Major color chord with sixth and ninth; open and stable without dominant pull.
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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Sixth add ninth combines a major sixth chord with an added ninth—a bright, modern major color that is wider than a triad but still avoids dominant tension from a seventh. Charts may show C6/9 or C6(add9). It is common in funk, soul, R&B, and fusion keyboard voicings where the band wants sparkle on a major or IV chord without turning it into a maj7 or a dominant.
Take a major triad, add the major sixth, then add the major ninth above the root. In C6/9: C–E–G–A–D. The sixth and ninth together create a wide, open sound; the chord differs from major add9 because it includes the sixth, and it differs from dominant sounds because it does not include a minor seventh.
In soul and funk, 6/9 voicings appear on I and IV as stable, “expensive” major pads. In jazz-funk and fusion, keyboard players use 6/9 as a clean color when the harmony is modal or static. In pop production, 6/9 stacks add shimmer to choruses without pulling like a V chord.
Keep the ninth and sixth audible in the upper structure; avoid doubling that obscures those color tones. This chord usually works best when the bass clearly states the root so the harmony reads as “major color,” not as a confusing inversion of another chord.
| Interval | semitones | Note | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | B♭ | |||
| 4 | D | |||
| 7 | F | |||
| 9 | G | |||
| 14 | C |