Chapter 3 · Intervals

Music Intervals Explained

An interval is the distance between two notes. Every melody, every chord, every scale is built from intervals.

What is a Music Interval?

An interval is the distance between two . Every melody is built from intervals — the steps between notes create the shape of a tune. Every is built from intervals — the gaps between stacked notes define whether a chord sounds , , , or . Learning intervals is one of the most important steps in understanding music theory.

Half Steps and Whole Steps

The (semitone) is the smallest interval on a standard keyboard — the distance from any key to the very next key. The (whole tone) skips one key, equal to two s. These two intervals are the building blocks of all scales and larger intervals. to is a . to is a .

Tip Count semitones on the keyboard first, then name the interval. This keeps the math grounded in something visible.

Half step — C to C# (1 semitone)

Thirds — The Building Blocks of Chords

A spans 4 semitones (like to ). A spans 3 semitones (like to ). These two intervals are the most important in harmony. Stack a then a and you get a . Stack a then a and you get a . Almost every chord you'll ever play is built from combinations of these two intervals.

Tip If an interval sounds warm and bright, it's likely a major third. If it sounds slightly darker, it's probably a minor third.

Major third — C to E (4 semitones)

Perfect Intervals — The Stable Sounds

Perfect intervals — the (5 semitones), (7 semitones), and (12 semitones) — sound especially pure and stable. They've been called 'perfect' for over a thousand years because of how consonant they are. s are the sound of power chords in rock and the foundation of classical harmony.

Tip Perfect fifths are the most stable-sounding two-note combination after the octave itself.

Perfect fifth — C to G (7 semitones)

Consonance and Dissonance

Some intervals sound restful and settled — these are consonant. Others create tension and feel like they need to resolve to a more stable sound — these are dissonant. This push and pull between tension and resolution is at the heart of how music creates emotion. The (6 semitones, like to ) is the most dissonant interval and drives much of the harmonic movement in Western music.

Tip If an interval sounds like it wants to move somewhere else, you're probably hearing dissonance.

Practice in the app

Learn this on Tiny Instrument

Tiny Instrument teaches music theory through interactive lessons, ear training, and playful practice — all connected in one app for iPhone, iPad, and Mac.

Download on the App Store
Music Intervals Explained | Tiny Instrument