Construction
Built from these intervals: 1-3-5-7-9-11.
Maj11 is maj7 with added 9 and natural 11. The 3 and 11 sit a half step apart, creating a potential clash. How you handle that clash defines the chord: spread the voicing for shimmer, close it for intensity, or omit one of the two tones entirely. In traditional jazz arranging, the natural 11 is considered an "avoid note" on major chords because of this half-step friction with the 3 -- which is why maj9#11 (with Lydian's raised 4th) appears far more often in charts.
Harmonic Function
In Roman numeral analysis (uppercase = major, lowercase = minor):
Imaj11-- extended tonic with a complex, ambiguous quality; the natural 11 creates tension against the 3 that the harmony must manageIVmaj11-- subdominant with a pedal-tone effect (a note sustained through changing harmony); the 5th of theIVchord is the tonic note of the key, giving a sense of home within motion away from home- Modal color -- in modal playing (using scales other than plain major/minor as the harmonic basis), maj11 can represent an Ionian (the major scale) sound, though the 3-11 clash limits its use as a resting chord
The natural 11 is an Ionian interval, not a Lydian (the major scale with a raised 4th) one. Managing the 3-11 clash is the defining challenge of this chord.
Character
As an extended chord, maj11 is complex and shimmering. The 3-11 tension gives it an internal friction that distinguishes it from the smooth consonance of maj9. Compare to maj9#11: raising the 11 to #11 eliminates the clash and produces pure Lydian brightness, while the natural 11 keeps an Ionian edge that is more restless and ambiguous. Film composers and jazz arrangers use this chord when they want luminous complexity rather than simple beauty.
Related Sounds
These chords share the major extended foundation -- each handles the upper extensions differently:
- maj9 (1-3-5-7-9) -- remove the 11, more stable and consonant
- maj9#11 (1-3-5-7-9-#11) -- raise the 11 to #11, eliminates the 3-11 clash and creates Lydian brightness
- maj13 (1-3-5-7-9-11-13) -- add the 13th for maximum Ionian extension, the 3-11 issue remains
- 11 (1-3-5-b7-9-11) -- dominant version, the b7 changes the function entirely
Voice Leading
Voice leading tracks how individual notes move from one chord to the next. The 3-11 half-step proximity shapes every voice-leading decision -- whether you feature or suppress that tension determines each progression's character.
Imaj11toIVmaj7: The 11 ofImaj11becomes the root ofIVmaj7. Smooth motion when the 11 is voiced high -- it transforms from a color tone into a new foundation.Imaj11toii7: The 11 ofImaj11becomes the b3 ofii7. The 7 moves to the 5 or b7 ofii. The progression gains momentum while extensions maintain color.IVmaj11toV7: The 7 ofIVmaj11moves to the 5 or b7 ofV7. The 3 moves to the 3 ofV7or down to the root. Subdominant to dominant with textural continuity.
These movements apply in any key -- the intervals are the same regardless of root.
Practice Seeds
Clash management. Voice maj11 with the 3 and 11 close together, then far apart. Hear how distance changes the effect -- close voicing creates intensity, spread voicing creates shimmer.
Natural vs. sharp 11. Play maj11 back to back with maj9#11. The #11 floats; the natural 11 grinds. Understanding this difference explains why the #11 is often preferred in practice.
Pedal tone effect. Play IVmaj11 in a key and listen for the tonic note sitting inside the chord as the 5th of IV. That sustained note creates a feeling of home even as the harmony moves away -- this is a pedal-tone effect.
Omission experiments. Play maj11 as a full voicing (on guitar, six-note chords require careful fingering or two-hand tapping), then omit the 3, then omit the 11. Real-world maj11 voicings often drop the 3rd, producing a sound closer to a sus chord with extensions. Discover which version suits the musical moment.