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    1. Home
    2. Chord Library
    3. G flat
    4. Dominant seventh flat ninth flat thirteenth

    G flat Dominant seventh flat ninth flat thirteenth

    Dominant 7 with ♭9 and ♭13; classic dark altered dominant with strong half-step motion.

    major7♭9♭13

    Similar chords

    Guitar diagrams

    Which intervals and notes are in the G flat Dominant seventh flat ninth flat thirteenth chord?

    Intervals from the root that spell this chord and its chord tones.

    To which mode does G flat Dominant seventh flat ninth flat thirteenth belong?

    Parent scales and degrees where this chord appears as a diatonic sonority.

    Which scales can you play on the G flat Dominant seventh flat ninth flat thirteenth chord?

    Scales that contain this chord’s notes and usually fit over it.

    Practice the dominant seventh flat ninth flat thirteenth chord

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    Piano voicings

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    Practice the dominant seventh flat ninth flat thirteenth chord

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    The dominant 7♭9♭13 is one of the most recognizable “fully altered” dominant flavors: it keeps dominant function with 3 and ♭7, then adds two dark extensions that both love to resolve by semitone. It is less neon-bright than dominants with ♯11 or ♯9, and more focused on shadowed tension and forward pull.

    How it’s built

    Practical stack: 1-3-5-♭7-♭9-♭13. In C7♭9♭13, a common working set is C-E-G-B♭-D♭-A♭. The fifth is frequently omitted so the altered tones can speak. Many improvisers connect this chord to the half-whole diminished scale family because it matches the altered dominant color set in many tonal contexts.

    Usage

    Use it when a dominant should sound serious: minor-key cadences, altered V chords approaching i or I, and cinematic harmony that needs weight without turning into a bright Lydian dominant.

    Examples

    • Jazz standards: altered dominants resolving to minor tonics
    • Modern pop production borrowing jazz altered vocabulary in bridges
    • Film scores: dominant color for suspense before a harmonic release

    Play

    Anchor 3-♭7, place ♭9 and ♭13 in different registers, and resolve at least one altered tone chromatically into the next chord. If the voicing feels heavy, drop the root or fifth first—listeners still infer the harmony from guide tones and bass context.

    Harmonic function in progressions

    Functionally, it intensifies dominant-to-tonic motion by giving the ear multiple half-step targets. It is especially convincing when the destination chord exposes the third clearly, because the altered dominant’s upper voices can land with clean voice-leading.

    Ear-training cues

    Hear the combination of root/♭9 rub with the lowered thirteenth floating above the fifth region: dark, compact, and directional.

    G♭ 5
    G♭ 7
    G♭ 7♯5
    G♭ 7♯5♭9
    G♭ 7♭13
    G♭ 7♭6
    G♭ 7♭9
    G♭ 7no5
    G♭ M
    G♭ Madd♭9
    G♭ alt7
    G♭ aug
    G♭ Chromatic
    G♭ Phrygian dominant
    G♭ Spanish heptatonic
    IntervalsemitonesNote
    0G♭
    4B♭
    7D♭
    10F♭
    13A𝄫
    20E𝄫
    Perfect unison
    Major third
    Perfect fifth
    Minor seventh
    Minor ninth
    Minor thirteenth

    DegreeTriadSeventhExtendedScale
    I
    II
    III
    IV
    V
    VI
    VII
    m
    m/ma7
    mM9
    Harmonic minor
    dim
    m7♭5
    Locrian sixth
    aug
    maj7♯5
    Major augmented
    m
    m7
    m11
    Dorian sharp four
    M
    7
    7♭9♭13
    Phrygian dominant
    M
    maj7
    maj9♯11
    Lydian sharp ninth
    dim
    dim7
    alt7
    Ultralocrian