The 7♯5♭9♯11 dominant is a high-intensity altered chord that layers multiple tensions into a single dominant function. The ♭9 compresses and darkens, while ♯11 and ♯5 add brightness and angular lift. This gives a volatile but highly directional sound for dramatic harmonic moments.
Construction
A practical formula is 1-3-♯5-♭7-♭9-♯11. In C, this can include C-E-G♯-B♭-D♭-F♯. In voicing practice, 3 and ♭7 remain functional anchors; altered tones are curated for clarity and impact.
Usage
Best used in modern jazz, fusion, and cinematic scoring when a dominant must sound urgent and complex. It works as a climactic pre-resolution chord rather than a neutral background sonority.
Examples
- Altered V before emphatic tonic or modal landing
- Fusion turnarounds with dense upper alterations
- Film tension peaks before controlled release
Play
Space altered tones across registers and avoid clustering everything in the middle. Keep guide tones stable and resolve at least one alteration by semitone for clear arrival.
Ear-training cues
Listen for dual character: ♭9 gives pressure, while ♯11/♯5 add sharpened brightness. The chord should feel tense yet "lit" from above.
