The dominant eleventh chord expands dominant harmony beyond the seventh and ninth, adding an eleventh color tone. It creates a broad, layered tension that sounds modern and spacious when voiced carefully.
Construction
The complete theoretical stack is 1-3-5-♭7-9-11. In C11: C-E-G-B♭-D-F. In practical arranging, players often omit tones like the fifth or even the ninth to avoid muddiness and highlight function.
Usage
Dominant eleventh sonorities are common in jazz, fusion, neo-soul, and cinematic writing where you want dominant direction plus harmonic depth.
Examples
- Jazz and fusion - extended dominant pads before cadence
- Neo-soul voicings - wide keyboard or guitar textures
- Film scoring - tense but airy harmonic motion
In practice
Protect the guide tones (3 and ♭7), then add 9/11 as color tones in clear registers so the chord stays functional and readable.
