Dominant ninth with sus4; suspended fourth plus ninth over dominant seventh frame.
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 9sus4 chord combines the open color of sus4 with the width of a ninth above a dominant seventh frame. It keeps the floating, unresolved quality of sus harmony while adding more melodic room in the upper structure. This is a common modern choice in funk, fusion, gospel, and contemporary jazz when you want a dominant area that grooves hard without locking into a major third too early.
Think 1-4-5-♭7-9 (the third is absent or delayed; the fifth may be omitted). In C9sus4, a practical voicing layer is C-F-G-B♭-D. The sus fourth defines openness; the ninth adds contemporary width above the seventh.
Use it on dominant pedals, sus-to-7 transitions, and modal-blues grooves where the melody can emphasize the fourth and ninth together. It also works as a richer alternative to 7sus4 when harmonic time is extended.
Keep 4 and ♭7 clear, voice the ninth above the seventh, and resolve the fourth down to the third when you want a classic sus release. If the voicing gets dense, omit the fifth first.
It still reads as dominant area harmony, but the ninth widens the palette for melodies and inner motion while the sus fourth postpones major-minor definition.
Listen for sus4 openness plus a ninth above the seventh—wider than 7sus4, still not a full major-third triad sound.
| Interval | semitones | Note | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | B | |||
| 5 | E | |||
| 7 | F♯ | |||
| 10 | A | |||
| 14 | C♯ |