RNG Chords

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Contact Jonathan about RNG Chords.

For feedback, accessibility issues, music workflow requests, or questions about RNG Chords, use Jonathan R. Reed's main contact page.

Helpful notes include the browser you used, whether playback started, which instrument was selected, and whether the issue appeared while rolling chords, locking a progression, copying text, or exporting MIDI.

Feedback is most useful when it explains the writing or practice context. Examples include guitar sketching, piano practice, pop topline writing, ambient harmony, loop building, or production work where quick chord options are useful.

If a progression sounds wrong, include the mode, key, instrument, tempo, and any locked chords. If an export fails, mention whether the file was meant for a DAW, notation software, or a simple archive of the idea. That context makes it easier to separate a musical preference from a browser issue.

Accessibility notes are welcome. Helpful reports describe keyboard navigation, focus order, control labels, playback controls, reduced motion settings, or mobile screen behavior. The goal is for RNG Chords to remain fast and usable during a writing session.

For theory or feature ideas, include the musical problem instead of only naming a control. A note like "I need more borrowed chords in minor keys" or "I want a cleaner way to practice ii V I movement" is more actionable than a broad request for more randomness.

If you are using RNG Chords in a classroom, lesson, or rehearsal setting, mention the instrument level and the type of exercise. That helps keep future changes useful for beginners who need clear progressions and advanced players who want more harmonic range.

Short, specific notes are enough. Useful feedback explains what you expected, what happened, and how the result affected the music task.

Open Jonathan's contact page

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