Learn · Tiny Instrument
Music Theory Glossary
Every term used across the Learn Hub.
Chords
Intervals
Scales
Modes
Roman Numerals
Scale Degrees
Cadences
Dynamics
Tempo
Time Signatures
Rhythm
Notes
Keys
Definitions
major triad
Three notes built from a root, major third, and perfect fifth. The foundation of most Western harmony.
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Three notes built from a root, minor third, and perfect fifth. A darker, sadder sound than the major triad.
↑ back to topC major seventh
C-E-G-B. A major triad with a major seventh on top. Warm, dreamy, jazzy.
↑ back to topC dominant seventh
C-E-G-B♭. A major triad with a minor seventh. Bluesy tension that pulls strongly toward F.
↑ back to tophalf step
The smallest distance between two notes on the piano — one key to the very next key.
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Two half steps. The distance between most adjacent notes in the major scale.
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Three semitones above the root. The defining sound of minor chords — darker and more emotional.
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Four semitones above the root. Bright and stable — the defining sound of major chords.
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Six semitones — exactly splitting the octave in half. The most dissonant interval, wants to resolve.
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Seven semitones above the root. Open and consonant — present in almost every chord.
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Bright and stable. Built with the pattern whole-whole-half-whole-whole-whole-half.
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Darker and more emotional. Built with the pattern whole-half-whole-whole-half-whole-whole.
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Darker and more emotional. Built with the pattern whole-half-whole-whole-half-whole-whole.
↑ back to topmajor pentatonic scale
Five notes (degrees 1-2-3-5-6) with an open, flexible sound used across many styles.
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Five-note minor scale (1-♭3-4-5-♭7) with a dark, soulful sound — the foundation of blues improvisation.
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A soulful scale with extra color and tension, common in blues, rock, and jazz.
↑ back to topIonian (major)
The natural major scale. Bright and stable — the most familiar sound in Western music.
↑ back to topDorian
Minor with a raised 6th. Jazzy and soulful — used heavily in jazz, funk, and rock.
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Minor with a lowered 2nd. Dark and Spanish-flavored — used in flamenco and metal.
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Major with a lowered 7th. Bluesy and confident — the sound of blues and classic rock.
↑ back to topAeolian (natural minor)
The natural minor scale. Darker and more emotional than major.
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Diminished with a lowered 2nd and 5th. Extremely unstable — rarely used as a tonal center.
↑ back to topV — major dominant
The strongest pull back to I. Creates tension that wants to resolve.
↑ back to topvi — minor submediant
The relative minor. Starting point for many emotional progressions.
↑ back to topiv — minor subdominant
Borrowed from the parallel minor. A darker, more poignant pull toward I.
↑ back to top♭VII — borrowed subtonic
Borrowed from the parallel minor. A major chord a whole step below tonic — adds a rock or modal flavour.
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Three half steps above the root. The note that makes minor chords dark.
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Ten half steps above the root. The blues note — gives dominant seventh chords their pull.
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Eleven half steps above the root. The leading tone — wants to resolve up to the octave.
↑ back to topCadence
A harmonic ending — the chords used to close a musical phrase. Cadences define whether a phrase feels finished, unfinished, or surprising.
↑ back to topAuthentic cadence
V→I. Strong and final — the most conclusive way to end a phrase. Like a period at the end of a sentence.
↑ back to topPlagal cadence
IV→I. Warm and gentle — called the "Amen cadence" because it ends countless hymns.
↑ back to topDeceptive cadence
V→vi. Expects I but gets vi instead — a surprise that creates continuation rather than closure.
↑ back to topTempo
The speed of the beat, measured in BPM (beats per minute). Affects the mood and energy of music.
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The symbol at the start of a piece telling you how many beats are in each measure and which note value gets one beat.
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The pattern of long and short notes and silences that gives music its movement and groove.
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A single sound with a defined pitch and duration — the building block of melody.
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Sounds with defined pitch and duration — the building blocks of melody.
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The first white key in each octave. Home base of C major — the most common starting key for beginners.
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A major third above C. The third degree of the C major scale — gives major chords their brightness.
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A perfect fifth above C. The most consonant interval above the root after the octave.
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A major sixth above C. The sixth degree of C major — also the root of A minor, its relative minor.
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A major seventh above C. One half step below the octave — the leading tone in C major.
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One half step below E. Moving the E in a C major chord down to E♭ turns it into C minor.
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One half step below B. The ♭7 of a C dominant seventh chord — creates its characteristic bluesy pull.
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One half step above F. The black key between F and G — also called G♭. Forms a tritone with C.
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One half step below D. The same key as C# — two names, same note (enharmonic equivalent).
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C in the third octave. One octave below middle C (C4). Vibrates at approximately 130 Hz.
↑ back to topC4 — middle C
Middle C. The most referenced note in music — near the center of the piano, vibrating at 261 Hz.
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A set of notes centered on one tonic, giving music its harmonic home and characteristic sound.
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Sets of notes each centered on a different tonic, forming the harmonic backbone of a piece.
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