Fifths
Read fifths as stable line-to-line or space-to-space leaps that outline common chords.
Five letter names
A fifth spans five letters, such as C to G or F to C. On the staff it lands on the same kind of position.
Chord outline
Fifths often outline the outside notes of a chord. Seeing them as a single shape helps both reading and hand placement.
Root and fifth
A fifth often connects a chord root to its strongest support note. Bass lines and simple accompaniments use this shape constantly.
Cadence outline
The I-V-I feeling is built around fifth relationships. Seeing fifths prepares you for cadences before you study them formally.
Perfect and diminished fifths
C to G is a perfect fifth. B to F is a diminished fifth, one half step smaller, and it creates strong tension inside dominant harmony.
Circle-of-fifths motion
Roots often move by fifth: C to G, G to D, or V back to I. That motion organizes key signatures and many chord progressions.
Dominant chain
Dominants often move by fifth to their target. A chain like A7-D7-G7-C creates forward motion by repeatedly setting up the next chord.
Tritone resolution
The third and seventh of a dominant seventh form a tritone. In G7, B usually rises to C while F falls to E.
Guided walkthrough
A fifth spans five letter names and often outlines a chord shape.
- 1Read the starting note.
- 2Count five letters including the start.
- 3Notice that the destination returns to the same line-or-space type.
Try it on the keyboard
Play C-G, D-A, F-C, and G-D while naming both outside notes.
- 1Keep the hand relaxed.
- 2Move by shape, not by guessing.
- 3Compare each fifth to a triad outline.
Common mistake
A fifth is wide enough that guessing often lands one key short.
Check yourself
Can you see the fifth shape before moving your hand?
Theory transfer
Connect perfect and diminished fifths and circle-of-fifths motion to the notation before playing so the theory idea becomes a reading decision, not only a definition.
- 1Name the theory idea in one short sentence.
- 2Point to the note, rhythm, interval, chord, or phrase shape that shows it.
- 3Play the example once for accuracy.
- 4Play it again while listening for the theory idea.
Analyze and compose
Use dominant chain and tritone resolution to explain what the music is doing, then make one small musical choice of your own.
- 1Name the key or temporary key area.
- 2Label the chord, cadence, non-chord tone, or phrase function.
- 3Play the example while saying the labels quietly.
- 4Compose a one-measure answer or variation using the same idea.
Short applied practice
Use the example as a one-minute transfer drill: preview the concept, play slowly, isolate the hesitation, then repeat with a steadier pulse.
- 1Preview the clef, key, rhythm, and main pattern before playing.
- 2Play once slowly while naming the lesson concept out loud.
- 3Repeat only the two notes or beats that caused hesitation.
- 4Play the full example again without changing tempo.
기억하기
A fifth is wider than a third but still has the same line-or-space pairing.