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Music Interval Table

All 13 musical intervals with symbols, ratios, examples, and audio playback.

About Music Interval Table

Whether you're a musician, podcaster, or audio enthusiast, Music Interval Table gives you a quick way to all 13 musical intervals with symbols, ratios, examples, and audio playback right in your browser. No downloads, no plugins — just open the tool and start working. Your audio data stays completely private on your device.

How to Use

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Load your audio Upload an audio file, record from your microphone, or use the built-in controls to get started.
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Adjust settings Use the available controls to set parameters like frequency, tempo, volume, or effect type.
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Listen and adjust Preview the audio output and fine-tune settings until you're satisfied with the result.
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Save or export Download the audio output or copy any generated data for use in your project.
🔒 Privacy note: All processing happens locally in your browser. Your data is never sent to any server.

Why Use Music Interval Table?

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Browser-Based Audio Music Interval Table uses the Web Audio API for high-quality audio processing directly in your browser. No plugins, no downloads — just open and start.
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Your Audio Stays Private Audio files and recordings are processed locally on your device. Nothing is uploaded to any server or stored anywhere.
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Professional Features Get capabilities that traditionally required desktop software like Audacity or FL Studio, accessible instantly from any browser.
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Works on Any Device Fully responsive design and touch-friendly controls make it easy to use Music Interval Table on desktop, tablet, or smartphone.

Frequently Asked Questions

Consonance and dissonance relate to how the frequencies' ratios interact. Simple ratios like 3:2 (perfect fifth) produce consonant, stable sounds. Complex ratios like the tritone (√2:1) create tension and feel unstable or dissonant.
In medieval times, the tritone (augmented fourth / diminished fifth) was called "diabolus in musica" (devil in music) and was avoided in sacred compositions because of its extremely tense, unresolved sound. It is exactly halfway between two octaves.
Each Play button sounds C4 (middle C, 261.63 Hz) first, then plays the interval note 0.5 seconds later. This lets you clearly hear the relationship between the root note and the interval above it.