Dominant seventh with altered extensions; the classic altered-dominant sound (♭9, ♯9, ♭5, ♯5, ♭13).
Intervals from the root that spell this chord and its chord tones.
Scales that contain this chord’s notes and usually fit over it.
Open the app and start your daily workout!
Available on Android and iOS
Open the app and start your daily workout!
Available on Android and iOS
The altered dominant symbol alt (often written 7alt) names a dominant-seventh family chord whose upper extensions are treated as fully chromatic—commonly including combinations of ♭9, ♯9, ♭5/♯5, and ♭13—while the tritone skeleton between 3 and ♭7 remains the engine of resolution. In jazz practice, players often draw pitch material from the half-whole diminished scale (or related super Locrian thinking) to improvise and voice the chord.
Core dominant frame: 1-3-♭7 plus altered upper tones chosen by context. The exact spelling is flexible because “alt” is a function label: the bass and voice leading tell you which alterations are foregrounded.
Primary target is V7 of a minor tonic or any dominant that wants maximum tension before resolution, including tritone-substitute situations where the bass implies dominant function.
Keep the guide tones (3 and ♭7) clear, avoid mud by choosing a small set of alterations per voicing, and resolve altered tones by half step into chord tones of the destination.
Hear dominant seventh with chromatic upper extensions that refuse a single diatonic scale—maximum tension, smooth half-step exits.
| Interval | semitones | Note | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | G♯ | |||
| 4 | B♯ | |||
| 10 | F♯ | |||
| 13 | A |