seventh for an authentic blues-rock edge.

Strumming Pattern

Try a D-D-DU waltz pattern at 80-100 BPM. Accent beat 1 strongly and keep beats 2-3 lighter. For fingerpicking, use a bass-pluck-pluck pattern with alternating bass notes.

FlamencoHope & Joy3/4 · 4 bars

Chords (triads): Lam, Si♭, Do, Fa.

Chords (7th): Lam7, Si♭Maj7, Do7, FaMaj7.

Famous songs using this progression

  • Alegrias de Concierto – Paco de Lucia