Music Theory

Intervals, chord construction, modes, and harmonic analysis — the grammar of music.

Pitch and the Chromatic Scale

The twelve notes
Chromatic scale (all 12 notes, ascending):

  C  C#/Db  D  D#/Eb  E  F  F#/Gb  G  G#/Ab  A  A#/Bb  B  (C)
  1    2    3    4     5  6    7    8    9    10   11    12

Enharmonic equivalents: C# = Db (same pitch, different name)
Sharp (#): raises pitch by one half step
Flat (b): lowers pitch by one half step

Half step (semitone): smallest interval in Western music (C→C#)
Whole step (tone): two half steps (C→D)

Concert pitch: A4 = 440 Hz
Each octave doubles the frequency: A3=220, A4=440, A5=880
Each semitone: multiply by 2^(1/12) ≈ 1.05946

Intervals

Interval names
Semitones  Name              Example (from C)   Sound
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
0          Unison            C→C                same note
1          Minor 2nd (m2)    C→Db               dissonant, tense
2          Major 2nd (M2)    C→D                whole step
3          Minor 3rd (m3)    C→Eb               sad, dark
4          Major 3rd (M3)    C→E                happy, bright
5          Perfect 4th (P4)  C→F                strong, open
6          Tritone (A4/d5)   C→F#               unstable, "devil"
7          Perfect 5th (P5)  C→G                stable, power chord
8          Minor 6th (m6)    C→Ab
9          Major 6th (M6)    C→A
10         Minor 7th (m7)    C→Bb               bluesy tension
11         Major 7th (M7)    C→B                jazzy tension
12         Octave (P8)       C→C                same note, higher

Inversion: interval + inversion = 12 semitones (octave)
  M3 (4) + m6 (8) = 12
  P4 (5) + P5 (7) = 12

Keys and Key Signatures

Circle of fifths
                    C (0 sharps/flats)
            F (1b)                G (1#)
        Bb (2b)                      D (2#)
      Eb (3b)                          A (3#)
    Ab (4b)                              E (4#)
      Db (5b)                          B (5#)
        Gb/F# (6b/6#)

Moving clockwise: add one sharp (fifths: C→G→D→A→E→B→F#)
Moving counterclockwise: add one flat (fourths: C→F→Bb→Eb→Ab→Db→Gb)

Order of sharps: F C G D A E B    ("Father Charles Goes Down And Ends Battle")
Order of flats:  B E A D G C F    (reverse)
Relative major/minor
Every major key has a relative minor (same key signature):
  C major ↔ A minor     (0 accidentals)
  G major ↔ E minor     (1 sharp)
  D major ↔ B minor     (2 sharps)
  A major ↔ F# minor    (3 sharps)
  E major ↔ C# minor    (4 sharps)
  B major ↔ G# minor    (5 sharps)
  F# major ↔ D# minor   (6 sharps)
  F major ↔ D minor     (1 flat)
  Bb major ↔ G minor    (2 flats)
  Eb major ↔ C minor    (3 flats)
  Ab major ↔ F minor    (4 flats)
  Db major ↔ Bb minor   (5 flats)
  Gb major ↔ Eb minor   (6 flats)

Relative minor is 3 semitones below the major
  C major → down 3 → A minor
  Eb major → down 3 → C minor

Chords

Triad types
Type         Formula    Intervals        Example     Sound
────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Major        1-3-5      M3 + m3          C-E-G       happy, stable
Minor        1-b3-5     m3 + M3          C-Eb-G      sad, dark
Diminished   1-b3-b5    m3 + m3          C-Eb-Gb     tense, unstable
Augmented    1-3-#5     M3 + M3          C-E-G#      dreamy, unresolved
Suspended 4  1-4-5      P4 + M2          C-F-G       open, unresolved
Suspended 2  1-2-5      M2 + P4          C-D-G       open, ambiguous
Seventh chords
Major 7th (Maj7):      1-3-5-7         C-E-G-B      jazzy, warm
Dominant 7th (7):      1-3-5-b7        C-E-G-Bb     bluesy, wants to resolve
Minor 7th (m7):        1-b3-5-b7       C-Eb-G-Bb    mellow, smooth
Minor-major 7th (mM7): 1-b3-5-7       C-Eb-G-B     dark, dramatic
Diminished 7th (dim7): 1-b3-b5-bb7    C-Eb-Gb-A    spooky, symmetrical
Half-dim 7th (m7b5):   1-b3-b5-b7     C-Eb-Gb-Bb   sad, jazzy

Extended chords:
  9th:   add 2nd an octave up    (C-E-G-Bb-D = C9)
  11th:  add 4th an octave up    (C-E-G-Bb-D-F = C11)
  13th:  add 6th an octave up    (C-E-G-Bb-D-F-A = C13)
Chord inversions
Root position:     1 - 3 - 5         (C-E-G)      most stable
First inversion:   3 - 5 - 1         (E-G-C)      lighter
Second inversion:  5 - 1 - 3         (G-C-E)      unstable, passing

Seventh chord inversions:
  Root:    1 - 3 - 5 - 7      (C-E-G-B)
  1st inv: 3 - 5 - 7 - 1      (E-G-B-C)
  2nd inv: 5 - 7 - 1 - 3      (G-B-C-E)
  3rd inv: 7 - 1 - 3 - 5      (B-C-E-G)

Figured bass shorthand:
  Root = 5/3    1st inv = 6/3 (or just 6)    2nd inv = 6/4

Diatonic Chords — All Major Keys

Formula: I - ii - iii - IV - V - vi - vii°
Uppercase = major, lowercase = minor, ° = diminished

Key    I      ii     iii    IV     V      vi     vii°
────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
C:     C      Dm     Em     F      G      Am     Bdim
G:     G      Am     Bm     C      D      Em     F#dim
D:     D      Em     F#m    G      A      Bm     C#dim
A:     A      Bm     C#m    D      E      F#m    G#dim
E:     E      F#m    G#m    A      B      C#m    D#dim
B:     B      C#m    D#m    E      F#     G#m    A#dim
F#:    F#     G#m    A#m    B      C#     D#m    E#dim
F:     F      Gm     Am     Bb     C      Dm     Edim
Bb:    Bb     Cm     Dm     Eb     F      Gm     Adim
Eb:    Eb     Fm     Gm     Ab     Bb     Cm     Ddim
Ab:    Ab     Bbm    Cm     Db     Eb     Fm     Gdim
Db:    Db     Ebm    Fm     Gb     Ab     Bbm    Cdim
Diatonic seventh chords: IMaj7 - ii7 - iii7 - IVMaj7 - V7 - vi7 - viiø7
Key    IMaj7    ii7     iii7    IVMaj7   V7      vi7     viiø7
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
C:     CMaj7    Dm7     Em7     FMaj7    G7      Am7     Bø7
G:     GMaj7    Am7     Bm7     CMaj7    D7      Em7     F#ø7
D:     DMaj7    Em7     F#m7    GMaj7    A7      Bm7     C#ø7
A:     AMaj7    Bm7     C#m7    DMaj7    E7      F#m7    G#ø7
E:     EMaj7    F#m7    G#m7    AMaj7    B7      C#m7    D#ø7
B:     BMaj7    C#m7    D#m7    EMaj7    F#7     G#m7    A#ø7
F:     FMaj7    Gm7     Am7     BbMaj7   C7      Dm7     Eø7
Bb:    BbMaj7   Cm7     Dm7     EbMaj7   F7      Gm7     Aø7
Eb:    EbMaj7   Fm7     Gm7     AbMaj7   Bb7     Cm7     Dø7
Ab:    AbMaj7   Bbm7    Cm7     DbMaj7   Eb7     Fm7     Gø7
Db:    DbMaj7   Ebm7    Fm7     GbMaj7   Ab7     Bbm7    Cø7

Diatonic Chords — All Minor Keys

Natural minor: i - ii° - III - iv - v - VI - VII
Key    i      ii°     III    iv     v      VI     VII
────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Am:    Am     Bdim    C      Dm     Em     F      G
Em:    Em     F#dim   G      Am     Bm     C      D
Bm:    Bm     C#dim   D      Em     F#m    G      A
F#m:   F#m    G#dim   A      Bm     C#m    D      E
C#m:   C#m    D#dim   E      F#m    G#m    A      B
G#m:   G#m    A#dim   B      C#m    D#m    E      F#
D#m:   D#m    E#dim   F#     G#m    A#m    B      C#
Dm:    Dm     Edim    F      Gm     Am     Bb     C
Gm:    Gm     Adim    Bb     Cm     Dm     Eb     F
Cm:    Cm     Ddim    Eb     Fm     Gm     Ab     Bb
Fm:    Fm     Gdim    Ab     Bbm    Cm     Db     Eb
Bbm:   Bbm    Cdim    Db     Ebm    Fm     Gb     Ab
Harmonic minor: i - ii° - III+ - iv - V - VI - vii°
Raised 7th changes v→V (major!) and VII→vii° (diminished)
This is why harmonic minor exists: to create a strong V→i cadence.

Key    i      ii°     III+   iv     V      VI     vii°
────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Am:    Am     Bdim    C+     Dm     E      F      G#dim
Em:    Em     F#dim   G+     Am     B      C      D#dim
Bm:    Bm     C#dim   D+     Em     F#     G      A#dim
F#m:   F#m    G#dim   A+     Bm     C#     D      E#dim
Dm:    Dm     Edim    F+     Gm     A      Bb     C#dim
Gm:    Gm     Adim    Bb+    Cm     D      Eb     F#dim
Cm:    Cm     Ddim    Eb+    Fm     G      Ab     Bdim

The V chord being MAJOR in minor keys is the foundation
of classical harmony. Wieniawski exploits this constantly:
  D minor: A major (not Am) resolving to Dm
  G minor: D major (not Dm) resolving to Gm

Chord Progressions

Common progressions (with examples in multiple keys)
I - V - vi - IV  "pop/rock"
  C: C - G - Am - F
  G: G - D - Em - C
  D: D - A - Bm - G
  A: A - E - F#m - D

I - IV - V - I  "classical cadence"
  C: C - F - G - C
  G: G - C - D - G
  D: D - G - A - D

ii - V - I  "jazz turnaround"
  C: Dm7 - G7 - CMaj7
  G: Am7 - D7 - GMaj7
  F: Gm7 - C7 - FMaj7
  Bb: Cm7 - F7 - BbMaj7

i - iv - V - i  "minor classical"
  Am: Am - Dm - E - Am
  Dm: Dm - Gm - A - Dm
  Gm: Gm - Cm - D - Gm
  Em: Em - Am - B - Em

vi - IV - I - V  "emotional/dramatic"
  C: Am - F - C - G
  G: Em - C - G - D

12-bar blues:
  I - I - I - I / IV - IV - I - I / V - IV - I - V
  In A: A-A-A-A / D-D-A-A / E-D-A-E

Circle of fifths progression:
  iii - vi - ii - V - I
  C: Em - Am - Dm - G - C
Classical minor key progressions (Romantic era — Wieniawski’s language)
i - iv - V7 - i              standard minor cadence
i - VI - III - VII - III - V  minor key circle (Baroque)
i - V/V - V - i              secondary dominant approach
i - N6 - V - i               Neapolitan 6th (Romantic signature)
i - It+6 - V - i             Italian augmented 6th
i - Ger+6 - V - i            German augmented 6th

In D minor (Wieniawski Concerto No. 2):
  Dm - Gm - A7 - Dm          (i-iv-V7-i)
  Dm - Bb - F - C - F - A    (i-VI-III-VII-III-V)
  Dm - Eb/G - A - Dm         (i-N6-V-i — Neapolitan)
  Dm - Bb/D# - A - Dm        (i-Ger+6-V-i)

Harmony Concepts

Consonance and dissonance
Consonant (stable):
  Unison, octave, perfect 5th, major/minor 3rd, major/minor 6th

Dissonant (tension):
  Minor 2nd, major 7th, tritone

Tension → resolution is the engine of music
  Dominant (V) → Tonic (I) is the strongest resolution
  G7 → C  (tritone B-F resolves inward to C-E)
Cadences
Authentic cadence:     V → I    (strongest resolution)
Perfect authentic:     V → I    (both in root position, melody on tonic)
Half cadence:          ? → V    (ends on dominant — sounds incomplete)
Plagal cadence:        IV → I   ("Amen" cadence)
Deceptive cadence:     V → vi   (surprise — expected I, got vi)

In D minor:
  Authentic:   A → Dm      (V → i)
  Half:        Dm → A      (i → V)
  Plagal:      Gm → Dm     (iv → i)
  Deceptive:   A → Bb      (V → VI)
Secondary dominants
Any chord can be preceded by ITS dominant:
  V/V:   D7 → G → C     (D7 is V of G, which is V of C)
  V/ii:  A7 → Dm → C    (A7 is V of Dm)
  V/vi:  E7 → Am → C    (E7 is V of Am)
  V/IV:  C7 → F → C     (C7 is V of F)

Secondary dominants create chromatic color and forward motion.
Wieniawski uses these constantly — modulations via secondary dominants
are a hallmark of Romantic violin writing.
Modes (scales built on each degree)
Mode        Start on    Character         Example
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Ionian      1st (C)     Major, happy       standard major
Dorian      2nd (D)     Minor, cool        jazz, funk
Phrygian    3rd (E)     Dark, Spanish      metal, flamenco
Lydian      4th (F)     Dreamy, floating   film scores
Mixolydian  5th (G)     Major, bluesy      rock, blues
Aeolian     6th (A)     Natural minor      sad, dark
Locrian     7th (B)     Diminished, rare   unstable, theoretical

See Also

  • Scales — scale construction builds on interval knowledge

  • Arpeggios — chord tones played sequentially

  • Notation — reading theory on the page