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Music Chord Generator

Free music chord generator for music teachers. Get random chord suggestions with a playable on-screen piano — perfect for composition and music theory lessons.

Why teachers use it

Use music chord generator instantly in class

Get random chord suggestions with a playable on-screen piano for composition and music theory lessons. The music chord generator helps students experiment with harmony without needing a physical keyboard.

Popular classroom uses

  • Support composition tasks with chord suggestions
  • Teach chord theory and progression building
  • Run improvisation exercises with structured backing

Where music chord generator fits in your lessons

Music Chord Generator is a free, no-login geography & other subjects tool you can use straight away in class. It works well for data handling, case study recall, discussion prompts, and runs in any browser on your classroom display, laptop or a student device.

Great for

  • data handling
  • case study recall
  • discussion prompts
  • wider curriculum starters
  • PE lessons
  • warm-up stations

Use it during

  • case study starters
  • data tasks
  • end-of-lesson recap
  • independent practice
  • plenary wrap-up

What teachers like about it

Built to be quick, clear and classroom-friendly so you can get on with teaching.

Picks fairly at random, so every student has an equal chance and you avoid choosing the same names.

Turns abstract ideas into a clear visual you can build and explain live on the board.

It is quick to launch, so you can use music chord generator the moment you need it in a lesson.

It works on classroom computers, laptops, tablets and phones without any installation.

Music Chord Generator FAQ

Answers for teachers looking for a fast, reliable classroom-friendly version of this tool.

Which instruments does it support?

Currently it includes a visual piano keyboard. Guitar fretboard support is planned.

Can I hear the chords?

Yes. Click any chord to hear it played on a synthesised piano sound.

Is it suitable for KS3 music?

Yes. It works well for both KS3 composition and GCSE music theory.

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