Parallel fifths occur when two voices form a perfect fifth and then move in the same direction to another perfect fifth, destroying the independence of the voices. In 18th-century voice leading (AP Music Theory Units 4-5), they are forbidden and are one of the most common errors flagged on part-writing FRQs.
Parallel fifths happen when two voices are a perfect fifth apart and both move in the same direction to land on another perfect fifth. Picture the tenor singing C while the soprano sings G, then both step up so the tenor sings D and the soprano sings A. That's P5 to P5 in parallel motion, and in 18th-century style it's a hard no.
Why the ban? The whole point of voice leading is independence of voices (PIT-4.A.1). A perfect fifth is such a stable, hollow-sounding interval that when two voices move in locked-step fifths, your ear stops hearing two separate lines and starts hearing one thick line. The voices fuse, and the four-part texture collapses. One important detail saves you a lot of grief, though. The rule only applies to consecutive perfect fifths. A diminished fifth moving to a perfect fifth (or vice versa) is judged by a different convention (PIT-4.C.2), and repeating the exact same fifth between the same two notes isn't parallel motion at all, it's just a repeated chord.
Avoiding parallel fifths is baked into the core skill of Unit 4: Harmony and Voice Leading I. Learning objective AP Music Theory 4.1.A asks you to identify and apply 18th-century voice-leading procedures through score analysis, error detection, writing exercises, and contextual listening, and parallel fifths are the textbook error you're hunting for. The conventions in AP Music Theory 4.2.B, 4.2.C, and 4.2.D (chord spelling, doubling, spacing, first-inversion chords) all exist partly because smart doubling and spacing choices are how you dodge parallels in the first place.
The rule follows you into Unit 5. When you add predominant chords like IV and ii (AP Music Theory 5.1.A), the bass often moves by step from scale degree 4 to 5, which is exactly the setup where careless upper voices generate parallel fifths. If you can't spot and avoid them, you lose points on every part-writing FRQ.
Keep studying AP Music Theory Unit 4
Visual cheatsheet
view galleryVoice Leading (Unit 4)
Parallel fifths only make sense inside the voice-leading framework. The CED's goal of 'independence of voices' (PIT-4.A.1) is the reason the rule exists, so think of parallel fifths as the clearest possible violation of that goal.
Direct Fifths and Direct Octaves (Unit 4)
These are the milder cousins. Direct (hidden) fifths happen when the outer voices move in similar motion INTO a fifth from some other interval, and they're only restricted in specific outer-voice situations. Parallel fifths go fifth-to-fifth and are always wrong.
Contrary Motion (Unit 4)
Contrary motion is your best defense. When the soprano and bass move in opposite directions, parallel fifths between them become impossible, which is why PIT-4.C.1 wants varied motion between outer voices rather than constant parallel motion.
Predominant Function IV (iv) and ii (Unit 5)
The IV-V progression is a parallel-fifth trap. Both chords are root position with bass moving by step, so if all the upper voices also move up in parallel, you get fifths (and octaves) instantly. The fix is moving the upper voices down, contrary to the bass.
Parallel fifths show up in two main ways. First, error-detection questions hand you a notated SATB passage and ask which voice-leading convention is broken. You need to scan pairs of voices for consecutive perfect fifths (check tenor-soprano and alto-bass, not just the outer voices). Second, the part-writing FRQs grade you on avoiding them yourself. The 2025 SAQ Q7, for example, asks you to compose a bass line for a given melody following 18th-century voice-leading procedures, and writing fifths in parallel with the soprano costs points. Practice questions also hit the IV-to-V and ii-to-V moves specifically, asking how upper voices should relate to the bass to avoid parallelism. The reliable answer is contrary motion: when the bass steps up, send the upper voices down to the nearest chord tones.
Parallel fifths go from one perfect fifth to another perfect fifth in the same direction, and they're banned everywhere, between any pair of voices. Direct (hidden) fifths arrive at a perfect fifth by similar motion from a different interval, and the restriction mainly applies between the outer voices with a leap in the soprano. If you see P5 followed by P5, it's parallel. If the fifth only appears at the arrival point, it's direct.
Parallel fifths occur when two voices a perfect fifth apart move in the same direction to another perfect fifth, and 18th-century style forbids them in every voice pair.
The rule exists because consecutive perfect fifths make two voices fuse into one, killing the independence of voices that voice leading is supposed to create (PIT-4.A.1).
A diminished fifth moving to a perfect fifth is a separate convention with its own exception in I-V⁴₃-I⁶, so don't lump it in with true parallel perfect fifths.
Repeating the same fifth between the same pitches is not a parallel fifth, because no motion happened, just a repeated chord.
Root-position chords with stepwise bass motion (like IV to V) are the biggest parallel-fifth trap, and contrary motion in the upper voices is the standard fix.
On part-writing FRQs, check every pair of voices for parallels before you finish, not just soprano against bass.
Parallel fifths happen when two voices form a perfect fifth and then move in the same direction to another perfect fifth. They violate 18th-century voice-leading conventions tested in Units 4 and 5 because they destroy the independence of the voices.
No, not between two perfect fifths. The one nearby exception involves unequal fifths, where a diminished fifth may rise to a perfect fifth in the progression I-V⁴₃-I⁶ (PIT-4.C.2). True parallel perfect fifths are always an error in part-writing FRQs.
Parallel fifths move from a perfect fifth to another perfect fifth and are banned between any two voices. Direct fifths arrive at a perfect fifth by similar motion from some other interval, and that restriction mainly matters between soprano and bass.
No. If both voices stay on the same pitches, there's no motion, so there's no parallel motion. Parallel fifths require both voices to actually move to a new perfect fifth.
Move the upper voices in contrary motion to the bass. When the bass steps up from scale degree 4 to 5, send the soprano, alto, and tenor down to the nearest notes of the V chord. This is exactly the move Topic 5.1 part-writing questions test.
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