The major7 add13 chord extends major-seventh harmony with a thirteenth color, often heard as a wide upper sixth above the root. A practical formula is 1-3-5-7-13. The result is clearly major and stable, but more spacious and contemporary than a plain maj7.
Construction
In Cmaj7(add13), a common set is C-E-G-B-A. The ninth is not required by the symbol, though many real-world voicings include it. Keep spelling tied to harmonic context rather than fixed pitch-class shortcuts.
Sound Character
The chord feels luxurious and open: maj7 gives refined stability, while 13 adds width and gentle lift. Compared with dominant-thirteenth sounds, it carries less pull and more sustained color.
Usage
Typical in jazz, neo-soul, R&B, modern pop, and cinematic pads as enriched I or IV harmony, soft ending sonorities, and long-duration accompaniment textures.
Examples
- Neo-soul keyboard endings with broad top-voice color
- Jazz ballad tonic voicings that avoid dominant tension
- Pop pads needing depth without harmonic aggression
Play
Prioritize 3 and 7 for identity, place 13 in the upper register, and omit 5 if needed for clarity. Manage spacing so 7 and 13 do not form cramped clusters.
Harmonic function in progressions
It behaves as stable extended major, not as a dominant driver. Small inner movements from 13 or 7 can create motion while the chord still reads as a resting color.
Ear-training cues
Listen for maj7 smoothness plus a wide upper-sixth/13 shimmer. Compare maj7 against maj7(add13) to internalize the extra breadth.
