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6.2
Triads and Sevenths: The Foundation of All Western Tonal Harmony

6.2.1
Dissonant in Music: The Real Meaning of Dissonance

Dissonant in music means "unresolved", and is caused by pitch relationships involving complex ratios of frequencies. If deployed skillfully, the restlessness and instability of dissoance makes the music compelling to the listener in the same way that conflict in a movie or television drama makes the show interesting to watch.

If the chord contains only consonant intervals, it will sound consonant. But if it contains even one dissonant interval, the whole chord will sound dissonant (Table 36 below; Figure 41 below).

TABLE 36 Consonant and Dissonant Intervals

Interval Number of
Semitones
Example Consonant/
Dissonant
Minor Second 1 C – C♯ Dissonant
Major Second 2 C – D Dissonant
Minor Third 3 C – E♭ Consonant
Major Third 4 C – E Consonant
Perfect Fourth 5 C – F Consonant
Aug 4th or Dim 5th 6 C – F♯ Dissonant
Perfect Fifth 7 C – G Consonant
Minor 6th or Aug 5th 8 C – A♭ Consonant
Major Sixth 9 C – A Consonant
Minor Seventh 10 C – B♭ Dissonant
Major Seventh 11 C – B Dissonant
Octave 12 C – C Consonant

The chord C major in root position (C, E, G) consists of a major third interval (C – E) with a minor third interval stacked on top (E – G). Two consonant intervals. (These are called the internal intervals.)

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