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Old 12-03-2004, 10:18 PM   #13
Spazzout22
spazz? oh right it's me..
 
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Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Appleton, WI
Posts: 1,484
Quote:
Originally Posted by Bass+Fingers+Amp=Groove
ITs ok, it is 4th and it is 5ths it just depends which direction you go in the circle of 5ths
Actually ^_^ it's more dependant on which direction you're going in relation to a note. If you're going from an E up to an A, it's a 4th; E down to an A is a 5th.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Druvid
E F F# G G# A

Count the steps my friend
I still see a 4th...

Quote:
Originally Posted by Druvid
Yes I was But meh... Everything is relative.

It may be 4ths after the major scale but it's the 5th in the chromatic scale..

Thanks for enlightening me on intervals though
I'll explain:

Major scales | Natural Minor show these intervals (numbers equal scale degrees used, then interval between them), then Variations on scale degrees

1-2 = M2 | 1-2 = M2 | A2=m3, d2=P-unison
1-3 = M3 | 1-3 = m3 | A3=P4, d3=M2
1-4 = P4 | 1-4 = P4 | A4=d5, d4=M3
1-5 = P5 | 1-5 = P5 | A5=m6, d5=A4
1-6 = M6 | 1-6 = m6 | A6=m7, d6=P5
1-7 = M7 | 1-7 = m7 | A7=P8, d7=M6
1-8 = P8 | 1-8 = P8 | A8=m9=cm2(compound minor second), d8=M7

Intervals are the same no matter what scale you use. There is always going the be the same distance between certain intervals. Hope that clears up any confusion, and creates a little

I should have just let the freeking link explain...

Last edited by Spazzout22; 12-03-2004 at 10:21 PM.
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