The major6 sharp11 chord blends a stable major framework with a Lydian-leaning extension profile. A practical formula is 1-3-5-6-♯11: no seventh is required by the symbol, so the sound remains lighter than maj7-based colors while still sounding harmonically rich.
Construction
In C6♯11, a common pitch set is C-E-G-A-F♯. The exact voicing depends on style: guitar and keys often omit or reorder tones, while arrangers keep the third and ♯11 clearly identifiable to preserve color.
Sound Character
This chord feels warm and lifted at the same time: the sixth provides breadth, while ♯11 adds a bright, floating edge. Compared with plain 6 chords, it sounds more contemporary and less "home-base" static.
Usage
Frequent contexts include I/IV color in modern major harmony, neo-soul comping, pop pre-chorus lift moments, and pedal-based textures where upper voices shift while bass remains fixed.
Examples
- Neo-soul voicings with major-six softness and Lydian sparkle
- Modern jazz reharmonization of stable major arrival points
- Pop production chords that brighten a section without full dominant tension
Play
Keep the major third present, place ♯11 high enough to avoid muddy clashes, and treat the sixth as width rather than dense clustering. In ensemble writing, align bass notes with intended function (tonic color vs subdominant color).
Harmonic Behavior
Major6(♯11) often behaves as an enriched stable color rather than a strong cadential driver. It can prolong a tonal center while still giving inner-motion opportunities through small movements of 6 and ♯11.
Ear-training cues
Listen for major brightness, sixth warmth, and a raised-fourth shimmer. Contrast plain 6 against 6(♯11) to lock in the Lydian lift.