The distance between two notes using the same natural, with 0 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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Here we hear the perfect unison after the intro. "EACH-MORNING-I-GET-UP-I" is all on the same note.
If you want to hear a lot of perfect unisons, you have to listen to this song! It's a real classic.
Every time Dolly sings Jo-lene, you hear a perfect unison.
You here the perfect unison in the piano melody. Agnes Obel repeats this.
At the start of the song you'll hear Got-My-First-Real... These notes form the perfect unison. A little note: this is without the first word of the sentence (I).
This classical masterwork by Chopin starts with repeating the same note.
The perfect prime (often called perfect unison) is the interval where two notes share the same pitch class: no distance in semitones, just one note doubled or sustained by multiple voices. Its abbreviation is P1. Because there is no pitch gap, P1 does not add melodic tension by itself; instead, it creates focus, weight, and stability in harmony, orchestration, and rhythm.
P1 spans 0 semitones. In interval notation, it is called "perfect" because unison belongs to the perfect-family group (P1, P4, P5, P8), not the major/minor group. Typical spellings keep the same letter name in both voices (for example C with C, or F# with F#), even when octave placement differs in real music.
Harmonically, unisons reinforce a line: choir sections, synth layers, guitars, or strings often double a melody at P1 to make it sound stronger and clearer. Rhythmically, repeated unisons lock attacks together and tighten groove. Melodically, a literal P1 appears as repetition of the same pitch, which can feel static on paper but expressive in performance through articulation, dynamics, timing, and timbre changes.
Train P1 by singing a reference pitch, then matching it exactly with another voice or instrument without drifting sharp or flat. In arranging, use unison doubling when you need clarity and impact, then contrast it with thirds, sixths, or octaves when you want a wider texture. In ear training, distinguish true unison from very small mistunings (beats/chorusing), since that precision improves intonation across all other intervals.
A true P1 sounds like one fused pitch, not two separate tones. If you hear beating, the notes are close but not perfectly aligned. Compare P1 with m2: P1 has no clash and no pull, while m2 introduces immediate tension and directional energy.