Major ninth with sus4; sus openness plus ninth width on a major seventh frame.
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 major ninth sus4 chord extends maj7sus4 by adding a ninth. It keeps the suspended, third-delayed character while introducing the wider, more contemporary sound of the ninth above the seventh. This is a go-to color in neo-soul, fusion, gospel-influenced pop, and modern jazz when harmony should feel open, expensive, and still fundamentally “major-side” rather than dominant.
Practical stack: 1-4-5-7-9 (the fifth may be omitted). In Cmaj9sus4, a common layer is C-F-G-B-D. The ninth should read as an extension above the seventh, not as a cluster filler squeezed against the fourth.
Use on I or IV colors, on pedal points, and in progressions that move from sus textures into maj9 or triad resolutions. It also works beautifully under melodies that emphasize the fourth and second/ninth degrees.
Keep 4 and 7 clear, place the ninth high, and resolve the fourth down to the third when you want a classic sus release.
It functions as rich major-side suspension: stable in a broad sense, but intentionally incomplete until the third appears.
Hear sus4 plus major seventh plus ninth width—a three-layer modern major color.
| Interval | semitones | Note | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | G♯ | |||
| 5 | C♯ | |||
| 7 | D♯ | |||
| 11 | F𝄪 | |||
| 14 | A♯ |