Learn music theory with Sonid
  • For teachers & schools

    Sonid logo

    Learn music theory with Sonid

    Learn music theory with practical tools, guided app exercises, and a complete reference for chords, scales, notes, intervals, and modes.

    Product

    Use cases

    • For beginners
    • For guitarists
    • For pianists
    • Ear training
    • Theory practice

    Solutions

    • For teachers & schools

    Learn

    Theory

    • Intervals
    • Interval playlists
    • Chords
    • Scales
    • Terms
    • Notes reference

    Tools

    • Music Theory Playground
    • Metronome
    • Why and how to play with a metronome
    • Tuner

    Community

    • Blog
    • Basics
    • Ear training
    • About us

    Get the app

    App StoreGoogle Play

    About

    Created byMartijn van der Eijk
    Written byLida van der Eijk
    Vectors byFreepik

    Legal

    PrivacyTerms of UsePress

    Socials

    YoutubeMusic Theory Video SeriesA step-by-step guide to music theory fundamentals. These 60-second videos provide a clear, structured path to understanding how music works, optimized for a full-screen learning experience.YoutubeMusic Theory ShortsMaster music theory concepts in 60 seconds or less. Quick, vertical videos designed to give you essential theory knowledge in a fast-paced, mobile-friendly format.
    YoutubeFacebook
    @copyright Martijn van der Eijk 2026
    1. Home
    2. Chord Library
    3. G sharp
    4. Dominant thirteenth sharp eleventh

    G sharp Dominant thirteenth sharp eleventh

    Dominant with 13 and ♯11; bright Lydian-dominant color with strong forward motion.

    major13♯1113+413♯4

    Guitar diagrams

    Piano voicings

    Sheet music

    Practice the dominant thirteenth sharp eleventh chord

    Open the app and start your daily workout!

    Learn music theory with sonid

    Available on Android and iOS

    Which intervals and notes are in the G sharp Dominant thirteenth sharp eleventh chord?

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

    Which scales can you play on the G sharp Dominant thirteenth sharp eleventh chord?

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

    Practice the dominant thirteenth sharp eleventh chord

    Open the app and start your daily workout!

    Learn music theory with sonid

    Available on Android and iOS

    The 13♯11 dominant chord blends warmth and brilliance in a single dominant frame. The 13 adds breadth and lyrical openness, while ♯11 contributes a lifted Lydian-dominant sheen. The result is directional like a dominant, but brighter and more modern than standard extended V7 colors.

    Construction

    A practical formula is 1-3-5-♭7-9-♯11-13. In C, this can be voiced from tones such as C-E-G-B♭-D-F♯-A. Real performance voicings rarely include every tone at once; you typically preserve function tones (3 and ♭7) and curate the extension set for clarity.

    Usage

    Choose 13♯11 when you want dominant pull with luminosity rather than dark altered bite. It is common in modern jazz, fusion, gospel harmony, and cinematic scoring where the dominant should sound expansive and harmonically elevated. This chord often acts as a "bright tension" rather than a "harsh tension" device.

    Examples

    • Lydian-dominant passages - V colors in modern modal-functional blends
    • Fusion and gospel climaxes - bright extended dominant voicings
    • Film cues - luminous pre-resolution dominant atmosphere

    Play

    Keep 3 and ♭7 stable, then separate ♯11 and 13 so each color remains audible. If texture becomes cloudy, remove less essential inner notes before sacrificing the target colors. Smooth voice-leading into tonic (or tonic-like destinations) keeps the chord sounding intentional and elegant.

    Common voicings / omissions

    On piano, shell-plus-extension voicings such as (3, ♭7, ♯11, 13) are often clearer than full stacks. Guitar shapes usually benefit from omitting root or fifth and emphasizing upper color tones. In ensemble writing, coordinate with bass to avoid doubling conflicts around altered upper notes.

    NameAliasesDifficulty
    G sharp Chromatic-Easy
    G sharp Composite blues-Guru
    IntervalsemitonesNote
    Perfect unison0G♯
    Major third4B♯
    Perfect fifth7D♯
    Minor seventh10F♯
    Major ninth14A♯
    Augmented undecime18C𝄪
    Major thirteenth21E♯
    NameAliasesDifficulty
    G sharp MajorM, ^, , majBeginner
    G sharp Fifth5Beginner
    G sharp Dominant seventh7, domBeginner
    G sharp Suspended secondsus2Beginner
    G sharp Dominant ninth9Easy
    9#11, 9+4, 9#4Easy
    6, add6, add13, M6Easy
    9b5Easy
    13no5Easy
    6add9, 6/9, 69, M69Easy
    7no5Intermediate
    9no5Intermediate
    M6#11, M6b5, 6#11, 6b5Intermediate
    13Intermediate
    Madd9, 2, add9, add2Intermediate
    7#11, 7#4Intermediate
    69#11Intermediate
    7add6, 67, 7add13Expert
    13b5Expert
    7b5Expert
    Mb5Guru
    G sharp Dominant ninth sharp eleventh
    G sharp Major sixth
    G sharp Dominant ninth flat fifth
    G sharp Dominant thirteenth no fifth
    G sharp Sixth add ninth
    G sharp Dominant seventh no fifth
    G sharp Ninth no fifth
    G sharp Major sixth sharp eleventh
    G sharp Dominant thirteenth
    G sharp Major add ninth
    G sharp Dominant seventh sharp eleventh
    G sharp 69 sharp 11
    G sharp Dominant seventh add sixth
    G sharp Dominant thirteenth flat fifth
    G sharp Dominant seventh flat fifth
    G sharp Major flat fifth