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6.3: Major, Minor, and Perfect Intervals

  • Page ID
    305350
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    As explained on Page 6.1, intervals are assigned a number. In addition to a number, intervals are assigned a quality.

    QualityIntervals from unison to P8

    The three categories of interval qualities are major, minor, or perfect. An interval will only have one quality description. The designation of major, minor, or perfect can be assigned by reading the notes on the music and understanding the distance between the pitches from a theoretical view, or by hearing them and listening for their distinct qualities.

    Major or Minor Intervals

    Major and minor are two labels that can be assigned to the same group of intervals (second, third, sixth, and seventh). The intervals in this group can be either major or minor. These are the intervals whose size changes depending on whether they are found in a major or minor scale. Minor intervals are one half step smaller than a major interval. For example, F to A is a major third; these two notes are 5 half-steps apart. F to A-flat creates a minor third; these two notes are four half-steps apart.

    Perfect Intervals

    The intervals of unison, fourth, fifth, and octave are classified as “perfect” but never “major” or “minor.” Conversely, the intervals of the second, third, sixth, and seventh can be major or minor but never perfect in quality.

    Perfect Intervals: Unison, 4th, 5th, 8ve
    Major or Minor Intervals: 2nd, 3rd, 6th, 7th

    Major and minor scales are comprised of different patterns of interval types. Let's start by looking at the intervals of the major scale.

    Intervals of the Major Scale

    When you measure from the tonic up to each scale degree of a major scale, you find the following intervals:

    intervals-of-major-scale.svg

    All intervals in the example above are either “perfect” or “major.”

    Intervals of the Minor Scale

    Arcs with distance from keynote to each note of the minor scale and the intervalWhen you measure from the tonic up to each scale degree of a natural minor scale, you find the intervals seen to the left.

    With the exception of the major second, the intervals in this example are either "perfect" or "minor."

    Attribution:

    Sections titled "Intervals of the Major Scale," and "Perfect" by Robert Hutchinson is licensed under a GNU Free Documentation License 1.3 license. Original source: https://musictheory.pugetsound.edu/mt21c/MusicTheory.html


    This page titled 6.3: Major, Minor, and Perfect Intervals is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Lauren C. Sharkey.