Chord Colors

E flat seven sharp nine chord

About the E flat seven sharp nine chord

The E flat seven sharp nine chord is a E flat dominant seventh sharp nine built from E flat, G, B flat, D flat, F sharp. It sits outside the plain diatonic set, so it is borrowed to add color and tension.

It is also written D sharp seven sharp nine , which spells the same notes enharmonically.

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Inversions

5fr 8fr 10fr

(root position)

Notes and intervals

1 E flat Root
2 G Major 3rd
3 B flat Perfect 5th
4 D flat Minor 7th
5 F sharp Augmented 9th

Shapes

Chromatic

C C♯ D♭ D D♯ E♭ E F F♯ G♭ G G♯ A♭ A A♯ B♭ B

Circle of Fifths

C G D A E B F♯ G♭ C♯ D♭ G♯ A♭ D♯ E♭ A♯ B♭ F

Other E flat chords

Simpler triads

Suspended

Sixths and sevenths

Extensions

Altered

Functional relationships

These chords are where this one most naturally comes from and resolves to inside a key.

Relative minor

The relative minor uses the same notes and key signature, so it works as a calmer, darker home base.

Parallel minor

The parallel minor keeps the same root note but lowers the third, giving the same key a darker, sadder sound.

Dominant

The dominant is a fifth above the root, and it builds tension that pulls strongly back to this chord.

Subdominant

The subdominant is a fourth above the root (a fifth below), and it usually leads on to the dominant or back home.

Tritone substitution

The tritone substitution is a dominant chord a tritone away that shares the same tension, so it can stand in for this chord and resolve the same way.

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