fretengine

Reference library

Ebadd9

Eb add nine chord

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Construction

Built from these intervals: 1-3-5-9.

The 3 establishes major brightness, and the 9 (the second scale degree voiced an octave higher) adds open shimmer on top. Add9 is a major triad with an added 9 -- no seventh involved. That missing seventh is the whole point: brightness without the complexity that a b7 or major 7 would introduce.

Harmonic Function

In Roman numeral analysis (uppercase = major, lowercase = minor):

  • Iadd9 -- tonic with added sparkle, the go-to enrichment in pop and worship progressions like Iadd9-V-vi-IV.
  • IVadd9 -- bright subdominant that lifts a progression without adding harmonic weight.
  • Vadd9 -- dominant with color but far less tension than V7 or V9, since there is no tritone (the interval of six half steps). Where V7 demands resolution, Vadd9 suggests it.

Character

Bright and open. As a member of the extended chord family, add9 sits between a plain triad and a full ninth chord. The 9 adds sparkle the way sunlight catches glass -- noticeable but not demanding. This is one of the most accessible extended sounds on guitar, a staple of acoustic pop and singer-songwriter music. Compare to 9: the dominant ninth includes a b7, which creates a tritone and drives toward resolution. Add9 skips the seventh entirely, so it sits still and shines rather than pushing forward.

These chords are closely related -- each modifies one interval:

  • major triad (1-3-5) -- parent chord; the foundation before the 9 is added
  • 9 (1-3-5-b7-9) -- adds b7, turning brightness into dominant tension
  • maj9 (1-3-5-7-9) -- adds major 7, gentle forward motion from the 7 pulling a half step below the root
  • sus2 (1-2-5) -- removes the 3, replaces it with 2, open and ambiguous
  • 6/9 (1-3-5-6-9) -- add9 plus the 6, vintage jazz warmth and completeness

Voice Leading

Voice leading tracks how individual notes move from one chord to the next. The 9 provides an extra melodic voice that moves naturally by step, enriching basic triad motion without complicating it.

  • Iadd9 to V: The 9 holds as a common tone -- it is the 5 of V. The 3 can step down to the 9 of the target. The 9 connects the two chords with no effort.
  • IVadd9 to Iadd9: Parallel add9 motion. Both chords share the same structure, so the 9 shifts in parallel, creating a shimmering ribbon between IV and I.
  • Iadd9 to vi: The 9 steps down to the b3 of vi or up to the 5. The 9 finds natural landing spots in the relative minor.

These movements apply in any key -- the intervals are the same regardless of root.

Practice Seeds

Add it everywhere. Take a I-IV-V-I progression and make every chord add9. Notice how the color changes without changing function -- this builds awareness of what the 9 contributes on its own.

add9 vs. 9. Play an add9, then a dom9 from the same root. The b7 in the ninth chord adds tension and drive. Hear what the seventh does that the ninth alone does not -- this is the core distinction between "add" chords and full extensions.

Vadd9 vs. V7. Play Vadd9 resolving to I, then V7 resolving to I. Without the tritone, the add9 dominant colors the resolution rather than demanding it -- this clarifies the functional tradeoff between beauty and tension.

IVadd9 to Iadd9. Practice this parallel motion in several keys. Listen for the shimmering continuity the 9 provides as both chords share the same structure -- this develops your ear for extensions as color rather than function.

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