Unit 4 Interval Unit
Unit 4 Interval Unit
UNIT 4: Intervals
An interval is the musical distance between two pitches. The distance is labeled with two
labels, the numeric distance and the quality term.
Numerical Terms: Counted distance between the two given notes, (note* count the given
pitch at the bottom of the interval as ONE)
unison or prime 1
second 2
third 3
fourth 4
fifth 5
sixth 6
seventh 7
octave 8
Qualitative Terms:
unison, fourth, fifth, octave
augmented +
perfect P
diminished o
AUGMENTED intervals are a ½ step bigger than PERFECT (for 1,4,5,8) or MAJOR
(2,3,6,7)
IMPORTANT CONCEPT:
In a MAJOR scale, moving from the root note of the key to another note above it will produce
intervals that are either MAJOR INTERVALS or PERFECT INTERVALS.
Example: Bb up to Gb.
Is “Gb” a note in the “key of Bb Major”?
If yes, the interval IS major or perfect depending on numeric distance (It is a 6th). If no, proceed
to further questions.
o Answer: NO. Move on in the flow chart:
What note IS in the Key of Bb in the that (6th) position?
Answer: G natural
How far is Gb (the requested note) from G natural (the note that IS in the Major scale)?
Answer: ½ step lower.
Since the interval is a 6th and the given interval is ½ step lower than a Major interval….
The final answer is: MINOR 6th. (since a minor interval is ½ step lower than major)
INTERVAL INVERSIONS:
Example:
C up to A is a Major 6th
A up to C is a minor 3rd.
An inverted interval raises the bottom note an octave or lowers the top note an octave which
results in the interval being flipped upside down.
When inverted, the sum of the numeric distances between both the original and the inverted
interval will add up to NINE.
1 inverts to 8
2 inverts to 7
3 inverts to 6
4 inverts to 5
5 inverts to 4
6 inverts to 3
7 inverts to 2
8 inverts to 1