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

    G flat Dominant seventh flat ninth sharp ninth

    Dominant 7 with ♭9 and ♯9; stacked altered ninth colors for maximum chromatic tension.

    major7♭9♯9

    Similar chords

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

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

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

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

    Practice the dominant seventh flat ninth sharp ninth chord

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    Sheet music

    Practice the dominant seventh flat ninth sharp ninth chord

    Open the app and start your daily workout!

    Learn music theory with sonid

    Available on Android and iOS

    The symbol 7♭9♯9 looks extreme on paper because it names two different ninth qualities above the same root. On a fixed-pitch instrument like piano, that typically means two distinct pitch classes a minor third apart (for example on C: D♭ as ♭9 and D♯ as ♯9). The result is a dense, blues-adjacent altered dominant color: gritty, vocal, and highly chromatic. In real arranging, players often choose voicings that imply the spectrum rather than literally cram every note into one hand.

    How it’s built

    A useful conceptual stack is 1-3-5-♭7-♭9-♯9, with the fifth commonly omitted for clarity. In C7♭9♯9, you might work with C-E-B♭-D♭-D♯ while deciding whether the bass or another instrument carries the root. The functional backbone remains 3 and ♭7; the paired ninths create the chord’s unmistakable “Hendrix-adjacent” tension.

    Usage

    This chord is best treated as a special effect rather than a default voicing: short hits, dramatic dominant peaks, or blues-jazz lines that intentionally lean into both altered ninth neighbors. It can sound stunning when rhythm and spacing are controlled, and muddy when over-sustained in the mid register.

    Examples

    • Blues-rock and jazz-fusion gestures that borrow ♯9 vocabulary while keeping dominant function
    • Turnarounds where a dominant bar needs a sudden increase in chromatic density
    • Film scoring: short dominant punches before a resolution

    Play

    Separate ♭9 and ♯9 across registers, keep 3-♭7 clear, and avoid doubling the root in the same octave as the altered ninths. If the voicing fights you, omit chord tones strategically—listeners still infer dominant function from guide tones and context.

    Harmonic function in progressions

    Functionally it is still a dominant preparing a target, but the double-ninth color signals “maximum altered attitude” more than a single altered extension would. It often resolves best when the next chord simplifies the harmony and gives the ear room to breathe.

    Ear-training cues

    Listen for the cluster neighborhood around the root: two chromatic neighbors above the tonic pitch class, framed by the tritone between 3 and ♭7.

    G♭ 5
    G♭ 7
    G♭ 7♯9
    G♭ 7♭9
    G♭ 7no5
    G♭ M
    G♭ Madd♭9
    G♭ alt7
    G♭ m
    G♭ m7
    G♭ Chromatic
    G♭ Flamenco
    G♭ Half whole diminished
    G♭ Spanish heptatonic
    IntervalsemitonesNote
    0G♭
    4B♭
    7D♭
    10F♭
    13A𝄫
    15A
    Perfect unison
    Major third
    Perfect fifth
    Minor seventh
    Minor ninth
    Augmented ninth