Do Popular Songs Really Only Contain 4 Chords?

For all the learn to play the piano courses online, they frequently claim that a lot of popular songs only contain four chords and that’s it. This claim is often made with other claims that range from the seemingly unlikely, such as “this is a totally unique program”, to the utter absurd one I read the other day that claims that reading music is essentially bad for your brain.

Despite the somewhat outlandish claims that these peddlers of online piano courses state, the one about a lot of popular songs only requiring four chords is actually true. I don’t just mean that they use only four chords, I mean that they can use exactly the same four chords.

The implication is that you can literally play many, many songs in a few short weeks. The downside though is that they can all sound very similar to each other, so you are not going to get a variety of sounds. However, if this is exactly what you were looking for when you were thinking of learning to play the piano, then go for it!

Just for reference, here is a list of four chord songs, that you could learn to play:

Spirit in the Sky – Norman Greenbaum

La Bamba – Richie Valens

Blue Suede Shoes – Carl Perkins/Elvis Presley

The Tide is High – Blondie

Lay Down Sally = Eric Clapton

Cherry, Cherry = Neil Diamond

Free Falling = Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers

Rockin Robin – Bobby Day

Wild Thing – The Troggs

You Are My Sunshine – Traditional

Surfin’ USA – Beach Boys

Twist and Shout  – The Beatles

Blinded by the Light – Bruce Springsteen/Manfred Mann

Sweet Caroline – Neil Diamond

Ob La Di Ob La Da – The Beatles

Chantilly Lace – The Big Bopper

The Horses – Daryl Braithwaite

Cecelia – Simon and Garfunkel

Down on the Corner – Creedance Clearwater Revival

Free Falling – Tom Petty

With a Little Help From My Friends – Joe Cocker

Feeling Groovy – Simon and Garfunkel

Sweet Home Alabama – Lynyrd Skynyrd

Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For – U2

Walk of Life – Dire Straits

I Love Rock and Roll – Joan Jett

Roll Over Beethoven – Chuck Berry

Gloria – Van Morrison

I Fought the Law – Bobby Fuller Four

Blowin’ In The Wind – Bob Dylan

Jack and Diane – John Mellencamp

Land Down Under – Men at Work

Breaking Up Is Hard To Do – Neil Sedaka

Dream Lover = Bobby Darin

Take Me Home Country Roads – John Denver

No Woman, No Cry – Bob Marley

Every Breath You Take – The Police

Where Is The Love – Black-Eyed Peas

Singin in the Rain – Gene Kelly

Day-O (The Banana Boat Song) – Harry Belafonte

Can You Feel The Love Tonight – Elton John

Africa – Toto

No-one – Alicia Keys

Right Here Waiting – Richard Marx

Time to Say Goodbye – Andrea Bocelli

Someone Like You – Adele

Zombie – The Cranberries

This list is far from exhaustive, but as you can see there is a lot of songs. If you were interested in learning only basic piano skills, you could find plenty of songs to play with using just a mere four chords.

So despite some fairly wild claims about learning the piano through an online course, the claim about being able to play a lot with only four chords is not just a marketing ploy – it is true!