T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2336.1 | I know...it's squid joke...sorry | WOLVER::SDANDREA | Trials Bulldawg | Thu Sep 26 1991 10:05 | 5 |
| what's an interval??
8^)
Bulldawg
|
2336.2 | You Win! | CAVLRY::BUCK | ACE Regional Rep | Thu Sep 26 1991 10:12 | 21 |
| Tony,
You're correct.
Intervals follow a rule "all intervals add up to 9"
What does that mean? It means...if you have a Perfect 4th interval,
and you invert it, it will be a perfect 5th interval. 4 + 5 = 9.
If You have a Major 7th Interval and invert it, you'll have a Minor
2nd interval. 7 + 2 = 9
In your case...if you have a Major 6th and invert it, it's a Minor 3rd.
6 + 3 = 9.
Here is one thing to NOTE: If you've noticed, if the FIRST interval is
MAJOR, the inverion invertal is MINOR!! Vice versa, If you have a
MINOR interval FIRST (like a Minor 3rd), the inversion will be MAJOR
(Major 6th). The only exceptions to this rule at the 4th and 5th
intervals, as they are both "Perfect" intervals (Perfect 5th, Perfect
5th), and the Minor/Major thing does not apply here.
|
2336.3 | | NEWOA::DALLISON | she takes down his particulars | Thu Sep 26 1991 11:06 | 1 |
| Phew - Thanks Buck, I'm learning 8^)
|
2336.4 | | NEWOA::DALLISON | she takes down his particulars | Thu Sep 26 1991 11:27 | 9 |
|
One of the things that was difficult to get accros to this person (who
knew a fair amount about theory) was that a descending and an ascending
interval between two notes are not the same.
BTW - I've just enrolled to study Jazz Fusion at the London Guitar
Institute. I'm psyched !!
-Tony (who studied rock/metal techniques there last year)
|
2336.5 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | ACE Regional Rep | Thu Sep 26 1991 11:31 | 15 |
| >One of the things that was difficult to get accros to this person (who
>knew a fair amount about theory) was that a descending and an ascending
>interval between two notes are not the same.
If he didn't know THAT...then he
a) doesn't know as much theory as he thinks he does
b) should hit the books
>BTW - I've just enrolled to study Jazz Fusion at the London Guitar
>Institute. I'm psyched !!
Congrats...very good move!!
|
2336.6 | Groovy | KERNEL::FLOWERS | Life? Just say NO! | Thu Sep 26 1991 13:00 | 9 |
|
1: Thanks Tony for asking the question.
2: Thanks Buck for the answer.....howcum nobodys' explained it like
that to me before? Ace way of explaining it (adding up to 9
Minor becoming Major etc.)
J
|
2336.7 | a question for the master | STAR::SALKEWICZ | It missed... therefore, I am | Thu Sep 26 1991 14:09 | 13 |
| Buck,
Is it not also true that the inversion of a "second" to a "seventh"
has no major/minor context to it?
I mean there is a minor second,... but no real "major" second. This
is becasue the interval between the root and the second is the same
for both the major and the minor scale.
OK,.. I'm ready to be corrected :-)
/Bill
|
2336.8 | Major mistake I'm making with this one | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Don't ask me what I think of you... | Thu Sep 26 1991 14:42 | 1 |
| So what do you get if you have like, a MAJOR minor, dude?
|
2336.9 | rebuttle | CAVLRY::BUCK | ACE Regional Rep | Thu Sep 26 1991 14:43 | 40 |
| > OK,.. I'm ready to be corrected :-)
Ready ... aim ...
8^)
> Is it not also true that the inversion of a "second" to a "seventh"
>has no major/minor context to it?
>
> I mean there is a minor second,... but no real "major" second. This
>is becasue the interval between the root and the second is the same
>for both the major and the minor scale.
It doesn't work that way. Example...Melodic Minor, Harmonic Minor, and
Aeolian Minor all have natural 6th's in the scale, but that makes them
"minor 6th" intervals becuase they are in minor-based scales. They are
all actually Major 6th invervals.
Basically, it comes down to using the terms "major" and "minor" in
relation to wether or not the note is natural to the scale form,
or wether it is altered as an accidental (ie - flatted!). Below are
some examples in the KEY OF C MAJOR to explain:
C - D - E - F - G - A - B - C
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1/8
C - D = MAJOR 2nd C - Db = MINOR 2nd
C - E = MAJOR 3rd C - Eb = MINOR 3rd
C - A = MAJOR 6th C - Ab = MINOR 6th
C - B = MAJOR 7th C - Bb = Minor 7th
Again, the 4th and 5ths were left out as they are "Perfect" intervals,
and do not apply to this theory.
...and it is this theory which back the statement of MAJOR 7th (say,
C - B) inverted is a MINOR 2nd (B - C)...see how it works?
|
2336.10 | ?? | WOLVER::SDANDREA | Trials Bulldawg | Thu Sep 26 1991 14:46 | 6 |
| ok guys, I've read all this stuff....now,
What the #@$^&* is an interval?????!!!
Steve 8^)
|
2336.11 | there ya have it | CAVLRY::BUCK | ACE Regional Rep | Thu Sep 26 1991 14:47 | 8 |
| >So what do you get if you have like, a MAJOR minor, dude?
Exactly that!!!
For example...the notes C, Eb, G, and B is a Minor Major 7th chord.
I guess for yuk's you could refer to a Dominant 7th chord as a
Major Minor 7th, as it is...(C E G and Bb), but the issue of Dominance
lies deep than that, so...
|
2336.12 | | NEWOA::DALLISON | she takes down his particulars | Fri Sep 27 1991 06:43 | 20 |
| Whasts an interval ?
Its a name given to the 'distance' betwen any two notes derived from
the major scale. Obviously, the major scale is made up of semi-tones
and whole tones and these tones (or in laymans terms 'frets') are
reffered to as Intervals.
The most frequenlty refered to interval is probably the octave, but there
are many more in western music (as per Bucks note) and even more in
Eastern music!!
Some intervals have an unresolved sound to them (like a minor 2nd or
diminished 5th etc..) this means that they sound kinda 'wrong' in some
applications. Intervals such as 4ths, 5ths and major (and minor) 3rds
etc.. are found frequently in 'rock' chords (ie power chords with the
root-interval-root_octave structure).
Then again, I'm probably wrong 8^)
-Tony
|
2336.13 | my interval definition | PLAYER::PETIT | | Mon Sep 30 1991 12:00 | 59 |
|
Tony,
I don't agree 100% on your definition of interval. To me, an interval
is the distance between two notes, FULL STOP (that is, regardless of any
scale...). A scale is a succession of notes, that can be identified by their
interval relative to the first note of the scale being the root note, also
called DEGREE 1 of the scale. The other notes form the successive degrees
of the scale. Each degree has always the same interval compared to the root
note :
DEGREE 1 = unisson (because it is the root)
DEGREE 2 = second
DEGREE 3 = third
DEGREE 4 = fourth
DEGREE 5 = fifth
DEGREE 6 = sixth
DEGREE 7 = seventh
DEGREE 8 = octave
DEGREE 9 = ninth = second but an octave higher
and so on...
Now, depending on the scale you are using,
1. some degrees may or may not exist :
ex : in major and minor scales, all degrees are present
in minor pentatonic scales, degrees 4 and 6 are missing
2. each degree that is present in a scale has properties that are
specific to the scale :
ex : in major scales, the DEGREE 3 is always a MAJOR third
in minor scales, the DEGREE 3 is always a MINOR third
As you can see, scales are constructed on intervals, but intervals
exist independently of the scales using them.
Also, if you take 2 notes, lets say C and D, the interval between
them will ALWAYS be a second, because D is the DEGREE 2 compared to the root
note C :
C - D is a major second
C - D flat is a minor second
C - D sharp is an augmented second, AND NOT a minor
third (C - E flat is a minor third, because
E is DEGREE 3 relatively to the root note C).
As you can see, when it comes to music theory,
D sharp and E flat are different notes,
although most musicians consider they're equal
(physically, they are different notes, but so
close that most instruments use the same key
or the same fret for both of them...)
Hope I haven't made things more complicated than they are...This is only
my understanding, and I'm open to discussion with anyone who would disagree...
Christian
|
2336.14 | I thought this was cool - interval examples | FRETZ::HEISER | hotfootin | Thu Dec 05 1991 14:55 | 72 |
| Article 16272 of rec.music.makers:
From: [email protected] (Tony Chung)
Subject: Intervals in a song
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Date: 1 Apr 91 14:18:19 GMT
Organization: Mad Artists' Technological Hangout
Hello! A long while back someone asked about hearing intervals. This
list is far from complete. Other people may have different songs that
are easier for them. You'll also notice I left a whole bunch of blanks.
I tried to find stuff for the TT going DOWN, and the major 7ths, but
still they elude me. I guess what I'd do in these instances is write a
song using those intervals as the starting line!
Without that ado crap, here's a little bit of what I use when my ears
just won't work for me:
Interval up down
=====================================================================
minor 2nd Jaws Second-Hand Rose
("DUH DUNT...) ("SE-COND HAND ROSE...")
major 2nd Oh Susanna The First Noel
("WELL I COME from...") ("THE-UH FIRST...")
minor 3rd O Canada Star Spangled Banner
("O CAN-ada") ("OH-OH say...")
major 3rd Michael Row Your Giant Steps
Boat Ashore ("LIFE WHEN we were...")
("MI-CHAEL row...")
perfect 4th Someday My Prince All Of Me
Will Come ("ALL OF me...")
("SOME-DAY my...")
tritone Maria (west side story)
("MA-RI-a, I just met...")
perfect 5th Imperial margerine For Your Eyes Only
(royal theme ("For your eyes ON-LY")
"DUNT-da da-DAH")
My Favourite Things
("RAIN-DROPS on roses...")
minor 6th Black Orpheus Where Do I Begin
("I'LL SING to the ("WHERE DO I begin...")
sun in the sky...")
major 6th My Bonny Lies Over All Blues (Miles Davis)
The Ocean ("The SEA, THE sky")
("MY BON-ny lies...")
or the NBC jingle,
(take your pick)
minor 7th There's A Place For Us
("THERE'S A place...")
major 7th
perfect octave Alice In Wonderland
("A-LICE in Wonderland")
Somewhere Over the Rainbow
("SOME-WHERE over ...")
--
-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
"If you drive, don't drink." -- Tony Chung
[email protected] [email protected]
|
2336.15 | | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Tommy The Cat | Thu Dec 05 1991 17:29 | 7 |
| Thyat's definately cool, I remember an old guitar teacher showing me
something similar, but I don't think he had the down interval examples.
I didn't know all the songs mentioned, anyone got any more examples
like that?
Greg
|
2336.16 | chords, too | GLDOA::REITER | | Thu Dec 05 1991 17:34 | 5 |
| someone in the last few months posted something similar with regard to
chords (major, minor, 7ths, 9ths, etc.) that was also very clever
anyone have a pointer?
\Gary
|