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Werner Bonthuys · Learn Guitar

Altered Dominants: Adding Color, Tension, and Drama

31 July 2025

The altered dominant is one of the most powerful and colourful chords in jazz-influenced harmony — bringing intensity, surprise, and sophistication to progressions, solos, and compositions.

What Is a Dominant Chord?

The dominant 7 chord is built on the 5th degree of the scale: root, major 3rd, perfect 5th, and minor 7th (e.g., G7: G–B–D–F). Dominant 7 chords naturally create tension that resolves to the tonic, driven by the tritone between the 3rd and 7th.

What Are Altered Dominants?

An altered dominant is a dominant 7 chord where the 5th and/or 9th are raised or lowered:

In C major, the dominant is G7. Altered versions include G7♭9, G7♯9, G7♭5, G7♯5, or combinations like G7♭9♯5. These alterations introduce chromatic colour and heightened dissonance, intensifying the pull toward resolution.

Why Altered Dominants Work

They exaggerate the voice-leading tendencies already present in a normal dominant 7 chord. Altered 9ths resolve naturally by step into chord tones of the tonic. Altered 5ths create extra half-step motion. The tritone remains intact, so the chord still unmistakably functions as a dominant — just with more drama.

The Altered Scale

The altered scale (super-Locrian) is the 7th mode of the melodic minor scale. For G altered: take A♭ melodic minor and start from G — G–A♭–B♭–B–D♭–E♭–F. All altered tensions are present in one place.

Using Altered Dominants

In a ii–V–I: Dm7 – G7alt – Cmaj7. G7alt maximises the tension before resolving beautifully into Cmaj7. Common voicings include the 7♯9 chord (Hendrix's "Purple Haze" chord: E7♯9). Practice the altered scale over V7alt chords to get comfortable with the sound.

Written by Werner Bonthuys

Guitarist, teacher, and author based in Haarlem. 34 years of playing, 20 years of teaching. Graduate of the Academy of Contemporary Music, Guildford. RSL Level 6 Teaching Diploma. Founder of the Haarlem Guitar Club and author of Guitar Scales, Arpeggios & Chords.