What is an augmented 9 chord?
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What is an augmented 9 chord?
An augmented ninth is a compound musical interval spanning 15 semitones, or 3 semitones above an octave. Enharmonically equivalent to a compound minor third, if transposed into a single octave, it becomes a minor third or major sixth. See: Dominant seventh sharp ninth chord.
What is a +9 chord?
A dominant ninth is the combination of a dominant chord (with a minor seventh) and a major ninth. A major ninth chord (e.g., Cmaj9), as an extended chord, adds the major seventh along with the ninth to the major triad. Thus, a Cmaj9 consists of C, E, G, B and D.
What is the G augmented triad?
G augmented chord The G augmented chord contains 3 notes: G, B, D#. The chord spelling / formula relative to the G major scale is: 1 3 #5.
What makes a augmented chord?
An augmented chord is a triad with a sharpened fifth – that is, a fifth note, raised one semitone. So an augmented C would play C – E – G#. This sharpening of the major C triad transforms the character from a happy, clean major chord.
Are augmented chords major?
Augmented chords are major triads with a sharp fifth. That raised fifth is the only difference between a major chord and an augmented chord. Each note in an augmented triad is two whole steps above the prior note.
What are augmented chords used for?
So like diminished chords, augmented chords are used to add spice to your musical meal. You don’t linger on them, but use them as transition chords between a major and another major chord, or between a major and a minor chord, or sometimes even between two minor chords.
Where can I use augmented chords?
How do you get an augmented chord?
To produce these chords, simply add a dominant seventh or a major seventh to an augmented triad. To turn a C+ triad into a major seventh chord, add the note B; to make it a dominant chord, we would add the note Bâ™. You can also create a C augmented sixth chord by adding the note A to a C+ triad.