The 11♭9 dominant chord is one of the most focused dark-dominant colors in advanced harmony. It combines the breadth of 11 with the compressed friction of ♭9, producing a sonority that feels urgent, dramatic, and strongly directional. You will often see it as C11♭9 or C7(♭9,11).
Construction
Start from a dominant extension set and alter the ninth downward: 1-3-5-♭7-♭9-11. In C, this implies tones such as C-E-G-B♭-D♭-F. In practical voicing, 3 and ♭7 define the function, while ♭9 is the key color driver and must be voiced with care.
Usage
This chord excels in minor cadential language, dramatic pre-resolution moments, and dense cinematic harmonic writing. Compared with a plain 11 dominant, it is less open and far more pointed. Compared with fully altered dominants, it can feel narrower but more psychologically tense.
Examples
- Minor-key cadence - altered V before i
- Film tension writing - dark dominant setup before release
- Modern jazz turnarounds - color-heavy dominant motion
Play
Secure 3 and ♭7 first, then place ♭9 in a clear register where it reads as intentional color, not accidental clash. Keep inner voices light and allow ♭9 to resolve chromatically whenever possible. That semitone release is often the emotional payoff of the chord.
Function in progressions
Use this as a high-tension dominant that narrows the destination field and increases expectation. It is especially effective when moving to minor tonic areas or modal targets that can absorb altered dominant pressure. If overused, it can fatigue the ear, so reserve it for true harmonic emphasis.
