Minor 11th chord (1–♭3–5–♭7–9–11); an open, velvety minor extension defined by a whole-step rub between the 3rd and 11th, foundational to modal jazz and neo-soul.
Intervals from the root that spell this chord and its chord tones.
Parent scales and degrees where this chord appears as a diatonic sonority.
Scales that contain this chord’s notes and usually fit over it.
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The minor eleventh chord (m11) is a lush, expansive extension of minor harmony that stretches far beyond the boundaries of a standard triad or minor 7th chord. By incorporating both the ninth and the eleventh (a perfect fourth above the root), this chord achieves a distinctive watercolor-like sonority: deeply reflective and melancholy, yet completely open, airy, and free from heavy harmonic weight. While a perfect 11th sounds highly unstable and dissonant over a major chord, it finds a perfectly serene home within a minor framework. The m11 chord serves as a foundational building block for modal jazz, neo-soul keyboard patches, modern R&B vamps, and contemporary gospel arrangements.
In modern composition and arranging, the m11 chord is utilized to add depth, eliminate predictability, and create fluid movement over static root notes:
The modern identity of the minor 11th chord was permanently redefined during the modal jazz explosion of the late 1950s and 1960s, pioneered by icons like Miles Davis, Bill Evans, and McCoy Tyner. Historically, Western harmony relied on tertian structure (stacking intervals of thirds), which made dense m11 chords sound overly heavy and traditional. As jazz shifted toward static modal landscapes, innovators bypassed thirds in favor of the quartal voicing approach, stacking intervals in perfect fourths. For example, a textbook Tyner-style stack for a Dm11 chord runs from the bottom up as A - D - G - C - F. Superimposed over a D bass, this layout cleanly delivers the 5th, root, 11th, ♭7th, and ♭3rd, producing an ultra-modern, spacious, and open sound that became the definitive voice of post-bop jazz.
Squeezing all six notes of an m11 chord into a standard arrangement can easily clutter the mix. Achieving a clean, professional sound requires thoughtful omissions:
To identify a minor 11th chord by ear, listen for a solid, moody minor-seventh foundation in the bass that supports a breezy, hollow, and spacious perfect-fourth window on top. It lacks the biting, cinematic tension of a minor-major 7th chord and the dark compression of a basic minor triad. Instead, it feels deep, reflective, and beautifully suspended—like looking at a vast, overcast landscape through a clear glass pane.
| Interval | semitones | Note | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | G♭ | |||
| 3 | B𝄫 | |||
| 7 | D♭ | |||
| 10 | F♭ | |||
| 14 | A♭ | |||
| 17 | C♭ |
| Degree | Triad | Seventh | Extended | Scale | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | |||||
| II | |||||
| III | |||||
| IV | |||||
| V | |||||
| VI | |||||
| VII |
These modes come from a defined series of intervals! Checkout our blogpost about the major modes!