The major flat5 chord keeps a major third but replaces the perfect fifth with a diminished fifth (♭5). A core formula is 1-3-♭5. This creates a paradoxical quality: the third signals "major," while the fifth destabilizes the triad through tritone tension. For that reason, it is less a default tonal harmony and more a chromatic color sonority in modern writing.
Construction
Think of it as a major triad with altered fifth: in C(♭5), one spelling is C-E-G♭. Depending on context, the same pitch set can be reinterpreted as part of larger altered dominant or polychord structures, so spelling and bass function should guide analysis.
Sound Character
The chord sounds bright yet fractured: major identity from the third, instability from the tritone to root. Compared with ordinary major, it feels less settled and more directional, even without adding sevenths or extensions.
Usage
Common uses include short passing color between stable harmonies, chromatic inner-voice motion, fusion comping accents, and cinematic cues where harmony should feel almost-major but uneasy.
Examples
- Modern jazz passing voicings between clear major or dominant targets
- Fusion riffs highlighting chromatic fifth-degree displacement
- Film underscore moments requiring controlled harmonic discomfort
Play
Keep the major third audible, avoid muddy low-register clustering, and treat ♭5 as an active tone that often resolves by semitone. In ensemble settings, make sure bass and comping agree on function to avoid accidental ambiguity.
Harmonic Behavior
Major(♭5) usually behaves as a transitional sonority rather than a cadential resting point. Small voice-leading moves from ♭5 to 5, or from 3 toward 4, can quickly reframe the chord toward clearer tonal destinations.
Ear-training cues
Train the contrast between major triad stability and major(♭5) tritone bite. The immediate clue is hearing a major third above the root while the fifth feels "tilted" instead of grounded.
