« The Sixth | Main | Modal Improvisation »

October 01, 2006

The Third

The third spans three diatonic scale degrees, the minor third contains 3 semitones, the major third contains 4 semitones. The pitch ratio of the third sixth is 6/5 or 7/6 and of the major third is 5/4.

Chords are formed as succession of thirds. When the interval between the tonic (first degree) and the mediant (third degree) of a chord is a major third the chord is a major chord.

Chords

When the interval between the tonic (first degree) and the mediant (third degree) of a chord is a minor third the chord is a minor chord.

Chordsminor

The point is to memorize how it sounds. Some examples:

Major thirds from Bernstein's West Side Story:

Pretty

The riff of Smoke On the Water begins with a minor third:

Smoke

A descending minor third from Deep Purple's Mistreated:

Mistreated

The diminished arpeggio is a succession of minor thirds:

Dim

Beethoven's Fifth opens with a descending major third followed by a descending minor third:

Fifth

The thirds are often played as double-stops like in Paganini's 24th capriccio:

Cap24

Learn to hear the difference between major and minor thirds and between major and minor chords. It's one of the most important things in relative hearing.

Comments

Post a comment

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In

Guitar Resources

Guitar Music

Recommended Sites

Blog powered by TypePad