D flat Altered seventh

Dominant seventh with altered extensions; the classic altered-dominant sound (♭9, ♯9, ♭5, ♯5, ♭13).


The altered dominant symbol alt (often written 7alt) names a dominant-seventh family chord whose upper extensions are treated as fully chromatic—commonly including combinations of ♭9, ♯9, ♭5/♯5, and ♭13—while the tritone skeleton between 3 and ♭7 remains the engine of resolution. In jazz practice, players often draw pitch material from the half-whole diminished scale (or related super Locrian thinking) to improvise and voice the chord.

Construction

Core dominant frame: 1-3-♭7 plus altered upper tones chosen by context. The exact spelling is flexible because “alt” is a function label: the bass and voice leading tell you which alterations are foregrounded.

Usage

Primary target is V7 of a minor tonic or any dominant that wants maximum tension before resolution, including tritone-substitute situations where the bass implies dominant function.

Examples

  • Minor-key ii–V–i cadences with a heavily altered V7
  • Turnarounds and backdoor progressions in jazz standards
  • Modern R&B and neo-soul reharmonizations for chromatic approach chords

Play

Keep the guide tones (3 and ♭7) clear, avoid mud by choosing a small set of alterations per voicing, and resolve altered tones by half step into chord tones of the destination.

Ear-training cues

Hear dominant seventh with chromatic upper extensions that refuse a single diatonic scale—maximum tension, smooth half-step exits.

Quality

major

Aliases

alt7

Images

Guitar voicing #0 of the D flat Altered seventh chord

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Which intervals and notes are in the altered seventh chord?

IntervalsemitonesNote
perfect unison0D♭
major third4F
minor seventh10C♭
minor ninth13E𝄫