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OpenStudy (anonymous):

Could someone please help me with Living Music?? I need to match intervals with their names. A. Unison B. Second C. Third D. Fourth E. Fifth F. Sixth G. Seventh H. Octave

OpenStudy (anonymous):

"Match the following intervals with their names. You may use some intervals more than once."

imqwerty (imqwerty):

hey i totally don knw anything abt notes nd ol

OpenStudy (anonymous):

DARNNNNNNNNNNNNNN

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I can help ya

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Hopefully

OpenStudy (anonymous):

One thing that's really going to help you is knowing placement on the staff.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

OpenStudy (anonymous):

For #1, you're going from F to F, so that's a full octave.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

#2, you're going from B to C, meaning you have a 2nd interval

OpenStudy (anonymous):

#3, you're going from B to F, which is a 5th (Do-So, in solfege)

OpenStudy (anonymous):

#4 is a bass clef, so refer to the bass clef picture I attached before. Now you're going from a G to a D, so it's a 5th

OpenStudy (anonymous):

you're a life saverrrrrrrrrrrr omg

OpenStudy (anonymous):

XD it's really easy once you understand it.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

So for #5, both of the notes are an F. That mean's they're in unison

OpenStudy (anonymous):

#6 is a Bflat to a Bflat, which is again an octave

OpenStudy (anonymous):

As for #7, it's a little trickier considering you have to build that yourself. But your starting note is a Bflat. I used my keyboard for this, but you travel up every other note. So if you were making a Bflat major chord, you would play Bflat, D, and F. D is your third, and F is your 5th. So #7 is F

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Not chord, but triad to be more exact

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Are you comfortable with note placement on staffs?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

thank youuuuu!!!

OpenStudy (anonymous):

yes i understand alot now hahah

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Okay good. If you need any extra help, ask me OR use this site I'm giving you. In school, we have to test certain things every quarter, and this quarter is note names. Then we have key signatures, then we have triads. Emusictheory.com is extremely useful for learning any of these things. Click on the Free Resources tab and go to "Try the drills online" For note names, your tab after that is called Paced Note Names

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