Dominant 9 with ♯11; Lydian-bright upper color on a complete dominant ninth frame.
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♯11 chord extends a dominant ninth with a raised eleventh, producing the characteristic Lydian dominant brightness against the major third. Compared with a plain 9 chord, it sounds wider, more modern, and more “upper-structure forward.” It is a staple when you want dominant function with a melodic top that can sit on the sharp eleven without feeling wrong.
Practical formula: 1-3-5-♭7-9-♯11 (the fifth is often omitted in real voicings). In C9♯11, a common working set is C-E-B♭-D-F♯ while the root may be shared with the bass. The ninth adds width; the ♯11 defines the Lydian color.
Very common in jazz, fusion, neo-soul, and modern pop harmony on dominant stations that support Lydian-dominant improvisation. It also works well on static dominant pedals where you want shimmer instead of darkness.
Anchor 3-♭7, place 9 and ♯11 in upper registers, and avoid crowding the third octave with too many stacked thirds. If the chord gets sharp-edged, widen spacing rather than removing the ninth first.
It still resolves like dominant harmony, but the ♯11 encourages melodic motion that floats upward or side-slips by whole step—useful for modern voice leading that avoids constant half-step clichés.
Hear the major third with ♯11 as the bright signature, plus the ninth widening the chord above the seventh.
| Interval | semitones | Note | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | E | |||
| 4 | G♯ | |||
| 7 | B | |||
| 10 | D | |||
| 14 | F♯ | |||
| 18 | A♯ |