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IntervalsPerfect unison, octave, fourth and fifth, Major second, minor second, major and minor third
Perfect intervals are the P1, P4, P5, and P8
Perfect Octave is the same letter name-it’s the eighth note from the original pitch
Perfect fifth-an interval that is from the first to the fifth of five consecutive notes in a major scale
Find two notes in this scale that make a P8 and two notes that make a P5
Perfect Unison is two of the same exact pitch-Same note name and in the same position on the staff
Perfect 4th-five half steps or from note one to note four of a major scale
Perfect fourth when played one at a time sounds like the first two notes
of Here Comes the BridePerfect fourth played independently and
together
Major 2nd is another way to say whole step. In this regard, the whole tone scale is a
series of major 2nds
Minor second is the interval of half steps. C-Db, Db-D, D-D#, etc. Chromatic scale is a
series of minor 2nds
Major third-four half steps apart or two whole steps-G-B, Db-F are major thirds
1st to 3rd notes in a major scale make up a major third C-E
Minor third is three half steps or lower your M3 by a half step
Major third vs minor third
Find these intervals-P8 (Octave)P5, P4, M3, m3, M2,
m2