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chord

D Ninth

The D ninth chord extends the dominant seventh with a major ninth—combining D, F♯, A, C, and E into a rich, colorful dominant sound. This five-note chord adds depth and sophistication to the already tension-filled dominant seventh, making it a staple of jazz, funk, and R&B harmony.

Symbol
D9
Key
d
Quality
ninth
Number of Notes
5
Notes
D, F♯, A, C, E

Degrees

Scale degrees of each note in the D Ninth chord.

NoteNumberName
D1Tonic
F♯3Mediant
A5Dominant
C7Subtonic
E2Supertonic

Intervals

Intervals from the root note of the D Ninth chord.

NotesSemitonesInterval
D → D0Perfect Unison (P1)
D → F♯4Major 3rd (M3)
D → A7Perfect 5th (P5)
D → C10Minor 7th (m7)
D → E14Major 9th (M9)

The D9 chord is built by stacking a major third, a perfect fifth, a minor seventh, and a major ninth above the root. The ninth adds warmth and color while the underlying tritone between F♯ and C preserves the dominant function and drive toward resolution.

Harmonic Function

Like the dominant seventh, the D9 functions as a V chord seeking resolution to the tonic. However, its richer voicing makes it the preferred dominant chord in jazz and funk. In a ii–V–I progression, the ninth chord on V provides more voice leading possibilities and a fuller sound than a plain seventh chord.

Voicing Tips

With five notes, ninth chords offer many voicing options. On piano, you can omit the fifth to create a more manageable four-note voicing without losing the chord’s character. The root, third, seventh, and ninth capture the essential sound. Ninth chords are also commonly used as static vamps in funk and R&B, where their rich texture sustains interest without needing resolution.

Related Chords

Explore chords that share the same key as the D Ninth chord.

D Add Eleventh

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