Major triad with ♯5 and added 9; augmented fifth color with wide ninth extension.
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 major ♯5 add9 chord combines a major third with an augmented fifth and adds a ninth extension. It is not a standard diatonic triad in common major-key harmony; it behaves more like a color chord that leans toward whole-tone and augmented sonorities while still keeping a recognizable major-third anchor. Use it when you want a floating, luminous tension that is not dominated by dominant-seventh grammar.
Practical formula: 1-3-♯5-9 (the seventh is absent in the symbol). In C(♯5add9), a common working set is C-E-G♯-D. Voice leading is important because ♯5 and 9 can create sharp intervals if cramped.
Appears in modern jazz, fusion, neo-soul, and cinematic pop as a momentary color on tonic-related harmony or as a reharmonization sparkle. It can also function as a passing chord between clearer major or minor sonorities.
Spread the ninth above the augmented fifth region, keep the major third clear, and avoid stacking everything in one octave. If it sounds harsh, widen spacing and reduce doublings.
Hear major third plus a widened fifth and a ninth above: bright, unstable, and not inherently V7-like.
| Interval | semitones | Note | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | E♭ | |||
| 4 | G | |||
| 8 | B | |||
| 14 | F |