EN
JolyMusic Theory Lab

Circle of Fifths Interactive Guide for Real Practice

Turn the circle of fifths into a real practice route for keys and cadences.

Published May 23, 2026, 4:48 AM

Turn the circle of fifths into a real practice route for keys and cadences.

The circle of fifths is useful because it makes distance visible. Neighboring keys share many notes, dominant chords resolve by fifth, and practice routines can move through all keys without feeling random. The circle is not a poster to memorize. It is a navigation tool.

Navigation Tool
Fifths organize both key and motion
ReaderTheory Lab
Clockwise movement adds sharps and follows rising fifths. Counterclockwise movement follows common dominant resolution: G to C, C to F, F to Bb.
Key distanceAdjacent keys are close relatives
Cadence motionDominants resolve down a fifth
Practice routeMove one click per repetition
Ear focusHear relationship, not only spelling
Circle of fifths practice clock
2 ring(s)

Four practice uses

UseMoveResult
ScalesC, G, D, A...Accidentals accumulate logically
CadencesDm7-G7-C, then Am7-D7-Gii-V-I patterns travel smoothly
ModulationMove to adjacent keys firstKey changes sound prepared
Ear trainingSing root movement by fifthDominant resolution becomes physical
Exercise
One lap, one idea
StudentAll Keys
Choose one pattern, such as a major triad, ii-V-I, or melody fragment. Move it once around the circle without changing the rhythm.
Route12 keys
PatternOne idea only
GoalConsistent sound in every key
Levelall

The circle becomes interactive when you make a decision at each stop: play, sing, transpose, compare, and move on. That loop turns a diagram into a practice engine.

Recent posts