Arpeggio loop

Build an arpeggio from a chord

Start with a root note, choose major or minor, then switch the pattern until the loop feels useful for practice.

Chord: C major
108 BPM

Generated note sequence

Press play, or adjust a control to hear a short preview.

C3

Chord quality

Free browser music tool

Arpeggio Maker Online

Choose a root note, set a major or minor chord, pick an arpeggio pattern, and hear the notes loop in your browser.

Keyword boundary

Built for arpeggio maker, arpeggio generator, online arpeggio player, and arpeggio practice intent, not melody maker or harmonium note-reference searches.

Last reviewed 2026-05-22

How this arpeggio maker works

An arpeggio plays the notes of a chord one at a time instead of striking them together. This tool keeps that idea simple: choose the chord, choose the movement, then listen to the loop.

Root note sets the starting point

C major starts on C, while A minor starts on A. Changing the root moves the same chord shape to a new pitch center.

Major and minor change the color

Major arpeggios use a brighter third. Minor arpeggios lower that third, which gives the same root a darker sound.

Patterns shape the practice loop

Ascending, descending, up-down, and random patterns all use the same chord tones, but the motion trains your ear differently.

Tempo controls difficulty

Slow tempos help you hear each note. Faster tempos are better once the finger pattern or listening exercise feels stable.

What you can practice with this arpeggio generator

Use the page when you want a quick online arpeggio player, not a full music production app. The best first exercise is a short loop you can repeat and copy on another instrument.

Piano arpeggio practice

Pick C major or A minor, slow the tempo down, and follow the notes until the octave jumps feel predictable.

Guitar arpeggio listening

Use the generated order to hear how a chord can be broken into individual notes before trying the same motion on strings.

Ear training

Switch between major and minor on the same root to hear how one interval changes the whole chord color.

Pattern comparison

Keep the same root and quality, then compare ascending, descending, and up-down movement at the same tempo.

A quick arpeggio practice workflow

1

Start with C major

Use C major first because the notes are familiar and easy to follow.

2

Slow the loop

Set a slower tempo until you can name each note before the next step plays.

3

Change one control

Switch only the root, quality, or pattern so you can hear what changed.

4

Try A minor

A minor is a useful contrast because it shares many familiar white-key notes but has a different mood.

5

Raise the tempo

Increase speed only after the note order feels clear.

Included now

  • Root note selection
  • Major and minor chord quality
  • Ascending, descending, up-down, and random arpeggio patterns
  • Tempo control and browser playback
  • Simple generated tones without external sample loading

Not included in this version

  • No account storage or uploads
  • No AI arpeggio generation claim
  • No MIDI, WAV, or audio export
  • No official Chrome Music Lab affiliation
  • No ads in the first release

Independent tool

Independent arpeggio maker, focused on practice

This page is an independent browser arpeggio maker for learning chord tones and loop patterns. It does not represent Chrome Music Lab, and it does not host official experiments or saved links.

Questions about this arpeggio maker

What is an arpeggio?

An arpeggio is a chord played one note at a time. A C major arpeggio uses C, E, and G across one or more octaves.

Is this an arpeggio generator?

Yes. Choose the root, chord quality, pattern, tempo, and tone, and the page generates a playable arpeggio sequence.

Can I use it for guitar arpeggios?

Yes, as a listening and note-order reference. It does not show guitar tabs or fret positions in the first version.

Does this export MIDI or audio?

No. The first version is a browser playback and practice tool only.

More music practice tools

Want to play notes directly instead of looping a chord pattern?

Open the online harmonium

Want to sketch a short melody instead of an arpeggio?

Use the melody maker

Need a note reference for Indian classical practice?

Read the harmonium notes guide

Want a faster way to play note ideas on your keyboard?

Use the laptop harmonium guide