G♭9 — G♭, B♭, D♭, F♭, A♭ — is a dominant 9th chord: major triad + minor 7th + major 9th — a dominant chord with the 9th added on top for a rich, slightly bluesy colour.
Intervals
The Gb dominant 9 chord stacks two thirds on the root. Each interval and its size in semitones:
- Gb→Bbmajor 3rd4 semitones
- Bb→Dbminor 3rd3 semitones
- Db→Fbminor 3rd3 semitones
- Fb→Abmajor 3rd4 semitones
On the keyboard
Each note of the Gb dominant 9 chord highlighted on a piano. Pitch class is what matters — any octave works.
On the guitar
One voicing of the Gb dominant 9 chord on a six-string guitar fretboard.
- 1Gb
- 3Bb
- 5Db
- ♭7Fb
- 9Ab
Common mistakes
The defining note is the 9th (A♭). It sits more than an octave above the root, which is why the chord needs a wide voicing — in tight piano voicings the 9th usually appears in the top register while the root and lower triad tones cluster below.
In context
Functions as the V9 in its target key — a richer, more colourful alternative to the plain V7 dominant.
Drill it
The Gb dominant 9 chord is one of 48 in the Chord Trainer. Open the full trainer to practice it alongside related chords with timing and best-time tracking.
Open the Chord Trainer →Or try today's Etudle puzzleRelated
Frequently asked
- What notes are in a G♭9 chord?
- G♭9 contains five notes: G♭, B♭, D♭, F♭, A♭.
- How is G♭9 different from G♭7?
- G♭9 adds the 9th (A♭) on top of the underlying 7th chord. The 9th extends the chord into the next octave and adds harmonic colour.
- When is G♭9 used in music?
- Functions as the V9 in its target key — a richer, more colourful alternative to the plain V7 dominant.