Diminished fifth

The distance spanning five note names, with 6 semitones between them.

d56 semitones

The diminished fifth (d5) spans 6 semitones and is one name for the tritone. It is a highly unstable interval that plays a central role in tension and resolution.

Construction and spelling

d5 is spelled as a fifth lowered by one semitone, such as C-Gb. Although it shares pitch distance with A4, its spelling indicates a contracted fifth function. This spelling choice matters for harmonic analysis.

Harmonic and melodic usage

Harmonically, d5 appears in dominant-function sonorities, diminished chords, and chromatic voice-leading. Melodically, it sounds dissonant and directional, often seeking resolution. In tonal harmony, the tritone is one of the main tension drivers.

Examples

In practice

Practice d5 from multiple roots and resolve it by contrary motion to stable intervals. Compare d5 with P5 to hear tension versus stability. Strong d5 recognition improves harmonic hearing and cadence awareness.

Guitar diagrams

Sheet music

Practice the Diminished fifth interval

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Which chords use the Diminished fifth interval?

Chords whose formulas include this interval from the root note.

Similar intervals

Intervals with a comparable quality and character.

Practice the Diminished fifth interval

Open the app and start your daily workout!

Learn music theory with sonid

Available on Android and iOS