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  1. How to play dominant seventh sharp ninth chords, 7#9, on the guitar. Check out this jazz guitar lesson with neck diagrams and voicing charts for a better understanding of this altered dominant chord.

  2. Dominant 7/#9 chord - The Hendrix Chord. Essential Guitar Chords: the Jimi Hendrix Chord. by Tommaso Zillio. Few sound have been more iconic than the sound of this chord. It is definitely not a “nice” chord: nasty, dissonant, yet appealing. The Hendrix chord, one of the pillars of modern guitar sound. Let’s see what it is and how to play it.

  3. The 7#9 chord is an extended dominant 7th chord with an augmented (sharpened) ninth. This chord form got its nickname because it was a favorite of Hendrix, who did a great deal to popularize its use in mainstream rock music.

  4. Dominant seventh flat ninth chords are built by lower the ninth of dominant 9 chords by one semitone. This jazz guitar lesson with diagrams and voicings will show you how to play 7b9 chords on the guitar.

  5. This chord is a dominant seventh with a sharpened ninth. By comparing C7 with C7#9 we could see that the notes changes from C, E, G, Bb to C, E, G, Bb, D#. The absolutely most common way to play the sharp nine chord is be the movable shape presented in the diagrams below.

  6. The A7b9 chord (A dominant 7 flat 9) contains the notes A, C#, E, G and Bb. It is produced by taking the 1 (root), 3, 5, b7 and b9 of the A Major scale. The A7b9 chord is often used when resolving to the D Major 7 chord. Here’s how to play it.

  7. A Dominant 7th chord is a major triad with an added minor seventh. The formula is : root (1) major third (3) perfect fifth (5) minor seventh (b 7). As it is shown in the chart below, dominant 7th chords are built by stacking thirds : G and B = major third. B and D = minor third.

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