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Ebmaj7b5

Eb major seventh flat five chord

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Construction

Built from these intervals: 1-3-b5-7.

The 3 and 7 suggest brightness, but the b5 introduces instability -- the diminished 5th replaces the grounding natural 5th with a tritone (the interval of six half steps) measured from the root. The b5 is enharmonically equivalent to #11 (different name for the same pitch), linking this chord directly to Lydian harmony. Lydian is the major scale with a raised 4th -- and this chord is that raised-4th sound compressed into four notes.

Harmonic Function

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

  • IVmaj7b5 -- on the fourth degree of a major key, the b5 is enharmonically the leading tone of the key (the note a half step below the tonic that pulls toward home), a natural Lydian application
  • Lydian chord -- the b5 (enharmonic #11) is the defining note of Lydian mode (the major scale with a raised 4th); this chord distills that modal color into a compact voicing
  • Color chord -- often used for its unique sound rather than a traditional harmonic role

The enharmonic equivalence of b5 and #11 connects this chord to Lydian harmony throughout jazz and impressionist music. The Lydian mode built on any root shares its notes with the major scale a 5th below -- so the Lydian chord draws from that parent major scale material.

Character

Bright but questioning. The 7 wants stability; the b5 denies it. As a member of the major seventh family, this chord glows with Lydian character while maintaining an edge of tension. Compare to maj7 (1-3-5-7): the natural 5 provides grounding and rest, while the b5 introduces the same raised-fourth brightness that defines Lydian mode. Compare to maj9#11 (1-3-5-7-9-#11): both share the #11/b5 pitch class, but maj9#11 keeps the natural 5 and adds extensions, while maj7b5 replaces the 5 entirely.

These chords are closely related -- each modifies one interval from a shared foundation:

  • maj7 (1-3-5-7) -- natural 5th, the stable parent chord without the questioning quality
  • maj7#5 (1-3-#5-7) -- raised 5th instead, augmented brightness that reaches upward rather than creating Lydian tension
  • maj9#11 (1-3-5-7-9-#11) -- keeps the natural 5 and adds #11 above it; related Lydian color with a different structure
  • 7b5 (1-3-b5-b7) -- dominant version, the b7 replaces the major 7th and changes the function entirely

Voice Leading

Voice leading tracks how individual notes move from one chord to the next. The b5 creates chromatic possibilities that expand beyond typical maj7 voice leading. Its enharmonic identity as the leading tone (in a IV context) drives smooth connections.

  • IVmaj7b5 to V7: The b5 of IV (enharmonically the leading tone of the key) holds as the 3 of V. The 7 moves to the 5 or b7 of V. Smooth Lydian motion toward dominant -- the leading tone pivots naturally.
  • Imaj7b5 to ii7: The b5 moves up a half step to the 11 of ii (an available extension), or down a half step to the b3 of ii. Chromatic approach in either direction creates color.
  • IVmaj7b5 to Imaj7: The b5 of IV (the leading tone) holds as the 7 of I. The 3 of IV moves down a whole step to the 5 of I. Ascending bass motion of a 5th with the leading tone connecting the two chords.

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

Practice Seeds

Lydian connection. Play maj7b5, then the Lydian scale (the major scale with a raised 4th -- built on any root, it shares its notes with the major scale a 5th below). Hear the scale inside the chord; the b5 is Lydian's defining #4 in enharmonic form.

Compare fifths. Play maj7, maj7b5, and maj7#5 in sequence. Each fifth quality creates a different character: stable, questioning, and ethereal.

b5 and #11 relationship. Play maj9#11, then maj7b5. Hear the shared pitch class -- same note, different harmonic contexts. One keeps the natural 5th alongside it; the other replaces it.

Color substitution. Use maj7b5 in place of a regular maj7 in a progression. Experience its unique color -- stability with a question mark.

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