Learning intervals on the guitar

Vicente ReyesVicente Reyes
4 min read

🎡 What Are Intervals?

An interval is the distance between two notes.

🎯 Example:

  • C to E β†’ Major 3rd

  • E to G β†’ Minor 3rd

Each interval has a sound and a shape on the guitar.


🧠 Music Theory Basics (Know These First)

  • 1 semitone = 1 fret

  • 1 whole step = 2 frets

  • Musical alphabet: A B C D E F G

  • Enharmonic notes: C# = Db, D# = Eb, etc.

  • Major scale formula: W W H W W W H (W = whole step, H = half step)


πŸ“Š Common Intervals to Memorize

Interval NameSemitonesExample (C as root)Sound
Perfect Unison0C - CSame note
Minor 2nd1C - DbVery tense
Major 2nd2C - DStep up
Minor 3rd3C - EbSad/somber
Major 3rd4C - EHappy
Perfect 4th5C - FSuspenseful
Tritone6C - F#Dissonant/devilish
Perfect 5th7C - GStrong/powerful
Minor 6th8C - AbWarm/sad
Major 6th9C - ASweet
Minor 7th10C - BbJazzy/tension
Major 7th11C - BDreamy/leading
Octave12C - CSame pitch class

🎸 Interval Shapes on Guitar (E & A Strings)

Assume you're starting from the 6th string (E) or 5th string (A):

  • Root + Major 2nd β†’ 2 frets forward, same string

  • Root + Major 3rd β†’ 1 string down, 1 fret back (diagonal)

  • Root + Perfect 5th β†’ 1 string down, 2 frets forward (power chord)

  • Root + Octave β†’ 2 strings down, 2 frets forward


🧠 How to Practice Intervals (Daily Routine)

1. Learn shapes on one string

  • Pick a root (e.g., G)

  • Play: G β†’ A (M2), G β†’ B (M3), G β†’ C (P4), etc.

  • Ascend and descend

2. Sing them aloud

  • Play and say: β€œG β†’ B… Major 3rd”

  • Builds ear training

3. Practice within a scale

  • C Major scale: C–D–E–F–G–A–B–C

  • Try jumps: C β†’ E (M3), D β†’ F (m3), E β†’ G (m3), etc.

4. Apply to chords

  • Major chord = Root + M3 + P5

  • Minor chord = Root + m3 + P5

5. Improvise with intervals

  • Pick 2 intervals (e.g., M3 & P5)

  • Create short melodic phrases


🎧 Bonus: Learn to Hear Intervals with Songs

IntervalSong (Ascending)
Minor 2ndJaws theme
Major 2ndHappy Birthday
Minor 3rdGreensleeves
Major 3rdWhen the Saints Go Marching In
Perfect 4thHere Comes the Bride
TritoneThe Simpsons theme
Perfect 5thStar Wars theme
OctaveSomewhere Over the Rainbow

🧐 β€œIsn’t C to E a Major 4th?”

Nope. It’s a Major 3rd. Let’s break it down:

βœ… Why?

In music theory, intervals are based on letter names, not just fret count.

C to E:

  • C β†’ D β†’ E = 3 letter steps β†’ It’s a 3rd

  • Count semitones:

    • C β†’ C# β†’ D β†’ D# β†’ E = 4 semitones

β†’ 4 semitones = Major 3rd


🀯 Why Not Go by Frets Only?

Fret count gives you semitones, not the interval class.

  • C to E = 4 semitones = Major 3rd

  • C to F = 5 semitones = Perfect 4th

Even though both are only 1 fret apart, they’re different intervals.


πŸ“ Visual: C Major Scale Reference

NoteDistance from CIntervalSemitones
C0Unison0
D2ndMajor 2nd2
E3rdMajor 3rd4
F4thPerfect 4th5
G5thPerfect 5th7
A6thMajor 6th9
B7thMajor 7th11
COctaveOctave12

🎸 On the Fretboard

  • C = 8th fret on 6th string

  • E = 12th fret β†’ 4 frets higher = 4 semitones = Major 3rd

βœ… Summary

βœ” Semitones define the quality (major, minor, perfect)
βœ” Letter names define the number (2nd, 3rd, 4th, etc.)

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Written by

Vicente Reyes
Vicente Reyes

Python Developer | Audio Editor | Technical Writer | OSS Contributor | Tag Moderator @ @ThePracticalDEV | Valorant TonyPoppins #881488