About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 89. Chapters: Interval, Tritone, Unit interval, Perfect fourth, Perfect fifth, Syntonic comma, Unison, Major sixth, Confidence interval, List of musical intervals, Semitone, Quarter tone, Prediction interval, Binomial proportion confidence interval, Pythagorean interval, Thirteenth, Major and minor, Cent, Picardy third, Swara, Complement, Pythagorean comma, List of meantone intervals, Major second, Neutral third, Diesis, Minor third, Minor sixth, Interval cycle, Diminished second, Major seventh, Harmonic seventh, Minor seventh, Wolf interval, Septimal major third, Credible interval, Augmented fifth, Diminished unison, Pseudo-octave, Augmented sixth, Diminished third, Steps and skips, Neutral second, Tonality flux, Holdrian comma, Interval ratio, Schisma, Neutral seventh, Pitch interval, Millioctave, Augmented second, Neutral sixth, Fifteenth, Lunitidal interval, Diminished seventh, Cyclic set, Augmented seventh, Savart, Diminished sixth, Diminished fourth, Tetrad, Subminor interval, Supermajor sixth, Supermajor interval, Diaschisma, Augmented third, Diminished octave, Serial interval, Dyad, Septimal tritone, Kleisma, Secor, Semicomma, Tolerance interval, Generic interval, Minor ninth, Specific interval, Eleventh, Invariant interval, Limma, Lorentz interval, Lipps-Meyer law, Major limma, Major ninth, Ditone, Minor fifth, Major fourth, Undevicimal diatonic semitone, Compound, Monad, Orwell comma, Supermajor seventh. Excerpt: In music theory, an interval is a combination of two notes, or the ratio between their frequencies. Two-note combinations are also called dyads. Although chords are often defined as sets of three or more notes, intervals are sometimes considered to be the simplest kind of chord. Intervals may be described as: In Western culture, the most common method to classify and name intervals is based on their quality (pe...