WieWaldi C and A is a major sixth interval. So if we use the span number in C major scale, then the value '6' aligns excellently.

Similarly ... C and G spans 5 notes in C major ... perfect 5th ... aka 5th.

WieWaldi I would prefer a "go 5 notes up" notation instead of having a span of 6 notes (including first and last).
And I would name the frequency doubling step not octave like 8, but septive like 7. There are only 7 different notes (qualifies excluded). But this discussion has been discussed to death over in PW. And it was fun to see how both camps argued to their side.

I tried to give a 3-stage lesson for anyone who might need it for what it is and how it is done, for the existing system. Could we please not discuss alternative systems that might exist exist? Another new thread could be started for that. I'd like this thread not to become confusing and convoluted like the other one did, for the sake of learners.

In my 3-part presentation, the first part defined how the "numbers" part works. It represents "1st note, 2nd note, 3rd note, 4th note" as though you were looking at racers coming in, or a row of houses saying "I live in the 3rd house from here." CA --- you're standing at the C house, and we're going to the 6th house over.

Please look at the very first post. It was organized that way for a reason.

SouthPark keystring CA = M6 because A is the 6th one over from C, and A belongs to the C major scale.

'A' is the 5th one over from C actually.

Southpark is right. And your post is the proof that the existing system is confusing. Even for experts and teachers.

I presented my terms and premises carefully before using them. The first thing I defined was "numbers" meaning what we call 2nd, 3rd, 4th etc.

me wrote

This comes first. You can think of a row of notes, 1st note, 2nd note, 3rd note, 4th note, 5th note etc. So if we have CE, our row is C, D, E, and E is the 3rd one over. (count them) If we have C, A, our row is C, D, E, F, G, A - and A is the 6th one over. So for CE, the interval is "some kind of 3rd". For CA, the interval is "some kind of 6th". The "some kind" part is our quality (major, minor etc.)

What is meant is defined there. Therefore in the next part when I give examples and write "CA - A is the 6th one over...." this goes with the definition already given. If someone glosses over the intro and jumps into the middle and then gets to the wrong conclusion of what is meant by "6th one over" - that's a problem, and THE problem here. If you want to give it a specific name yourself, such as "span" - go for it. but please start with what I defined, rather than assuming.

I usually teach this in stages, making sure that each concept is understood and can be worked with, before going on. It is not confusing when done that way. When it is all written out, there is the propensity to:

a) try to get it all in one quick read
or
b) extrapolate things you heard before because of trigger words in there
or
c) jump to bits that catch your attention and assume you know what was meant

Nobody is disagreeing that it's an awkward system. I called it "antiquated". However, there are people who want or need to learn this system. Given how complicated the topic got in the other thread, I tried to present something organized. I had no idea whether it would work, however.

i.e. this:

wiewaldi wrote

And your post is the proof that the existing system is confusing.

It is definitely an awkward system. I said as much in my opening post. I don't find it confusing, but I also don't like it that much.

K.S. I know what you mean. It was a long time ago - I thought the issue was me - but the issue is actually with the system. The way that people are teaching it - which is messed up.

For example, for intervals - people are often teaching things like ---- 'From C to E'. And students are always thinking the obvious -- and intuitively -- sure -- from C --- in C major scale, the 'E' is two notes 'away' from 'C', right?

Well ---- of course --- yes it is. E is TWO notes away from C. In other words, that is TWO houses from C. Not three houses from C.

Although, if we think of it as --- houses on a street, with the first house (labeled number 1), second house (labeled number 2), third house etc. Then we can say things like the 'third house'. We don't need to introduce uncertainty by saying 'from'. So when we say sixth house - we know EXACTLY which one it is .... it's the sixth one. And this is extremely clear. This is the 'span' method.

For the span method -- we say eg. C and E. The C being the lower note. The E being the higher note. The lower note sets the scale, and is also assigned temporarily to be the tonic (root note of that scale). In this case - C major scale, which goes C, D, E etc.

E happens to exist in the C major scale. C to E spans THREE notes in the C major scale. Major third.

Had E been an E-flat instead. Then we can just go with C to E-flat is one semitone less than the major third. So -- that would be a minor third interval. But to get formal about it -- C minor scale goes C, D, E-flat. So E-flat exists in C minor scale. C to E-flat is a minor third interval, because C to E-flat spans three notes in the C minor scale. It spans three notes in the minor scale --- minor third.

    On the numbers part. Maybe we can even get to a common point here.

    When we measure something, the first number on a ruler is "0". We start at point 0. When something is 4 centimeters long, we started at 0. When I used to teach primary school the kids got "centimeter cubes" which were each 1 cm. long. They stuck together their centimeter cubes and visually got to see how many centimeters long something was. How many centimeters fit. This is the best image I could find:

    This is NOT what our interval names reflect. They don't tell us "how long the length of the interval is". For that, our equivalent to centimeter cubes might be semitones.

    Instead, we've got something quite primitive. You're at a row of trees. How far are you supposed to stretch that rope? "Up to the 3rd tree". You're counting your trees: 1st tree, 2nd three, 3rd tree. You start at 1, not 0. That's what the interval names do.

    Supposing your trees are 1 yard apart (they're small trees). The distance from the 1st tree to the 3rd tree would be 2 yards. We've got a distance of two yards, but we've gone to the third tree.

    The "length" of an interval - or "size" of an interval - is done in a primitive way. "It's over yonder, 4th gopher hole over." and if you stretch your rope first the 1st to the 4th, you get the right length of your rope - this is also a way of "measuring" but not how we think of measuring.

    South Park, we cross posted. I did the centimeter cube one while you were writing. 🙂 We might actually be getting somewhere. I'm going to respond to what you wrote - this may be going somewhere.

    K.S. --- the two 'proper' ways they generally use to define intervals is a 'distance' approach -- measured as an integer multiple number of semitones. The other proper way -- is the SPAN method.

    Ok ...... I do know there is the way that a lot of people try to teach or push onto the students, which involves people telling students things like 'G is FIVE notes from C'. And then they will START their count AT C, Beginning the count AT C is not an example of FROM C.

    In C major scale, beginning the count (1) at 'D' is the correct example of 'FROM' C. But the issue there is -- G is four notes from (ie. away from) C in the C major scale.

    It's ok to use the 'FROM' method if we're using SPAN of notes though. That works excellently. Eg. in the C major scale, from C to D, this pair of notes spans (including themselves) 2 notes. Major 2nd.

    K.S. - also --- very importantly, I totally understand what the teachers have been teaching. I notice there is a fundamental issue with that approach. But on the other hand, I definitely know that if the students are prepared to accept the 'G is 5 notes away from C' thing (and begin the counting from the tonic) --- then it obviously isn't going to ruin them. And the thousands of people that learned it that way certainly have not been ruined at all - and in fact are very successful. The main thing is that there is an understanding that teachers saying things like 'G is five notes from C' (and starting the count from C) is ----- I think we all know that it's 'technically' wrong. But I don't mind at all. I'm just trying to point that out only.

      SouthPark K.S. I know what you mean. It was a long time ago - I thought the issue was me - but the issue is actually with the system. The way that people are teaching it - which is messed up.

      For example, for intervals - people are often teaching things like ---- 'From C to E'. And students are always thinking the obvious -- and intuitively -- sure -- from C --- in C major scale, the 'E' is two notes 'away' from 'C', right?

      There is a much bigger picture that I'd like to go into for teaching as a whole. I find that when things are taught, esp. theory, "basic things" are glossed over, or gotten at in a utilitarian superficial way. By "utilitarian", I mean let's give a quick name to this so that we can get back to playing music - or let's memorize these rules so the exam can be passed. The teacher may have learned in the same manner and nobody has ever really gone to the heart of anything. We can pass exams nicely without ever grasping the essence of a thing.

      In 2006 I studied the whole RCM rudiments, did the middle and upper level exams passing the middle with 99.95% and felt quite dissatisfied. I restudied it all, this time at the piano or tapping rhythms to make it more real: then I taught the whole thing over 18 months, this time the way that I would have wanted to do it. I was still near the start of my own journey, but it went fairly well.

      When I worked with that student, who had been playing for some years, one of the elementary concepts that had gotten mixed up involved time. There is note value, the relative note value of say half note vs. quarter note, beats, and meter. For some of this there were "what is this really?" moments to sort out. (Just as an example - I don't want to start a new topic. 😉 )

      The elementary concepts are "so easy", so "babyish" - why spend any time on them. And yet we build everything on top of them and if the bricks are misshapen, we'll flounder here and there without ever knowing the cause as we advance. OR we actually succeed with high grades in exams, be able to pontificate to the next crop of students if we become teachers, without ever really connecting any of this to music.

      In my own training as a teacher at the "formative" level (primary grades), I already had the concept of going from concrete to abstract. The "centimeter cubes" example is that. So I went in that direction. My own first experience in lessons, which happened as an adult, collapsed largely because the "baby things" were rushed through. While a lot of this was physical instruction, the same principle applied. When I went back to basics and the "real" version, problems in advanced music also often resolved themselves.

      This has gone way past intervals, but the issue with intervals that you described I think is part of that picture.

      SouthPark Ok ...... I do know there is the way that a lot of people try to teach or push onto the students, .....

      I'd like to get past what "people do" when they teach. I'm trying to get past that here. I presented it as how I teach it rather than what "they" teach. Either it helps others or it doesn't. You and I seem to be on the same page, where you've decided to use the word "span" to describe what I call "1st house, 2nd house, 3rd house..." which is less abstract than the word "span" which frankly I'd have to look up and might still get wrong.

      I'd be interested to know whether my presentation is useful to anyone. What others do, wrongly or otherwise, not so much. That's not the purpose.

        SouthPark The main thing is that there is an understanding that teachers saying things like 'G is five notes from C' (and starting the count from C) is ----- I think we all know that it's 'technically' wrong. But I don't mind at all. I'm just trying to point that out only.

        That puts us on the same page. Good enough.

          keystring That puts us on the same page. Good enough.

          We're on the same page now K.S. The centimetre (distance) units is equivalent to the integer multiple of semitone units.

          When we use the definitions of major and minor intervals in the form of unison, major second, minor second, major third, minor third etc --- there is a direct but non-linear mapping. Eg. unison maps to zero semitone. Minor second maps to 1 semitone. Major second maps to 2 semitones. Minor third maps to three semitones. Major third maps to four semitones. Perfect fourth maps to FIVE semitones. Perfect fifth maps to SEVEN semitones etc.

          Some people do take advantage of the above mapping.

          I don't have a problem with you or teachers teaching what you want to teach.

          And earlier, I was only pointing out that when you wrote 'A' is sixth one over from 'C', it should be 'A' is the sixth one in the set of notes 'C to A' in C major scale, which is the application of the SPAN-of-notes method.

          Another example of that is E4-sharp and C5. Since E4-sharp is the lower note, we go for E4-sharp major scale, which has this sequence E♯, F, G, A♯, B♯, C, D -- and then finally back to E# of course. And the E4-sharp and C5 spans six notes. Major sixth interval. Here, we can say that from E4-sharp to C5, we have a span of notes equal to six. We have a major sixth interval.

          I think it was great that we had this conversation, and also the discussion in this thread and the other thread about the diminished third interval. It looks like everyone has learned something - which benefits all of us.

          keystring You and I seem to be on the same page, where you've decided to use the word "span" to describe what I call "1st house, 2nd house, 3rd house..." which is less abstract than the word "span" which frankly I'd have to look up and might still get wrong.

          Once you have been taught what span-of-notes means --- which probably takes 10 seconds or less to convey (ie. span of notes being the number of notes covered/contained in a set/sequence of notes) --- then you will never forget it for the rest of your life.

            We have some common ground but I'm afraid you slipped up on the "E# major scale" 😏

            SouthPark E♯, F, G, A♯, B♯, C, D -- and then finally back to E#

            We don't usually have a scale written out as "E# major scale", which doesn't make it impossible. Did you try playing what you wrote out at the piano, before posting? (I always double check) Try it - it doesn't sound like a major scale. A quick indication is that E#, F .... are the same piano keys, and B#, C are also the same piano keys.

            I've written out an E# major scale, and juxtaposed F major. If you play these on the piano you should hear the same thing.

            E# to C is dim6 (what you were after)
            F to C is P5
            That's a quick check, because you'll be playing the same piano keys. We know that dim6 = P5, and we also see and hear it.
            However, in the E# major scale there is no C. There is a B# ---- and E# to B# is a P5. It also fits neatly.

            This was kinda fun. 🙂

            The problem happened in trying to write out this interesting scale. It happens. That's why I try to play what I write out before sending, to make double sure. 🙂

              keystring We don't usually have a scale written out as "E# major scale"

              K.S. There indeed is an E sharp major scale. As long as we follow that pattern ... tone, tone, semitone etc .... the major scale will sound like .... a major scale. It's all relative.

                SouthPark K.S. There indeed is an E sharp major scale. As long as we follow that pattern ... tone, tone, semitone etc .... the major scale will sound like .... a major scale. It's all relative.

                Are you taking the time to carefully and fully read what others write? I take care in my posts, double checking before sending. I literally wrote out an E# major scale. Did you not see it?

                The notes you wrote out do not give us a major scale because you made some mistakes: If you play what you wrote out at the piano you'll hear it. I also did a sound file letting you hear that.

                Please do go back and take your time reading everything. Otherwise we're not communicating. thx.

                keystring We have some common ground but I'm afraid you slipped up on the "E# major scale"

                Earlier .... I was meaning to write e-flat major scale.
                E♭, F, G, A♭, B♭, C, and D.

                The two notes I was meaning to set the example for is ... E-flat and C.

                So now we see the value of myself laying out the foundations ... and explaining my procedure comes in handy.

                The interval E5-flat and C5 in the E-flat major scale is a major sixth. Spanning 6 notes.

                  SouthPark Earlier .... I was meaning to write e-flat major scale.

                  It is important when writing in a forum to double check before posting. Otherwise time is wasted, including the reader's, and you can be taken less seriously when you end up making gross mistakes. Before I posted my notation, I played it to make double sure.

                  The rest is the same as what I presented which is unsurprising since it's basic. The answer of M6 is correct.

                    keystring It's fine K.S. In my post .... I did mention the pattern .... tone, tone, semitone etc. So you will know that the sequence I had earlier doesn't follow that pattern. And you know full well my example intention is to demonstrate a major 6 interval. And as I told you .... it should have been E-flat and C as the example pair. I was thinking of E-flat ...... not E-sharp, since E sharp is an F in absolute terms.

                    Hence the importance of me writing the process ... so it's easy to see that cross checking indicates that my example really was to meant to be what I wrote. E4-flat and C5.

                    Likewise .... when you make mistakes like writing A is 6 notes over from C ..... same deal.

                    I think all has been written that can be written on this tangent. I'm done.

                    Almost done. E# major scale will be F major scale. F, G, A, B♭, C, D, E

                    If considering F4 and C5, then the procedure is to take the lower note. It is F. So use F major scale. If the lower note had been F# instead, then would use F# major scale. But we're dealing with the lower note being F. So F major scale.

                    In this case .... F4 and C5 interval spans 5 notes in F major scale. Perfect fifth interval.

                    Better cover F4-sharp and C5 as well. Lower note is F#, so choose F# major scale.

                    F♯, G♯, A♯, B, C♯, D♯, E♯

                    F# and C# spans five notes ... perfect fifth, while we want F# and C, which is 1 semitone less than the perfect fifth interval. So F# and C is associated with a diminished fifth interval.