Here we're going to discuss a minor third
interval, where we take the major scale and
we go from the first note up a whole step,
up another whole step to the third note of
a major scale. Now, a minor third refers to
taking this third note and lowering it by
a half step, the same way we lowered the second
down to a minor second. So, we've got the
first note, the second note, the third note
of a major scale. Bring it down one for a
minor third. Now, anywhere on the neck, if
you play one note and you go up three frets,
that would be referred to as a minor third
interval. Now, you can also do that between
two strings. You could start on this note
and go, instead of here, you could play this
note five fret back, right here. So, you could
also play a minor third now on two separate
strings. Just remember, when you get to the
B string, this will always work until you
get to the B string. When you hit the B string,
raise that interval shape up by one fret to
make that interval the same.
