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Ear Training
Beginner
7 min

Interval Ear Training: Complete Guide with Reference Songs

Published February 3, 2026

Master interval recognition with this comprehensive guide. Every interval paired with a famous song for instant recall.

Key Takeaways

  • Every interval has a famous song anchor. Memorize the table.
  • Ascending and descending need separate reference songs.
  • Start with perfect intervals (unison, 4th, 5th, octave) — they are easiest.
  • Use the Musoca Ear Trainer for daily interval practice.

The Complete Interval Reference Table

Ascending Minor 2nd: "Jaws" theme / "Happy Birthday" (first two notes)

Ascending Major 2nd: "Happy Birthday" (first two notes) / "Frère Jacques"

Ascending Minor 3rd: "Greensleeves" / "Smoke on the Water" riff

Ascending Major 3rd: "When the Saints Go Marching In" / "Kum Ba Yah"

Ascending Perfect 4th: "Here Comes the Bride" / "Amazing Grace"

Ascending Tritone: "Maria" from West Side Story / "The Simpsons" theme

Ascending Perfect 5th: "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star" / "Star Wars" theme

Ascending Minor 6th: "The Entertainer" (first two notes) / "Love Story" theme

Ascending Major 6th: "My Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean" / "NBC" chimes

Ascending Minor 7th: "Somewhere" from West Side Story / "Star Trek" theme

Ascending Major 7th: "Take On Me" (a-ha) / "Don't Know Why" (Norah Jones)

Ascending Octave: "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" / "Willow Weep for Me"

Descending Intervals (Different Songs)

Descending intervals often need different reference songs because the melodic context changes.

Descending Minor 2nd: "Joy to the World" / "Für Elise"

Descending Major 2nd: "Mary Had a Little Lamb" / "Silent Night"

Descending Minor 3rd: "Hey Jude" (Beatles) / "The Star-Spangled Banner"

Descending Major 3rd: "Summertime" / "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot"

Descending Perfect 4th: "Eine Kleine Nachtmusik" / "O Come All Ye Faithful"

Descending Perfect 5th: "Feelings" / "The Flintstones" theme

Descending Octave: "Willow Weep for Me" / "Singin' in the Rain"

Practice Exercises

  1. 1Pick 3 intervals. Listen to each on the Ear Trainer. Sing them back. Do this for 5 minutes.
  2. 2Play the reference song for an interval, then stop and sing the interval without the song.
  3. 3Have a friend play intervals on piano/guitar. Identify them without looking.

Common Mistakes

  • Confusing major and minor 3rds. They differ by one semitone. Drill them side by side.
  • Thinking tritone = perfect 5th. The tritone is smaller and sounds unstable. The perfect 5th is open and stable.
  • Only practicing ascending. Melodies go both ways. You must recognize descending intervals too.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need different songs for ascending vs descending?

Yes, the same interval sounds different ascending vs descending. Use separate reference songs for each direction.

What if I don't know the reference songs?

Pick songs you know well. The Ear Trainer lets you preview intervals. Create your own anchors with music you love.

How do I practice intervals effectively?

Start with 2-3 intervals. Master them completely before adding more. Practice both ascending and descending. Use the Ear Trainer's interval module daily.

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