C Dominant 7th Sharp 11

Notes:C – E – G – Bb – F#
Formula:R-M3-A4-P5-m7
Intervals:P1-M3-A4-P5-m7
Scale Degrees:1-3-#4-5-b7

Introduction

The C Dominant 7th Sharp 11 piano chord (C7\u266f11) consists of the notes C, E, F#, G, Bb. It is a dominant 7th chord with an augmented (sharpened) 11th, creating a distinctive tritone clash, giving it a tense, tritone-driven character central to the Lydian Dominant sound in jazz and fusion. Formula: R-M3-A4-P5-m7 | Scale degrees: 1-3-#4-5-b7.

Notes

Notes:C – E – G – Bb – F#

C Dominant 7th Sharp 11 Inversions

PositionNotes
Root PositionC4 – E4 – G4 – Bb4 – F#5
1st InversionE4 – F#4 – G4 – Bb4 – C5
2nd InversionF#4 – G4 – Bb4 – C5 – E5

Key Signature

The key of C Dominant 7th Sharp 11 has No sharps or flats.

Theory: Intervals

Formula: R-M3-A4-P5-m7
Intervals: P1-M3-A4-P5-m7

The C Dominant 7th Sharp 11 is built by stacking intervals from the root note. The formula R-M3-A4-P5-m7 describes the scale degrees used. The intervals P1-M3-A4-P5-m7 show the distance between each note in the chord.

C Dominant 7th Sharp 11 — Frequently Asked Questions

What notes are in the C Dominant 7th Sharp 11 chord?

C7#11 contains five notes: C (root), E (major third), F# (sharp 11th/augmented 4th), G (perfect fifth), Bb (minor seventh). It is a dominant 7th with a raised 11th — the Lydian Dominant sound.

How does C7#11 differ from C7?

C7#11 adds F# (the #11). This tritone between C and F# creates the distinctive Lydian Dominant colour — brighter and more complex than a standard dominant 7th.

How does C7#11 differ from C11?

C11 has a natural 11th (F) which clashes with the third. C7#11 has F# which does not clash — it sits comfortably alongside the major third (E). This is why jazz musicians prefer #11 over natural 11.

How is C7#11 used in music?

C7#11 is the signature chord of the Lydian Dominant scale (4th mode of melodic minor). It appears in jazz as an enriched dominant, often as a tritone substitution. It adds sophistication to any dominant V chord.

What songs use 7#11 chords?

7#11 chords appear throughout modern jazz. Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, and McCoy Tyner use Lydian Dominant voicings. The sound defines sophisticated jazz harmony.

What scale matches C7#11?

The Lydian Dominant scale (C, D, E, F#, G, A, Bb) — the 4th mode of G melodic minor. It is Mixolydian with a raised 4th, combining the dominant 7th function with Lydian brightness.

Practice Tips

  • Play C7 then add F# — hear the Lydian Dominant brightness.
  • The #11 (F#) does not clash with the third (E) — unlike the natural 11 (F). This is why jazz prefers #11.
  • C7#11 is the Lydian Dominant sound — practice the scale C–D–E–F#–G–A–Bb over this chord.
  • Use C7#11 as a sophisticated substitute for any C7.
  • Practice C7#11 → F as an enriched V–I resolution.
  • Voicing tip: play E–Bb on the left, F#–C on the right for a classic jazz spread.