Dominant 13 suspended 4; suspended dominant gravity with wide upper color.
Intervals from the root that spell this chord and its chord tones.
Scales that contain this chord’s notes and usually fit over it.
Open the app and start your daily workout!
Available on Android and iOS
Open the app and start your daily workout!
Available on Android and iOS
The 13sus4 dominant replaces the third with a suspended fourth while preserving dominant drive through 7 and 13 colors. The chord sounds open and unresolved, but still directional. It is excellent when you want forward motion without immediate major/minor definition.
A practical structure is 1-4-5-♭7-9-13 (with voicing-dependent omissions). In C this can include C-F-G-B♭-D-A. Because the third is absent, suspension character remains central.
Use 13sus4 in modern gospel, soul, jazz, and cinematic harmony to delay resolution while maintaining momentum. It works beautifully before a dominant or tonic release, and in grooves where suspended color needs to persist.
Keep the suspended fourth clear and avoid accidentally introducing a strong major third too early. Let the eventual move from 4 to 3 become the expressive release point.
13sus4 acts as a "held" dominant that postpones clarity while increasing expectation. It is most effective when followed by a clearly resolved dominant or tonic sonority.
| Interval | semitones | Note | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | E | |||
| 5 | A | |||
| 7 | B | |||
| 10 | D | |||
| 14 | F♯ | |||
| 21 | C♯ |