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Intervals Perfect unison, octave, fourth and fifth, Major second, minor second, major and minor third

Intervals

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Page 1: Intervals

IntervalsPerfect unison, octave, fourth and fifth, Major second, minor second, major and minor third

Page 2: Intervals

Perfect intervals are the P1, P4, P5, and P8

Page 3: Intervals

Perfect Octave is the same letter name-it’s the eighth note from the original pitch

Page 4: Intervals

Perfect fifth-an interval that is from the first to the fifth of five consecutive notes in a major scale

Page 5: Intervals

Find two notes in this scale that make a P8 and two notes that make a P5

Page 6: Intervals

Perfect Unison is two of the same exact pitch-Same note name and in the same position on the staff

Page 7: Intervals

Perfect 4th-five half steps or from note one to note four of a major scale

Page 8: Intervals

Perfect fourth when played one at a time sounds like the first two notes

of Here Comes the BridePerfect fourth played independently and

together

Page 9: Intervals

Major 2nd is another way to say whole step. In this regard, the whole tone scale is a

series of major 2nds

Page 10: Intervals

Minor second is the interval of half steps. C-Db, Db-D, D-D#, etc. Chromatic scale is a

series of minor 2nds

Page 11: Intervals

Major third-four half steps apart or two whole steps-G-B, Db-F are major thirds

Page 12: Intervals

1st to 3rd notes in a major scale make up a major third C-E

Page 13: Intervals

Minor third is three half steps or lower your M3 by a half step

Page 14: Intervals

Major third vs minor third

Page 15: Intervals

Find these intervals-P8 (Octave)P5, P4, M3, m3, M2,

m2