Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Perfect fifth

Encyclopedia : P : PE : PER : Perfect fifth


perfect fifth
Inversion (music)>Inverse perfect fourth
Name
Other names diapente
Abbreviation P5
Size
semitone>Semitones 7
Interval class 5
Just intonation>Just interval 3:2
Cents
Equal temperament 700
Just intonation 702
The perfect fifth or diapente is a musical interval which is responsible for the most consonant, or stable, harmony outside of the unison and octave. It is a valuable interval in chord structure, song development, and western tuning systems. The prefix perfect identifies it as belonging to the group of perfect intervals (Perfect fourth, Perfect octave) so called because of their extremely simple pitch relationships resulting in a high degree of consonance. The perfect fifth is historically relevant because it is the first accepted harmony (besides the octave) of gregorian chant, a very early formal music composition. The perfect fifth occurs on the root of all major and minor chords (triads) and their extensions. It is one of three musical intervals that span five diatonic scale degrees; the others being the diminished fifth, which is one chromatic semitone smaller, and the augmented fifth, which is one chromatic semitone larger. The Solfege of the perfect fifth is "Do - So". A helpful way to recognize a perfect fifth is to hum the starting of twinkle twinkle little star, which is a familiar perfect 5th. The perfect fifth is abbreviated as P5 and its inversion is the perfect fourth.

Use in chords

Due to its high level of consonance, the perfect fifth contributes very little to the overall harmonic effect of any chords containing it (power chords excepted). In any situation that necessitates the omission of notes from a chord, such as for practical reasons of fingering, for example, the note forming the perfect fifth above the chord's root can often be safely omitted, its absence being barely, if at all, noticeable.

A bare fifth or open fifth is a chord containing only a perfect fifth with no third. The closing chord of Mozart's Requiem is an example of a piece ending on an open fifth, though these "chords" are common in Christian Sacred Harp singing and throughout rock music, especially hard rock, metal, and punk music, where overdriven or distorted guitar can make thirds sound muddy, and fast chord-based passages are made easier to play by combining the four most common guitar hand shapes into one. Guitarists refer to them as "Power chords" and often include octave doubling (i.e. their bass note is doubled one octave higher, e.g. F3-C4-F4).

Use in tuning and tonal systems

A perfect fifth in just intonation, a just fifth, corresponds to a pitch ratio of 3:2, while in 12-tone equal temperament, a perfect fifth is equal to seven semitones, a ratio of 1:27/12 (approximately 1.4983), or 700 cents, about two cents smaller.

The just perfect fifth, together with the octave, forms the basis of Pythagorean tuning. A flattened perfect fifth is likewise the basis for meantone tuning.

The circle of fifths is a model of pitch space for the chromatic scale (chromatic circle) which considers nearness not as adjacency but as the number of perfect fifths required to get from one note to another.

The strings on violins, violas, and cellos are all tuned to perfect fifths unless in scordatura.

See also

External link

Diatonic intervals [http://encycl.opentopia.com/ edit ]
Perfect : unison (0) | fourth (5) | fifth (7) | octave (12)
Major : second (2) | third (4) | sixth (9)| seventh (11)
Minor : second (1) | third (3)| sixth (8)| seventh (10)
Augmented/Diminished : tritone (6)
semitones of equal temperament are given in brackets

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: