The distance spanning five note names, with 7 semitones between them.
Real tracks where you can hear this interval and practice it with movable-do syllables.
Chords whose formulas include this interval from the root note.
Scales whose formulas include this interval.
Intervals with a comparable quality and character.
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Open the app and start your daily workout!
Available on Android and iOS
This is our favourite Queen-song. In this emotional ballad you can hear the perfect fifth when Freddy sings MY-LIFE.
Amy's first two notes form a perfect fifth.
The U2 song starts with a perfect fifth in the first two notes of the verse.
The first two notes of the verse form a perfect fifth.
In the first sentence of the verse you can find the perfect fifth interval at WAKE-UP. You can hear it again at MAKE-UP.
This Jazz standard is intrumental. The first two notes played by John Coltrane form the perfect fifth.
In this classic you can hear a perfect fifth at DEAD-OF (NIGHT).
This song starts with a perfect fifth in the instrumental intro. You can hear it in the first two notes (and then it repeats).
This Disney song is filled with perfect fifths. The first three you hear in the intro, at MAKE-WAY, A-LI and SAY-HEY. Afterwards there are many perfect fifths in the verse. A good song to practice your ears!
You can hear a perfect fifth at BUT-LISTEN-CAREFULLY. The melody is going from A to E and back again.
The perfect fifth (P5) is one of the most stable and foundational intervals in tonal music. It spans 7 semitones, and its balanced sound is why it appears everywhere: in chord construction, bass motion, melody writing, and tuning systems.
P5 is built from a root to the fifth scale degree: for example C to G, D to A, or F to C. In notation, it belongs to the perfect-family intervals (P1, P4, P5, P8). Keep spelling consistent with the note letters so harmonic analysis and voice leading remain clear.
Harmonically, P5 defines the outer frame of triads and power chords, giving harmony a strong center. Melodically, leaps of a fifth sound open and direct, often outlining tonal function quickly. In progressions, root movement by fifths creates strong forward pull and clear cadential energy.
Practice P5 by singing and playing it from multiple roots, ascending and descending, then identifying it by ear in bass lines and chord progressions. Compare P5 with P4 to hear their different directional feel. Strengthening this interval improves intonation, harmonic hearing, and functional listening.