The major seventh ♭9 chord is an extreme color chord: it keeps the major third and major seventh that define “major family,” but adds a lowered ninth a semitone above the root. That minor-second rub is instantly dramatic—more cinematic than classroom diatonic harmony. It is not a dominant-function chord in the V7 sense; it is usually used as a special effect, a passing sonority, or a deliberately uncanny tonic-related color.
Construction
Practical stack: 1-3-5-7-♭9 (the fifth is often omitted to reduce collision). In Cmaj7♭9, a spelling might be C-E-G-B-D♭. Because the ♭9 sits right against the root, voicing and register choices determine whether the chord sounds thrilling or simply muddy.
Usage
Appears in film scoring, modern jazz, fusion, and contemporary classical-influenced pop where harmony should feel sophisticated, suspenseful, or “wrong in a controlled way.” Use short durations or clear voice leading out of the rub unless you intend sustained dissonance.
Examples
- Film and game cues that need immediate harmonic tension on a major frame
- Modern jazz reharmonizations as a brief pivot chord
- Experimental pop production for a single spotlight bar
Play
Separate root and ♭9 across octaves when possible, keep 3 and 7 clear to preserve major identity, and resolve the ♭9 by step when you want the ear to relax.
Ear-training cues
The signature is the minor second between root and ♭9 inside a major-seventh context.