>>18834074>So from what I'm looking at, that first chord is C, E, G, which makes C major, then... does that make the next chord F major?That's a really good question. I didn't want to boggle your noodle with unneeded info, but since you asked
Certain notes of a key are major, diminished or minor when they become a chord.
In any major key, (I, IV, V) are major, and (ii, iii, vi) are minor. (vii) is diminished.
Do you see how the major notes get capitalized roman numerals, and the minors get lowercased? I suggest you write down which ones are major, minor, and diminished until you memorize it.
So that means if our chord progression is (one, four, two, five) our notes are (I, IV, ii, V) so one of those chords (ii) is minor.
There's a pattern with it. It's all patterns.
Remeber, just like there are major keys, there are minor keys, but you shouldn't get into minor until you've mastered major, because major is easy.