Dominant 7sus4 with ♭9 and ♭13; dark altered extensions over an open sus fourth.
Intervals from the root that spell this chord and its chord tones.
Scales that contain this chord’s notes and usually fit over it.
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The dominant 7sus4 with ♭9 and ♭13 is a hybrid sonority: the suspended fourth still gives the chord its wide, unresolved openness, while ♭9 and ♭13 import serious altered-dominant darkness from the jazz vocabulary. It is less “pure sus funk” and more cinematic: floating on top, heavy underneath. Use it when you want dominant time to feel stretched, ambiguous, and emotionally weighted.
Think in layers: 1-4-5-♭7 as the sus dominant frame, then add ♭9 and ♭13 as color tones (the fifth is often omitted first to reduce clutter). Spelling depends on register and instrument, but the ear should always catch the sus quality and the lowered extensions.
Common in modern jazz, fusion, and dramatic scoring on dominant pedals and in turnaround substitutions where a plain 7sus4 would sound too bright. It also works as a passing color between clearer dominants.
Keep the fourth and seventh readable, then place ♭9/♭13 away from the sus tone cluster if possible. If the voicing fights you, omit the fifth or distribute the root to bass.
You should hear both sus openness and altered ninth/thirteenth color—not only one of them.
| Interval | semitones | Note | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | A♭ | |||
| 5 | D♭ | |||
| 7 | E♭ | |||
| 10 | G♭ | |||
| 13 | B𝄫 | |||
| 20 | F♭ |