I've been studying (perhaps that's too strong a word) some theory, and I'm given to understand the following:
All unison, octave, perfect fifth, major/minor third and major/minor sixth intervals are "consonant".
All major/minor second, major/minor seventh, and any augmented or diminished intervals are "dissonant".
Perfect fourths are consonant in melody but dissonant in harmony.
However, I'm confused on one point. Augmented fifth = minor sixth, for all intents and purposes, right? But that means that a four-tone interval is both consonant AND dissonant. I'm assuming it depends on the context, but how you differentiate? Under what circumstances will a minor sixth be, in fact, dissonant?
All unison, octave, perfect fifth, major/minor third and major/minor sixth intervals are "consonant".
All major/minor second, major/minor seventh, and any augmented or diminished intervals are "dissonant".
Perfect fourths are consonant in melody but dissonant in harmony.
However, I'm confused on one point. Augmented fifth = minor sixth, for all intents and purposes, right? But that means that a four-tone interval is both consonant AND dissonant. I'm assuming it depends on the context, but how you differentiate? Under what circumstances will a minor sixth be, in fact, dissonant?