D#m11

notes

The chord D#m11 is made up of these notes:

D#
F#
A#
C#
E#
G#
play
strum
The D# minor eleventh chord (D#m11) is a lush, complex collection of six notes: D#, F#, A#, C#, E#, and G#. This chord is built starting with the root note D#, followed by a minor third, perfect fifth, minor seventh, major ninth, and an eleventh. It carries a rich, dreamy quality that is often found in jazz, soul, and R&B music, where it adds a smooth sophistication to the sound. In chord progressions, D#m11 can serve as a beautiful backdrop or a transition that enriches the harmonic landscape, lending a sense of depth and gentle tension that resolves gracefully into the next chord.
InversionsChord inversions refer to the different ways you can play a chord by rearranging the order of its notes. When a chord is inverted, one or more notes are shifted up an octave, changing the "bass" or lowest note of the chord. Even though the notes remain the same, the overall sound and feel of the chord changes depending on which note is the lowest.
Inversion 1
F#3
A#3
C#4
E#4
G#4
D#4
Inversion 2
A#3
C#4
E#4
G#4
D#4
F#4
Inversion 3
C#4
E#4
G#4
D#4
F#4
A#4
Inversion 4
E#4
G#4
D#4
F#4
A#4
C#5
Inversion 5
G#4
D#4
F#4
A#4
C#5
E#5