Dominant 9 with ♯5; augmented-fifth color on a dominant ninth, bright and unstable.
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 9♯5 chord replaces the perfect fifth with an augmented fifth, creating a brighter, more unstable dominant color while keeping the ninth extension. It is related to the augmented triad’s “lifting” quality, but the presence of ♭7 and 9 keeps the sound anchored in dominant function rather than floating away as a pure augmented sonority often does.
Practical formula: 1-3-♯5-♭7-9. In C9♯5, a common working set is C-E-G♯-B♭-D. The augmented fifth wants to resolve melodically, often outward by semitone or along the voice leading of the next chord’s third and seventh.
Useful in jazz, blues-rock, fusion, and soul-jazz when a dominant needs extra lift and edge. It can also appear as a chromatic passing dominant color between more stable voicings.
Keep 3-♭7 clear, voice ♯5 so it does not collapse into the third in close position, and treat the ninth as the width element above the seventh. If the chord sounds too sharp, widen spacing before removing extensions.
Hear the widened fifth against the dominant seventh frame: brighter than 9, more restless than 9♭13.
| Interval | semitones | Note | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | D | |||
| 4 | F♯ | |||
| 8 | A♯ | |||
| 10 | C | |||
| 14 | E |