A flat Dominant seventh sharp eleventh

Dominant 7 with ♯11; bright Lydian-dominant tension with clear function.

major7♯117♯4

The 7♯11 dominant chord is a core Lydian-dominant sound: a functional dominant with a brighter, more modern upper color than plain 7 or 9 chords. The raised eleventh adds lift and openness while preserving forward harmonic pull.

Construction

A practical set is 1-3-5-♭7-9-♯11 with optional omissions. In C: C-E-G-B♭-D-F♯. In many voicings, 3 and ♭7 anchor function, and ♯11 becomes the defining color tone.

Usage

7♯11 appears in jazz, fusion, gospel, and cinematic writing whenever dominant function should feel bright rather than dark. It is especially useful in modal-functional blends and secondary dominant movement.

Examples

  • Lydian-dominant V color before major or modal targets
  • Fusion comping with clear upper harmonic lift
  • Film harmony requiring directional but luminous tension

Play

Keep 3 and ♭7 clear, place ♯11 in a register that projects, and avoid crowding the middle. If needed, remove 5 first to make room for color tones.

Common voicings / omissions

Shell + (9, ♯11) is often more effective than full stacks. With bass support, rootless shapes can sound cleaner and more modern.

Which intervals and notes are in the A flat Dominant seventh sharp eleventh chord?

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

Which scales can you play on the A flat Dominant seventh sharp eleventh chord?

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

Practice the dominant seventh sharp eleventh chord

Open the app and start your daily workout!

Learn music theory with sonid

Available on Android and iOS