It is an eighth, or an octave.
No. Two simultaneous pitches of the same letter name and pitch (e.g., C, G, or D) do not constitute a harmony; they are said to be in unison.
The term 'octave' is the name for an interval(space) between two notes. The frequency of the note is doubled, or halved, depending on whether the interval goes up or down in frequency. The two notes are heard toghether as the same, and will also have the same name. For example, an octave above A(440 Hz) is A(880 Hz) an octave under A(440 Hz) is A(220 Hz) To answer the question, the similarity between the keynote and an octave above it, is that the ratio between the frequency of these notes is 1:2 and of course, their names.
The previous answer was: "A chord" to which I have to disagree. Chords are made up of 3 or more notes. Two (2) notes played at the same time are an interval. If the notes are the same and played at the exact same frequency, then they are said to be in unison. Otherwise, the interval (space between the notes) is measured in half and whole steps, and is many times referred to relative to the distance between the notes in the major scale of the bottom note of the interval. For example, if the bottom note of the interval is C and the noted played above it is F, then counting up the C Major scale reveals the interval is a 4th (2 and 1/2 whole steps). Likewise, if the bottom note is F and the top note is C, then counting up the F Major scale reveals the interval is a 5th (3 and 1/2 whole steps).
Grades such as A, B, and C are not considered interval data; they are typically classified as ordinal data. This is because grades represent a ranked order (A is better than B, which is better than C) but do not have a consistent numerical difference between them. For example, the difference in performance between an A and a B may not be the same as between a B and a C. Interval data, on the other hand, must have equal intervals between values and a meaningful zero point, which grades do not possess.
Yes, the octaves are the same notes but in varying pitches.
In music theory, an interval that spans two pitches with the same name (e.g., C to the next higher C) is known as a unison. Unisons have a distance of zero half steps, meaning the two pitches are played simultaneously and sound at the same pitch. Unisons are considered to be the simplest and most consonant interval in Western music, as they create a sense of unity and stability.
The Pitch Interval
An interval that remains the same throughout a sequence
Not necessarily but yes, it can be. A contour interval is the difference in elevation between successive contours, while a vertical interval is the distance between any two contours. So yeah, it can be the same sometimes.
The interval of eight diatonic degrees between two tones of the same name, the higher of which has twice as many vibrations per second as the lower.
Well, if its a petrol engine, i assume its the same as the Honda accord made between 1994-1998, because they really are the same car.That interval is 60000miles.
The same note name, yes. They could possibly be different pitches.
MELODIC--are notes played separately. HARMONIC-- are notes played together. C- G =a melodic interval. C AND G played at the same time = a harmonic interval.
No. Two simultaneous pitches of the same letter name and pitch (e.g., C, G, or D) do not constitute a harmony; they are said to be in unison.
The term 'octave' is the name for an interval(space) between two notes. The frequency of the note is doubled, or halved, depending on whether the interval goes up or down in frequency. The two notes are heard toghether as the same, and will also have the same name. For example, an octave above A(440 Hz) is A(880 Hz) an octave under A(440 Hz) is A(220 Hz) To answer the question, the similarity between the keynote and an octave above it, is that the ratio between the frequency of these notes is 1:2 and of course, their names.
If those times are both in the same day, then the interval between them is 101/2 hours.
yes the titanic is the same size as three football-pitches