Finger Positions

Bm9/D diagram
Root Note B
Name B minor ninth over D
Intervals 1P-3m-5P-7m-9M
Relative Minor G#m
Notes B, D, F#, A, C#
Aliases Bm9, B-9

How to play the Bm9/D Chord

The Bm9/D is a fundamental dominant chord in guitar music. To play this chord correctly, ensure your fingers are placed precisely on the frets indicated in the diagram above.

Music Theory Analysis

From a theoretical perspective, the B minor ninth over D is built using the 1P, 3m, 5P, 7m, 9M intervals. In the key of B Major, this chord functions as the I chord.

Common Progressions

In music composition, the Bm9/D chord is often used to create tension or resolution.

I-V-vi-IV

vi-IV-I-V

The Diatonic Family

Understanding the "family" of chords that belong to B helps with transposition and ear training.

Scale Compatibility

View All Scales
Minor Dorian Dorian #4 Bebop Minor Minor Bebop Composite Blues Messiaen's Mode #3 Chromatic

* 8 scales found containing the notes B, D, F#, A, C#.

Acoustic & Digital Analysis

Digital footprint of the Bm9/D chord for MIDI programming and synthesizer sound design.

MIDI Numbers 71, 62, 66, 69, 61
Frequencies (Hz)

493.8833012561241, 293.6647679174076, 369.9944227116344, 440, 277.1826309768721