augmented unison


The augmented unison (A1) is an enharmonic interval that spans 1 semitone. It sounds like a minor second, but its spelling indicates an altered unison with specific theoretical meaning.

Construction and spelling

A1 is written as the same letter raised chromatically, such as C-C# or F-F#. Unlike m2, both notes keep the same letter name. This spelling is used when harmonic function requires altered scale-degree interpretation.

Harmonic and melodic usage

In practical music, A1 appears mostly in notation-driven contexts: chromatic voice-leading, altered lines, and theoretical analysis. Sonically, it behaves like a semitone, but structurally it marks alteration of a single pitch class. It is especially useful in advanced tonal and post-tonal spelling.

Examples

  • Chromatic raising of a scale degree within one letter name
  • Analytical contexts distinguishing A1 from m2
  • Notated altered tones in functional harmony exercises

In practice

Train A1 by reading and writing interval spellings, then compare C-C# with C-D♭ to hear same pitch distance but different function labels. Combining ear and notation work helps internalize enharmonic logic. Strong A1 understanding improves theoretical accuracy in analysis and composition.

Transposed

Guitar interval diagram for augmented unison in position 0

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Which chords use the augmented unison interval?

Chords that include this interval between chord tones.

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Which scales use the augmented unison interval?

Scales whose formulas include this interval.

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