Dominant 13 with ♯9 and ♯11; high-intensity bright altered dominant 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.
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The 13♯9♯11 dominant is a high-density color chord that combines upper brightness with altered tension pressure. It keeps dominant direction, but with a distinctly modern, intense profile. When voiced well, it sounds expansive and electric rather than chaotic.
A practical formula is 1-3-5-♭7-♯9-♯11-13. In C this may include C-E-G-B♭-D♯-F♯-A. In real use, 3 and ♭7 remain the functional anchors, while ♯9/♯11/13 are curated for color impact.
Use this chord in modern jazz, fusion, progressive gospel, and cinematic climax writing where a standard dominant is not dramatic enough. It is best used as a high-impact moment before a clear arrival, not as constant harmonic background.
Space the altered tensions carefully to avoid midrange overload. Keep guide tones stable and treat color tones as a controlled upper structure. Resolve at least one altered tone stepwise to make the chord feel directional.
Shell + upper-structure voicings are usually cleaner than full stacks. In ensemble settings, omit root/5 when bass is active and prioritize 3, ♭7, ♯11, and either ♯9 or 13 depending on context.
| Interval | semitones | Note | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | F | |||
| 4 | A | |||
| 7 | C | |||
| 10 | E♭ | |||
| 15 | G♯ | |||
| 18 | B | |||
| 21 | D |