The diminished second (d2) is a rare but important enharmonic interval. It spans 0 semitones, sounding like unison, yet its notation implies a contracted second with specific harmonic meaning.
Construction and spelling
d2 is spelled as a second that has been lowered, such as E to F♭ or B to C♭. Although it sounds like P1, the letter names show stepwise motion and harmonic context. This distinction is essential in tonal spelling and advanced analysis.
Harmonic and melodic usage
In common practice, d2 appears in chromatic voice-leading and theoretical spellings where function matters more than raw pitch distance. In notation-heavy contexts, d2 can clarify altered scale degrees and directional movement. It is less about sound color and more about structural meaning.
Examples
- Chromatic inflections where a notated second contracts enharmonically
- Classical and late-romantic passages with precise voice-leading spelling
- Theory analysis comparing sounding unison versus functional interval name
In practice
Practice identifying d2 by notation rather than sound alone: compare E-F♭ with E-E and track their different theoretical roles. Pair ear training with score-reading so enharmonic intervals become musically meaningful. Strong d2 awareness improves harmonic literacy and analytical precision.
