Tag Archive | "major third"

A quick study on intervals

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By now, you should already know what Whole and Half steps are.

To review:

Half Step (h): From key to key (no keys in between)
Whole Step (w): Every other key (one key in between)

Equivalents:

2 Half steps = 1 whole step
2 Whole steps = 4 Half Steps
1 Half Step = 1 / 2 Whole Step

Examples:

C to E = 2 Whole Steps / or 4 Half Steps
F to F# = 1 Half Step
G to C = 5 Half Steps / 2.5 Half Steps

—————–
Intervals
—————–

Intervals are important. They form major, minor, and other type of chords.

Do you know what an interval is?

An Interval in music, is the “distance in pitch between two notes.” In our 300-pg course, we cover over 7 different types of Intervals (major, perfect, melodic, harmonic, minor, augmented, diminished, etc)

In this lesson, we will cover only two:

Major Intervals & Perfect Intervals

————————————————————

Major Third:

Is the distance between the root and the (3) degree of a major scale.

For example, in (C major), the root is (C) of course, and the (3) degree is: (E).

(C) and (E) played together is classified as a “major third.” This is the beginning of a major chord.

Perfect Fifth:

Is the distance between the root and the (5) degree of a major scale.

For example, in (C major), the root is (C), and the 5th degree is: (G)

(C) and (G) played together is classified as a “perfect fifth.”

As you will learn tomorrow, these two intervals combine to make up the “major chord.”

Try to figure out the major third and perfect fifth intervals in all 12 major keys!

See you later and thank you for your time!

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Perfect and Major Intervals

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The "Secrets to Playing Piano By Ear" course covers everything from the basics and fundamentals to Cmin13 (b9b5) chords. The following lesson focuses on chapter five from the course. If you are already familiar with perfect and major intervals and how they are formed, you may skip this lesson.

 

Perfect and Major Intervals (01)

Note: Please pay close attention to this lesson as you will need to know about perfect and major intervals when forming various major chords.

 

Get the rest of this lesson by clicking here

Note: Disregard the "SLXYZ" numbers (if any) as they refer to sound examples. Our 300-pg course comes with a CD with over 330 sound examples which can be heard with the click of a button. (Example: SL003)

 

This concludes lesson #1. This lesson is just half of what our course covers on intervals! To see how you can get this chapter with tons of written and interactive exercises, along with 19 other chapters, please click here

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