E flat Dominant seventh sharp fifth

Dominant 7 with ♯5; augmented dominant brightness and forward drive.


The 7♯5 dominant chord brightens the dominant center by raising the fifth. It keeps strong functional pull but sounds more volatile and modern than plain 7. This is a classic entry point into altered dominant language.

Construction

Core formula: 1-3-♯5-♭7, often with optional 9 or 13 colors in context. In C: C-E-G♯-B♭. The chord remains functionally dominant because 3 and ♭7 are intact.

Usage

Widely used in jazz, blues-influenced harmony, and cinematic transitions where dominant pull needs extra edge. It can resolve strongly to tonic or pivot chromatically to neighboring colors.

Examples

  • Altered V before clear tonic arrival
  • Jazz turnaround dominant with brighter altered core
  • Expressive bridge harmony in modern songwriting

Play

Keep 3 and ♭7 stable, make ♯5 clearly audible, and avoid overloading inner voices. A smooth stepwise resolution of ♯5 gives this chord its strongest dramatic effect.

Quality

augmented

Aliases

75+77+7augaug7

Images

Guitar voicing #0 of the E flat Dominant seventh sharp fifth chord

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Which intervals and notes are in the dominant seventh sharp fifth chord?