The dominant 7♭9 keeps the core dominant sound of a major third and minor seventh, then adds a lowered ninth a semitone above the root. That semitone relationship is what makes the chord feel compact, urgent, and unmistakably altered. It is one of the most common altered dominants in jazz, fusion, and film harmony because it communicates tension quickly without needing a huge voicing.
How it’s built
Think in layers: 1-3-5-♭7-♭9. In C7♭9, common spelling includes C-E-G-B♭-D♭. In practice, the fifth is often omitted to reduce mud, especially when extensions or altered upper notes are added. The guide tones 3 and ♭7 still carry dominant function; the ♭9 mainly colors the top and melodic approach.
Usage
7♭9 appears wherever a dominant needs a darker, more chromatic attitude: minor-key cadences, secondary dominants, and turnaround harmony. It pairs naturally with scales and lines that emphasize half-step motion toward chord tones of the target. Because the ♭9 is so close to the root, it also invites careful melody writing so lines do not accidentally sound like the wrong tonic.
Examples
- Jazz standards: altered dominants before minor or major targets
- Film and game scores: short dominant hits with chromatic upper lines
- Blues-adjacent harmony: dominant color with more “city” chromaticism than plain mixolydian
Play
Start with shell voicings (root–3–♭7) and add ♭9 above the root or in an inner voice. Resolve the ♭9 downward where possible (for example toward the fifth of the tonic in major resolutions) and keep voice leading smooth in the tritone frame between 3 and ♭7.
Harmonic function in progressions
In functional terms, 7♭9 still wants to complete dominant business: it sets up a tonic or a new tonal area with extra chromatic weight. It is especially convincing when the destination chord has a minor third or when you want the dominant to sound less “open mixolydian” and more “altered and directed.”
Ear-training cues
Listen for the minor second between root and ♭9 as the chord’s signature rub. If you can sing root and ♭9 accurately, you will recognize the sound instantly in dense progressions.
