Intervals
See it on the neck
The root sits on the open string; the perfect 5th (P5) lands 7 frets up.
The shape changes when you cross strings — this single-string view shows the raw semitone distance, which is what your ear is actually learning to recognize.
What an interval is
An interval is the distance between two notes, measured in semitones (half-steps). When you can name an interval by ear alone, transcription speeds up, improvisation gets less random, and theory finally clicks.
Eleven intervals fit inside an octave — from the minor 2nd up to the major 7th — plus the octave itself, and each one has a distinct fingerprint: a minor 2nd is the tense semitone of Jaws; a perfect 5th is the open, rooted "power chord" sound; a perfect octave is the same note an octave apart.
Reference songs
The fastest way to recognize intervals is anchoring each one to a familiar melody. When a prompt plays, hum the opening of the matching song in your head, then compare.
| Interval | Ascending reference |
|---|---|
| m2 | Jaws theme — the two-note dread |
| M2 | "Frère Jacques" — the first two notes |
| m3 | "Greensleeves" — the first two notes |
| M3 | "When the Saints Go Marching In" |
| P4 | "Here Comes the Bride" |
| TT | The Simpsons theme — the first two notes |
| P5 | Star Wars main theme — the opening leap |
| m6 | "The Entertainer" — first leap after the pickup |
| M6 | "My Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean" — "My Bon-nie" |
| m7 | Star Trek: TOS main theme |
| M7 | "Take On Me" — chorus leap |
| P8 | "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" |
Stash these in memory and the trainer becomes a recall game, not a guessing game.
Ascending, descending, harmonic
- Ascending (asc) — root first, then the higher note. The default at Beginner.
- Descending (desc) — root first, then the lower note. The same interval can sound very different going down.
- Harmonic (harm) — both notes at the same time. Tense intervals like the tritone or minor 2nd reveal their character much faster harmonically than melodically.
The Beginner pool is asc only. Intermediate adds desc. Advanced adds harm.
Why this matters
Once interval recognition is automatic, the rest of musicianship unlocks. You can transcribe a riff by ear in minutes instead of hours, predict where a melody is heading while you're soloing over it, and finally connect "what I hear" to "what I play" without staring at the fretboard. Theory stops feeling like rules and starts feeling like a vocabulary you can speak.